Ryan Free
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educational purposes only

 

Landscape Roll 5

1/12/2018

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Landscape Roll 4

30/11/2018

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Landscape roll 3

29/11/2018

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I did not mess the roll up, the other images are towards another project on this roll. 
This was a beautiful morning, silent, early mist at the air field on a Monday morning I believe. The relics still mark the land here, a German fighter plane rests in the bushes, once what would have been used to try and kill us, now watches over snd is rusting away. Booker Airfield is one of the busiest private airfield in the UK. 
What I love about the negs of these images, is the tones created by the subtle mist in the air, the mist softens the light and this creates a very diffused scene, There is still blacks in the lower of the frame and there is still whites in the sky but the subtleness of the overall image is lovely. Reminiscent. 
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Landscape Roll 2

28/11/2018

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Landscape; Mamiya 7II, 6x7 images, roll 1. High Wycombe.

27/11/2018

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reflections

27/11/2018

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Here are some of my oldest family image dating back to 1913. 1922 and an unknown one which depicts the little girl in the studio. The last image was taken a few months ago at an airfield with my mum. 
What I love about these old family documents, they tell us something very important about how people communicated, visually and literally. So the postcard image of the woman nicely dressing in a formal hat, posed with a balcony in the background, is obviously well taken and would be a contact print of a 5x4 image taken in a studio, probably in London. On the back is a postcard template and a Wimbledon stamp. The writing reads Dear Elsie, just a pic of myself to wish you many happy remains of the day. Love to all. mabs? 
To me I see this way of representation a sign of comfort within the family circle, also a symbolic representation of the subjects power, saying 'This is a pic of myself', so the viewer can see her and connect, the writing helps anchor the image to a sensitive narrative, one of openness and honesty, This document was obviously communication between two people, Elsie and Mabs. And this shines through in context. 

What I absolutely love about the last image on here of my mother is that, it communicates something very important to me and i'm sure to her also. She is always rushing around, to do something, whether that is do the school run, go to work at 7am or go shopping early, she is onit! The most competent person I know and I think I will ever know, she is the manager of a garden centre and my boss at work too. Everything is kept in order because she cares, she has a wide knowledge of thing. So I photograph her when she is busy, when she is rushing around and when we have a lot of things to be getting on with. I use the camera as tool to create moments of pause, of clarity, of reflection, by capturing photographs my mum can look at her self still and calm, and whole, when she may actually need to. When we age and get old, 
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Reflections

27/11/2018

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Having a sense of identity, to create a representation of reality, through the use of the photograph or a painting is to create a sense of security, a reaffirmation of (in this case) purpose/ belonging subjectively and more largely through the lens of society as a whole/ The British Image. What it means to be me/you/to be here. A representation of what it is like to actually experience these places or to know these people.


Identity articulates the geographic.


The image is a statement of what was seen. We know the photographic vision is highly constructed. Nonetheless, photography significantly contributes to our sense of knowledge, perception and experience, and to (trans)forming our feelings about our relation to history, and geography and, by extension, to a sense of ourselves.  Liz Wells, Land Matters. Pg. 56. bottom.



three chapters to the book.


start with old family images, then transition into my documents of family.
last chapter should be the future of the document.
contact sheets at the end of the book, with scans of books, albums and covers of the documents used in the book. evidence it all at the end. this will add another layer of interest and will show with the contacts; how the photographer shoots and thinks and sees, also it shows how the edit has been put together and what is determined to be good or, right for the context of the edit; a good print or message.


the structure of a family is something every child should have, a structure that directs the individual but also allows for as much freedom for them to explore and to ask questions.


Print all images selected from archives and from shooting over summer in the darkroom (5”x7”).
Scan new images and add to folder of family pics.
Get family images off the internet and from social media, and compare the power, emotion, aesthetic, how it is viewed… on a screen rather than in a book, or an actual chemical print. Even through this will be a digitally constructed and printed book.




Photography reinvents history. these images are collected from my family albums and images stored in the loft and under beds or in boxes under the houses my family own. Creating and mapping out my family image in terms of the historical document and British photography as a way of expressing ourselves, a way of remembering and a way of seeing.


Find paintings and significant works that express thought and artistic movements in landscape photography and science- biology and make reference to them in the afterword of the book, in relation to the modern images of my mum and family figures. What they really represent.
The generals in the army, that high order sense of being, allow it to shine through, and abstract the family image into the model of disposability within culture.




Put the book together now! use Walsh and Price to help sequence the images into a high order abstraction of the family image.
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Reflections on the real book

27/11/2018

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The book will start with my earliest family photos, as if they are paintings, analysed as paintings. It will progress through the war then turning into modern day. This first part of the book will allow the viewer to meet people who they have never met, historical documents of British human experience. The narrative will start to show the disposability of the image, and the family image in general. This will raise questions of what the family image looks like today in general, a topic many many people will feel deep down. But also will question deeply the reason for these historical documents, their role compared to the image of today shows a nature of disposability, as I pick up on the painterly process of creating them. With the acquisition of digital social media platforms, we view our selves through these simulated representations, which can only be de coded or viewed with certain programmes and digital media.
What Im trying to say is the black and white or colour image that has painterly aesthetics and connotations, that is made for a book or to be archived, holds more meaning within documentary photography and within the nexus of history within the image as language. It is the process and time and place that opens the door for information to be written into the background of images, the physical encoding of light onto film. The temperature of the air, the steadiness of the photographers hand. The limited number of shots. The consideration and composition of where the sun falls in frame. The way a documentary photographer reads the landscape in front of them is through the language of semiology. John Berger was a Semiologist.
I also want to represent a scary side to the project, with these photos on facebook, and being viewed from an environment that is disposable and tends to get lost or forgotten, I want to say that is void of meaning and is historically a bad move… we need to keep representing our experience authentically and physically, literally paintings on the walls and documents that last hundreds of years for generations to come. Because we have a massive responsibility as an individual, as a couple, a friendship group, a family, a town, a city, a nation. The entire human experience. On every level we need to preserve this nature. If we are looking at ourselves as disposable nonsense then really what does that mean? ​
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Reflections notes and whatnot

27/11/2018

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Some quotes.
It is important to perceive photography as a selection and interpretation of the world in two respects. First, from a point of view of the photographer who selects and interprets a scene or incident in the process of encoding an image. Second, from the perspective of a viewer who interprets (reads) the photograph in the process of decoding. This orientation views the photographic communication as an active process of interpretation, by both the creator and the viewer.

This would also appear to be the view of John Berger.


Every image embodies a way of seeing. Even a photograph. For photographs are not, as is often assumed, a mechanical record. Every time we look at a photograph, we are aware, however slightly, of the photographer selecting that sight from the infinity of other possible sights.
Clive Scott- The Spoken Image, Page 23.
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Reflections statement of intent.

27/11/2018

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Statement Of Intent.
Reflections On The Real will be connected through the theme ‘Close To Home’. When reflecting on  the real, which is often, (to see a clearer reflection/ more ordered/ updated version of my experience.) I find that being close to home where I have grown up and where I can assign a high level of meaning to the world, the place/s which bring back memories, the places in which I can see myself, the people; are the best places to get the clearest reflection of I and also others. When I think of reality, the experience I am, the people I know, the places that I have seen and been to and not to forget skills and desires that take my interest; that which is familiar. Family, friends (loved ones) are at the top of my structure of meaning. This is because mum, dad, uncle, auntie, brother, sister, grandparents, cousins etc etc, all birthed me into the world, each person showed something different whether they intended to or not, at an age in which I was a blank canvas for ‘potential’ to be brought into the world to be just like them, articulate, creative and competent and to one day also have a family of my own with a solid job. At least. As a society, as matured individuals we learn from reality through the image, the documents we create of our experiences and leave behind, the family photographs, the images of our friends and the places we have run through and laughed and cried. these images don't only add to a family, but a larger more chaotic in one sense but also a more powerfully structured image of society, of a country or humanity in its entirety. These documents definitely capture something very real, they show us something very sensitive about our lives. I feel in a way they capture the loss of reality (the fleeting moment), they hold still reality in time and form and allow you to meet people from the 20th centry who you have never met or to see things which may have been washed away with time etc.
I intend to look back through my family photographs from my mothers side and from my fathers side, and to create an abstraction of the family image in context of contemporary documentary photography including combinations of sequencing historical images from my family archive and my own practise up to today in a sketch book style photo book. I have been looking at loads of photo books recently, old and new, and have found some amazing works to indulge in. I intend to learn from the sequencing and representational methods what the family image looks like today within documentary photography. I also intend to learn how to sequence complex, varied multi-medium imagery into a very well thought out, high quality book in which which focuses down so that the book doesn't only speak about my family image but is open to interpretation enough to speak to the viewer directly about theirs or the family image in general. A book which is touching something at the core of meaning in reality for everyone. I will have the documents on Friday 6th October and will start ordering them and looking at sequencing as soon as I can.
I have been looking at loads of photo books recently, old and new, and have found some amazing works to indulge in.
My thoughts on the actual point of the book, is to simplify/ abstract reality to this. ‘with all this digital visualisation of the mis representation of the image of ourselves, of political views, of cultural occurrences within social media and the distribution of the image throughout media, It is the historical document that solidifies/ holds together the reality of the photographer as photojournalist.’
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Reflections in the real

27/11/2018

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In your response you will choose one of the following themes to explore (from Tate Modern’s first ever exhibition devoted to photography; Cruel + Tender in 2003):    


Comparison and Classification


Close to Home


Industry and Consumerism


Caught in the Lens


Close to home: Real.
Reality, can be broken down into two categories; Objective, Subjective- Left side of brain, Right side of brain, Conscious, Unconscious…
Objective reality it that which is supported by science, for the past 500 years we have been looking at the world through the paradigm of science of law. Constants and Rules, are the governing factors we have focused our social perimeters on, the discovery of science opened the possibility for people to research in ways that were never thought of previously, to examine what the world is made up of at a more complex and on a smaller scale throughout time.


My reality-


The reality I know is what is familiar to me, the things I know and what I choose to interact with in the world. My mother is a very predominant image in my reality, she brought me into this chaos and I'm here to order it with photography.   


sketchbook on
family


inspiration; My Family, Friends, Tutors and those strangers you encounter whilst photographing.
Henri Cartier-Bresson.
​Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin.

Robert adams.
Richard mosse.
Bruce Davidson.
simon Northolk.
Chris Kilip.
R\obert Clayton.
John Myers.
Fay Godwin.
Simon Roberts.
Richard Bellingham.
Nan Golding.
Francesca woodman.
Jim Goldberg.


A lot of people inspire me.
Reflections on the real… Close to home, Family, friends, show the intense relationship of being at home, the beauty in the ordinary. the balance of lightness and darkness, day and night, sat around or on it. its about rewarding yourself with something to remember something to look at with friends and family to bring back the memory of that time. when looking at old photographs though, you look back at reality that has been lost, an old you, the you you used to be. Loved ones may have died and they are captured in spirit in the representation of the photograph.
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Editing for Reflections Book

27/11/2018

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So I went through thousands of images and pulled out the ones that represented the family or a person, whilst considering certain compositional elements

In the background I also had to look through all my negatives going all the way back to the beginning of my career (5 years) just to only pull out 4 or 5 that I'd actually use fro the book. I wanted the negatives so I can print them on black and white paper and create the positives, to create the archive, to add to the family albums in effect. I selected recent images and a few old ones of my mother, father, grandparents and sister and printed to a similar size as the postcards that were sent when the chemical print was the only option, they were printed on 5"x7" Barclay black and white paper. 
I printed for 3 days and made around 45 prints, copies.   
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Reflection prints

27/11/2018

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Here is a nice wod of prints I produced for the project, the just need scanning and ordering for the book. 
Picture
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Digi map of high wycombe (westside)

21/11/2018

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This is where the project really stared to shape, looking at maps from the 1880's, I noticed locations that I know really well that revealed what used to be present there just over one hundred years ago. Using the maps I could see how the town has been designed, during the industrial era, with tones of furniture making factories and terrace housing to accommodate the factory workers, the housing which is still prevalent in the town. The maps also reveal way, way older histories and topographies that used to be present on the land, for example, the Rye park shows a roman villa and settlement that used to be there, dating back 2000 years, the new topographic that replaces this ancient location is a leisure facility, a swimming pool covering an intricate mosaic a piece of art. These simple facts of how the landscape has changed, been covered over and re-imagined fascinates me,  how to read this change using maps and to evidence it using photographs seems like what i'm doing. Documenting... re-imagining in a way the history, the physical landscape and the social engagement with the land. 
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November 21st, 2018

21/11/2018

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A landscape Architect student showed me this website that the university pays for, so they can use maps that date back to the early 1800's. The maps reveal ancient ruins of Roman Villas, Iron Age settlements, burial sites, stone monuments, and caves. The maps also reveal the town plans in the urban areas too, which reveal how the housing and the towns were planned out in relation to an industrial landscape during the mid 1800's. The maps can be used to find ruins or old buildings and marked down, tracked down and photographed/ re-photographed, this re-photography can be used to re-invent history, or to re-imagine history. You could also use them to study the change in the landscape, wether thats in the countryside of in an urban setting, see what gets covered over and what is looked after, listed buildings for example. 
Picture
"Historic Digimap delivers historical Ordnance Survey maps of Great Britain. The Collection is licensed from Landmark Information Group for UK Higher and Further Education."

Historic Digimap offers the following map images, the originals of which were published between 1846 and 1996:
  • All available County Series maps at 1:2,500 and 1:10,560 scales
  • All available National grid maps (1943 to 1996) at 1:1,250, 1:2,500 and 1:10,560/10,000
  • Selected Town Plan maps (1848 and 1939) at scales of 1:500, 1:528 and 1:1056
  • Over 400,000 geo-referenced digital map images are available for use in GIS and CAD.

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geography 'Land Drawing'

21/11/2018

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Expand on the British Geography. how it has been scapped and by who and when. 
Historical natural land and the human constructed landscape. 
Urban and Rural. 
High Wycombe. 
​
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More liz wells theory

21/11/2018

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Picture
Accessed; https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/uniofglos/detail.action?docID=1968918&query=Wells%2C+Liz# 
​20/11/18.
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Landscape photographers

21/11/2018

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Picture
Edmund clark.
Negative Publicity.

Created in collaboration with counterterrorism investigator Crofton Black Negative Publicity (2011 – 2016) comprises photographs and documents that confront the nature of contemporary warfare and the invisible mechanisms of state control. From George W. Bush’s 2001 declaration of the ‘war on terror,’ until 2008, an unknown number of people disappeared into a network of secret prisons organised by the US Central Intelligence Agency – transfers without legal process, otherwise known as extraordinary rendition. No public record was kept as these prisoners were shuttled all over the globe. Some were eventually sent to Guantánamo Bay or released, while others remain unaccounted for.
The paper trail assembled in this volume shows these activities via the weak points of business accountability: invoices, documents of incorporation, and billing reconciliations produced by the small-town American businesses enlisted in prisoner transportation. In conjunction with photographs of former detention sites, detainees’ homes, companies and government locations this work recreates the network that links CIA ‘black sites,’ and evokes ideas of opacity, surface, and testimony in relation to this process: a system hidden in plain sight.




Simon Roberts.




Karen knorr; Connoisseurs- A critical view of High class gallery space, british architecture and


Country Life 1983 - 1985




Paul Nash- Post WW1 Landscape painter. + WW2. 759.2 NAS Master Of The Image.




Eric Revellio- Chalk hills. his perspective is looking down, uses the lines in the landscape to lead the eye. The balance of lightness and darkness.




Fay Godwin . The Drovers. black and white landscape.  778.936 GOD / 779.092 GOD Landscape Photographs. Landmarks ISBN - 1-899235-73-6.  
Nice quote;

“It is tempting to read a photograph. Not from left to right or from top to bottom exactly, but to find within the composition a meaning or even a story, of which the photograph is the concluding detail, the clinching moment. It is still further tempting to equate photography with a more specific kind of writing - poetry. The practice and language of both art forms appear to support a connection. Modern poems are very often ‘snapshots’, captured and offered for public examination. they are ‘slices’ of life’, ‘Instants’, bearing the suggestion of a larger concern. Many revolve around a central image, a visual image more often than not. From around the same time as the science of photography was discovered, poetry has been moving away from linear and chronological treatments of it’s subjects, towards more instantaneous executions of subject and form. In fact the size and shape of most contemporary poems could be snuggly housed within the average Kodak print.” Fay Godwin - Landmarks. Pg.10.



Robert Clayton;  Estate p.




John Myers; middle england.- 779.092 MYE Library number.
​










​
PAUL BARKER- The Freedoms of Suburbia. - 307.76 BAR Library number.

​






Robert adams. seascapes.


Jonnathan meads- theory on landscape and architecture.


The new English Landscape. Jason Orton. Ken Worpole.


Photography: A Critical Introduction- Liz Wells-     Wells, L (ed.) 2015, Photography: a Critical Introduction, Routledge, London. Available from: ProQuest Ebook Central. [20 November 2018].


Land Matters- Liz Wells.


Perspectives On Place- Theory And Practise In Landscape Photography- J.A.P Alexander.



Faust A Tragedy- JOHANN WOLFGANG GEOTHE

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Landscape painters

21/11/2018

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Constable


​ 

Tuner

Gainsborough 

Paul Nash

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Karen knorr essays

18/11/2018

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​http://karenknorr.com/writings/the-grapes-are-sour-anyway/
The Grapes Are Sour Anyway!Author: Daniel Campbell Blight
Word count: 1327
​
​http://karenknorr.com/writings/the-photographic-practice-of-karen-knorr/
The Photographic Practice of Karen Knorr
​Author: Kathy Kubicki 
​
Word count: 3165

​

The Virtues and the Delights: Reinventing HistoryAuthor: Karen Knorr
Word count: 3169
http://karenknorr.com/writings/the-virtues-and-the-delights-reinventing-history/
​
​
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So why landscape

14/11/2018

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The landscape is always changing, it is current and relevant. Environmentally, socially and existentially. The ways in which we perceive 'Landscape' change within the confines of cultural language. I want to explore the places I am familiar, to map out memory and encode meaning through suggesting ways of seeing, by the process of framing and ordering the world a certain way, out of the infinite possible ways of seeing that there are in any given moment. These images will be documents of place and time as well as allegorical moments, a poetic colouring of everyday experience. Picking up on human intervention and our involvement in managing the British landscape, along side the urban-historic Landscape in High Wycombe. They will work in series in terms of, exposure, camera height, composition and subject, paper printed on and quality input/output. 

The Thames Valley is certainly a naturally aesthetic place, rolling hills and beautiful estates of rare chalky meadows that overlook the plaines of Oxfordshire and beyond to the west and well the chaos of London to the east. Situated 29miles west,north,west of the capital of our country, High Wycombe was historically known as a a place to stop off whilst travelling to London or back. Wycombe had many inn's for people, looking on 1840 maps of the area from 'DigiMap'. This place en route London was known for market trading and drinking, But there was also the terraces that most people lived in. The residents of High Wycombe during the early 1800's were mostly workers of the many near by furniture production factories, supplying the famous Windsor chair to her majesty and many many other known designs and names. This town supplied hundreds of villages and towns with their finely crafted furniture for quite some time. The original designs for the houses and factories show terrace housing in between inns and furniture factories. Monuments stand on top of many hills and Roman roads define borders and territories associated in Wycombe, the districts of Wycombe are broken up into; Micklefield 

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Landscape proposal

14/11/2018

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I intend to research the topographic of the Urban Landscape in my home town of High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. I intend to investigate the places I am familiar in an historical context, to find new materials that enhance -or unseat- previous understandings of place and circumstance. I will be using dated maps from the early 1800's to not only see how the town was designed around the industrial era but to also see how it has changed today and what remains on the land to represent these moments in history that shaped our landscape but also our lives today. I will be creating 'straight documentary' photographs using black and white film to pick up on the historical side to the project, but to also create physical documents on print to the largest and highest quality I am capable in the darkroom. I intend one image to be printed in the darkroom at 16"x20" on fibre paper, to pristine quality. This image will be used to exhibit in the Garden Gallery, Gloucestershire. I will select and print the others smaller to add to a portfolio. ​These images will be documents of place and time as well as allegorical moments, a poetic colouring of everyday experience. Picking up on human intervention and our involvement in managing the British landscape, along side the urban-historic Landscape in center High Wycombe. They will work in series in terms of, exposure, camera height, composition and subject, paper printed on and quality input/output.
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Capability Brown- Landscape architect

14/11/2018

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"England's Greatest Gardener"

Picture
Source; http://www.capabilitybrown.org/about-capability-brown
Known as one of the first Landscape Architects, Brown designed and worked on many very famous grounds around Britain. He was a master of water technology, directing and shaping the lakes and rivers to excentuate the shape of the land, using the border of the lake to show the land. Brown worked with almost every county in England, traveling by horse and carriage travelling through the landscape he could see the land quite intimately.  He was known in his days, as a man who was fizzing with ideas, someone who has travelled and has a desire to expand and to re image the landscape of towns or estates. He would have been seen as quite famous, he stood out to the wealthy with his designs and creations. Brown set bridges and buildings into the landscape as a jeweller would set valuable stone into jewellery. Precise and thought out, he was a calculated man. He would choose every tree and plant in the grounds, and design the space for them, not just so the space looks amazing but so the whole image of the landscape is transformed into something more powerful and something very British. 
A visionary vandal who colonised the land.
‘Capability’ Brown is best remembered for landscape on an immense scale, constructing not only gardens and parkland, but planting woods and building farms linked by carriage drives, or `ridings', many miles from the main house. Although his work is continually reassessed, every landscape gardener and landscape architect since, both in Britain and across the developed world, has been influenced in one way or another by Brown. Over two centuries have passed since his death, but such are the enduring qualities of his work that over 150 of the 260 or so landscapes with which he is associated remain worth seeing today. The images that Brown created are as deeply embedded in the English character as the paintings of Turner and the poetry of Wordsworth.
http://www.capabilitybrown.org/about-capability-brown


Adderbury House, Oxfordshire (designs not thought to be implemented)[33]
Addington Place, Croydon
Alnwick Castle, Northumberland
Althorp, Northamptonshire
Ampthill Park, Ampthill, Bedfordshire
Ancaster House, Richmond, Surrey
Appuldurcombe House, Isle of Wight
Ashburnham Place, East Sussex
Ashridge House, Hertfordshire
Aske Hall, North Yorkshire
Astrop Park, Northamptonshire
Audley End, Essex
Aynhoe Park, Northamptonshire
The Backs, Cambridge
Badminton House, Gloucestershire
Ballyfin House, Ireland
Basildon Park, Berkshire
Battle Abbey, East Sussex
Beaudesert, Staffordshire
Beechwood, Bedfordshire
Belhus, Essex
Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire
Benham, Berkshire
Benwell Tower, near Newcastle upon Tyne
Berrington Hall, Herefordshire
Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire
Boarstall, Buckinghamshire (unknown if work carried out)[34]
Bowood House, Wiltshire
Branches Park, Cowlinge, Suffolk
Brentford, Ealing
Brightling Park, Sussex
Broadlands, Hampshire
Brocklesby Park, Lincolnshire
Burghley House, Lincolnshire
Burton Constable Hall, East Riding of Yorkshire
Burton Park, Sussex
Burton Pynsent, Somerset
Byram, West Yorkshire
Cadland, Hampshire
Capheaton Hall, Northumberland
Cardiff Castle, Cardiff
Castle Ashby House, Northamptonshire[35]
Caversham, Berkshire
Chalfont House, Buckinghamshire
Charlecote, Warwickshire
Charlton, Wiltshire
Chatsworth, Derbyshire
Chilham Castle, Kent
Chillington Hall, West Midlands
Church Stretton Old Rectory, Shropshire
Clandon Park, Surrey
Claremont, Surrey
Clumber Park, Nottinghamshire
Compton Verney, Warwickshire
Coombe Abbey, Coventry
Corsham Court, Wiltshire
Croome Park, Worcestershire
Dodington Park, Gloucestershire
Danson Park, Bexley Borough of London
Darley Abbey Park, Derby
Euston Hall, Suffolk
Farnborough Hall, Warwickshire
Fawley Court, Oxfordshire
Gatton Park, Surrey
Grimsthorpe Castle, Lincolnshire
Hampton Court Palace, Surrey[7]
Harewood House, Leeds
Heveningham Hall, Suffolk
Highclere Castle, Hampshire
Highcliffe Castle, Dorset
Himley Hall, Staffordshire
Holkham Hall, Norfolk
Holland Park, London
The Hoo, Hertfordshire
Hornby Castle, North Yorkshire
Howsham, near York
Ickworth, Suffolk
Ingestre, Staffordshire
Ingress Abbey, Kent
Kelston, Somerset
Kew Gardens, South West London[10]
Kiddington Hall, Oxfordshire
Kimberley, Norfolk
Kimbolton Castle, Cambridgeshire
King's Weston House, Bristol
Kirkharle, Northumberland
Kirtlington, Oxfordshire
Knowsley, near Liverpool
Kyre Park, Herefordshire
Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire
Laleham Abbey, Surrey
Langley, Berkshire
Langley Park, Norfolk
Latimer, Buckinghamshire
Leeds Abbey, Kent
Littlegrove, Barnet, London
Lleweni Hall, Clwyd
Longford Castle, Wiltshire
Longleat, Wiltshire
Lowther, Cumbria
Luton Hoo, Bedfordshire
Madingley Hall, Cambridgeshire
Maiden Earley, Berkshire
Mamhead, Devon
Melton Constable Hall, Norfolk
Milton Abbey, Dorset
Moccas Court, Herefordshire
Moor Park, Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire
Mount Clare, Roehampton, South West London
Navestock, Essex
Newnham Paddox, Warwickshire
Newton Park, Newton St Loe, Somerset
New Wardour Castle, Wiltshire
North Cray Place, near Sidcup, Bexley, London
North Stoneham Park, Eastleigh, Hampshire
Nuneham Courtenay, Oxfordshire
Oakley, Shropshire
Packington Park, Warwickshire
Paddenswick Manor, West London
Patshull Hall, Staffordshire
Paultons Park, Hampshire
Peper Harow, Surrey
Peterborough House, Hammersmith, London
Petworth House, West Sussex
Pishiobury, Hertfordshire
Porter's Park, Hertfordshire
Prior Park, Somerset
Ragley Hall, Warwickshire
Redgrave Park, Suffolk
Roche Abbey, South Yorkshire
Sandleford, Berkshire
Savernake Forest, Wiltshire
Schloss Richmond (Richmond Palace) in Braunschweig, Germany
Scampston Hall, North Yorkshire
Sheffield Park Garden, Sussex
Sherborne Castle, Dorset
Sledmere House, East Riding of Yorkshire
Southill Park, Bedfordshire
South Stoneham House, Southampton, Hampshire
Stoke Park, Buckinghamshire
Stowe Landscape Garden
Syon House, West London
Temple Newsam, Leeds
Thorndon Hall, Essex
Trentham Gardens, Staffordshire
Ugbrooke Park, Devon
Wallington, Northumberland[36]
Warwick Castle, Warwick
Wentworth Castle, South Yorkshire
West Hill, Putney, South London
Weston Park, Staffordshire
Whitehall, London
Whitley Beaumont, West Yorkshire
Widdicombe Park, near Slapton, Devon
Wimbledon House, South West London
Wimbledon Park, South West London
Wimpole Hall, Cambridgeshire
Woburn Abbey, Bedfordshire
Wolterton Hall, Norfolk
Woodchester, Gloucestershire
Woodside, Berkshire
Wootton Place Rectory, Oxfordshire
Wotton, Buckinghamshire
Wrest Park, Bedfordshire
Wrotham Park, Hertfordshire
Wycombe Abbey, Buckinghamshire
Wynnstay, Clwyd, Wales
Youngsbury, Hertfordshire
More than 30 of the gardens are open to the public.
CRITISISM
Richard Owen Cambridge, the English poet and satirical author, declared that he hoped to die before Brown so that he could "see heaven before it was 'improved'." This was a typical statement reflecting the controversy about Brown's work, which has continued over the last 200 years. By contrast, a recent historian and author, Richard Bisgrove, described Brown's process as perfecting nature by "judicious manipulation of its components, adding a tree here or a concealed head of water there. His art attended to the formal potential of ground, water, trees and so gave to English landscape its ideal forms. The difficulty was that less capable imitators and less sophisticated spectators did not see nature perfected... they saw simply what they took to be nature."
Quote; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capability_Brown
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3rnhSchQQk

This mans influence on the British ideal of landscape was huge, his works of art are still in tact today and many of them are publicly accessible. It would be really interesting to see these places and to document the change.  
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Berris Conolly- Hackney Photographs 1985-1987

9/11/2018

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Picture
Photo Source: http://www.berrisconolly.com/photo_12855817.html
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Liz wells- Land matters pages 161- 211.

9/11/2018

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Pastoral heritage: Britain viewed through a critical lens.

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