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British
Archaeology
Simon
Denison founded the magazine and is still its editor.
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Quarry
Land
Simon Denison took the concept a step further by mixing photographs
from the Clee Hills with portraits and the stories of people
who live and work there.
Mining
in Shropshire
In Shropshire the county's rural landscape has been
shaped by its mining past.
Industrial
Archaeology
A Shropshire-based group of keen amateur archaeologists have
been researching and recording the industrial past of the
county and beyond.
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| WHAT
THE CRITICS SAID |
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‘Simon
Denison photographs the rural landscape as a constantly changing
site of interaction between organic forces and manufactured
detritus. He even brings out the beauty in our messed-up countryside’
Robert Clark, The Guardian
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TECHNICAL
INFO
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Simon
uses Bronica 6x6 and Nikon 35mm cameras.
In
medium format he mainly uses Ilford HP5 Plus film rated at
ISO 200 (overexposed one stop); in 35mm, most images were
made on Agfa APX25 – a film that has now been discontinued
– rated at ISO 6 (overexposed two stops).
Development is in highly diluted (1:3) Perceptol to achieve
fine grain, edge sharpness and a full tonal range.
Prints
are made on Agfa Classic variable contrast fibre-based paper,
selenium toned and retouched.
In
the darkroom, negatives are cropped and tonal areas balanced
or emphasised as necessary. Beyond that, no image manipulation
takes place.
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But,
as the stark pictures of Shropshire photographer Simon Denison show,
the rural landscape is not as unspoilt as we think.
His
monochrome prints capture the signs of past human activity, such
as a mattress dumped in a quarry or a pair of gateposts in a field
that are the last remnants of a country house.
.Sample
a selection of Simon
Denison's pictures pop-up gallery
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And,
although he takes pictures all over the UK, Shropshire figures prominently
in his work. The Shropshire landscape, especially in the south of
the county is an ideal subject, is dotted with places that were
once hives of human activity, but now lie silent, still and derelict
as nature took them over long ago.
Traditionally,
landscape photographers concentrate on the scenic side of the countryside,
regarding all but the most picturesque human constructions as eyesores
which are excluded. But Simon's work is all about these 'eyesores'.
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‘There
is a school of landscape photographers – Fay Godwin is probably
the best known – which dismisses the Beautiful Britain cliché.
Simon Denison belongs to this school. As the editor of the
magazine British Archaeology he is attuned to the traces which
man’s progress has left on the landscape. As a photographer
he celebrates them . . .
The beauty appears almost accidental in these stark black-and-white
images. It is all the more powerful for that. Simon Denison’s
imagination is certainly not romantic in the sunsets and seascapes
sense of the word, yet it is deeply rooted in Britain’s Romantic
(with a capital R) traditions
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| Rachel
Campbell-Johnston, The Times |
He
says: "Far from corrupting the lyrical beauty of the rural
landscape, I believe the works of man intensify it. They are the
signs that people have lived on the land and altered it, before
moving on or passing away.
"Our
constructions and discarded possessions often survive after we are
gone, but in time they too fall into ruin.
"As
they decay, they provide a forlorn metaphor for the human condition,
standing as poignant reminders of the pasage of time and our own
mortality."
Simon's
fascination with the traces left in the countryside by man is hardly
surprising, given his other main occupation as editor of British
Archaeology magazine, which he founded in 1995.
His
photographs have been published in a book, The Human Landscape,
and they featured in a travelling exhibition last year, which received
critical acclaim.
In
Shropshire, his work was most recently exhibited at Ludlow Assembly
Rooms.
Simon,
who's married to the painter Susannah Creese and lives with their
two small children near Ludlow, was born in 1964 near Cambridge.
After
reading classics at Oxford University, he studied photography part-time
at St Martin's School of Art. His work has been published in several
books and magazines, as well as being held in private collections.
Before
founding British Archaeology he wrote for several national newspapers
including the Sunday Times, the Independent, the Guardian and the
Sunday Telegraph.
His
next project is making images on the two Clee Hills.
Sample
a selection of Simon
Denison's pictures pop-up gallery
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Copies
of the book, The Human Landscape (£12.95), and hand-made,
signed copies of any of Simon Denison’s images are for sale.
Contact
Simon Denison direct on 01584 823323 or by email: simondenison@pobox.comr
thllery
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