#MYLDN (1015)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1014)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1013)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

I appear to be having a moment of reflection…

 

#MYLDN (1012)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1011)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN 1010

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1009)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1008) – Comic Con 17 (Pt 5)

Me and my camera at comic con, my geek out, my london

To see the full Comic Con gallery please click here

When I was a kid I lived and breathed marvel comics, 2000 AD and batman. And basically wanted to be a superhero. And not much has changed except that now there are tons of other people who also feel the same way and now congregate en masse at events like comic con. Superheroes have become the biggest genre on the planet and it does not seem to be abating in any way. And yet, even though it is firmly a part of the mainstream it still attracts those who maybe once felt like they are on the periphery…oddballs, obsessives, loners. freaks, geeks, nerds and fantasists but it turns out so are most people (and I would certainly include myself in most of those groups) so put all these ‘weirdos’ together and they become the norms. And the norms become the weirdos.

Comic Con is a sensory overload of an experience of the highest magnitude. You literally can’t look anywhere without seeing something amazing. Everyone makes a serious amount of effort with their costumes and whether they are at the DIY ‘sweded’ end or the top of the range authentic they all look brilliant. So much inventiveness, time, energy and money seems to go into everyone’s creations. As a photographer it is a visual paradise of opportunity and I did everything I could to capture as much as possible. And yet, I wasn’t here to just take pictures, I was here for the same reason they were. To be amongst my own kind and spend the day in Toontown. But for me, its difficult to look around and not question what is it that makes everyone want to do this.

The unspoken rule at comic con is that you can take pictures of people as long as you ask but if you ask they then pose as the character and any semblance of their actual self disappears. Mainly because they want it to. This is their time out away from themselves. This is their fantasy. To be this all powerful dynamic capable colourful character. Who doesn’t want that? But much more interesting to me is to see a glimpse of the real self beneath the facade. And so I mostly ignored the unspoken rule and did what I normally do which is to try to capture that moment before the guard goes up. My goal was to reveal the person beneath the attire as well as the character they were pretending to be. I was interested in revealing the slightly hidden aspects of this experience.

As the day went on and people started to get tired and hot (it was boiling in the excel centre) they started to shed the mask, literally in a lot of cases. And by the end when they were tired and ready to go you could see how the experience had been for them. You could see the shortfall between what they wanted it or needed it to be and the reality. You could feel a sense of dejection and disappointment as maybe all that effort and work had maybe not delivered what they had ultimately wanted…to leave reality and their real selves completely and to become the hero of their fantasies and for people to treat them as such.

When I started to go through the photographs I had taken there I really wanted to show both sides of this experience by highlighting the colourful nature of their cosplay but also to show a sense of the dreary day to day reality they were trying to get away from. This is why I desaturated the background into black and white and made them a technicolour spotlight in their own fantasy. This also gave the shots a comic book feel in the process which seemed appropriate. I also liked the contrast of revealing their inner selves visible from within these created constructs which were ultimately designed to hide exactly that.

Although, having said all of that, this is just the angle I have focussed on, the aspect that caught my attention but most of the people attending the event  clearly were having a hugely positive and enjoyable experience. You can dress up as whatever you want and no-one will judge you. By masquerading as someone else you can maybe finally be yourself. And then buy a shitload of cool stuff from your favourite whatever.

One of my favourite things was seeing all these characters from comics, films, manga and video games be recreated perfectly and then seeing them wander around with plastic bags of merch, drinking coffee, eating chips, being on their phones and any other run of the mill day to day actions that you would never see superheroes do. That never gets old for me. I also loved seeing couples dressed up as matching characters from the same world as into it as each other and clearly loving being together in Nerddom and having someone they could share this experience with. Geek love is a beautiful thing.

We live in an era where dressing up seems to becoming bigger and bigger and as fantasy now rules both tv and film it is very visible to see that people want to escape reality. And as the real world appears to be getting grimmer and grimmer there feels more and more of a need to get away from it whenever possible. But, one must ask the question, maybe we should be attempting to improve the real world rather than create an alternate fantasy one in order to deal with it? Just sayin…

 

 

#MYLDN (1007) – Comic Con 17 (Pt 4)

Me and my camera at comic con, my geek out, my london

#MYLDN (1006) – Comic Con 17 (Pt 3)

Me and my camera at comic con, my geek out, my london

#MYLDN (1005) – Comic Con 17 (Pt 2)

Me and my camera at comic con, my geek out, my london

#MYLDN (1004) – Comic Con 17 (Pt 1)

Me and my camera at comic con, my geek out, my london

 

#MYLDN (1003)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1002)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (1001)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

The Dead Rise in Kensal Rise!

Me and my camera in a spooky cemetary…

I went down to kensal rise cemetary to pay my respects to a dear departed friend and couldn’t help but notice that the tombstones looked like they were being literally pushed out of the ground by what I could only presume was the residents of said cemetary. I am not one for the supernatural but it was difficult to ignore. It looked like they were all planning an escape until I read the sign at the exit:

ah, month of the dead! Of course! I wondered if October was a particularly good month to die and if the cemetary was doing a discount if you popped your clogs in October. Die now, get one free sort of thing. Maybe they thought that just one day for the dead wasn’t enough and they needed a whole month to do their thing. I guess everyone needs an occasion to feel special and the dead are no exception. Who knows? I have obviously seen the Thriller video, as am sure you have, so we know how this plays out…I guess all that’s left to say is Happy Halloween and Happy Month of the dead!

#MYLDN (1000)!

Me and my camera celebrating 1000 posts in my home town, my capital city, my london

 

https://vimeo.com/236450829 (if u can’t see vid above please click on this link to view)

And so I arrive at my 1000th MYLDN post. Difficult to imagine I have put that many photographs up but there you go. Numbers don’t lie. It clearly happened so I guess. The video above is a peek into a photography book featuring my favourite 100 shots so far.  The book tells the story of the changing face of this city and its inhabitants since I started this blog back in 2008. There is currently only one in existence but am hoping to get a publisher on board in some shape or form so hopefully will let you know in due course when it becomes available to buy.

My home town has altered massively since I began posting my daily shots and not necessarily altogether for the better. This daily series began as a photographic love letter to the city I was born and lived in and was intended to be a ongoing celebration of the rich diversity of cultures and culture in this non-stop city. Over time it became an observation of the gentrification process and the impact it had on the population of London. A city that I felt was defined by being inclusive to anyone from anywhere who wanted to have a go, it slowly then quickly became an exclusive place, home only to the rich who could afford to be here and the poor who couldn’t afford to do anything but be here. So many people have been forced out by exorbitant rents  and living prices and that is still continuing on a seemingly relentless scale.

Music venues, pubs, bars and clubs and affordable houses have been torn down and replaced with luxury flats most people living and working here could never afford to buy. A city with a chronic housing shortage is now twistedly home to tens of thousands of flats that remain empty, safety deposit boxes for the rich, commodities rather than homes for communities. And it doesn’t look like that will change anytime soon.

And yet this is a city that never stops evolving and its ability to transform itself over and over again is one of the defining characteristics of this city and its chameleonic nature is maybe its greatest feature. I hope that in time it will change again from what it is now and become something else, a place where people who work in it can actually live in it again and not have to ship themselves in from the outskirts. A place that has opportunities for all and not just for those who already have them. A place where artists and musicians can find places to live cheapily and develop their craft so they can create the next wave of  art and music that will define the next generation of this magnificent metropolis. London was a the city of culture, then it became the city of commerce and now it will become…I have no idea but I will be sticking around to watch and see what happens and I will be documenting it all along the way and bringing you more of my photographic observations along the way.

If you are reading this and are one of my subscribers I would like to thank you for staying on board and your continued support. I hope you will stick around for another 1000 posts..or thereabouts!

And a big special thanks to Bolis Pulpul who let me use his incredible track Teknow for the video above. You can check out his tunes here

 

#MYLDN (999)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

This week has featured some creepy faces found on my travels in the lead up to halloween. Above is Hannibal Lecter made entirely out of cherrios and is currently hanging on the wall at the Cereal Killer Cafe in Brick lane. Although this is genuinely disturbing it is nowhere near as horrifying as paying nearly a fiver for a bowl of cereal. I didn’t by the way. I was merely passing through. Some people are willing to pay this much but I associate cereal with the cheapest food you can eat when you are broke so it goes against every grain in my body (and probably in the cereal itself – haha. ok, shit pun but so is the title of their shop so just joining in really) to fork up for those prices (although a spoon would probably be preferable -okay, I’ll stop).

 

 

#MYLDN (998)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

#MYLDN (997)

Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london