• Home
  • Work
    • Bourke's Regulars
    • The Future's Bright
    • Portraits of Employees Deceased, Left, Retired
    • From Around These Parts
    • Pictures of People in Public Places
  • Short Stories
    • Bye Bye Baker Building
    • Demolition
    • New Faces
    • On the Steps
    • Out of Season
    • Socially Distant
    • The Touring Shroud
    • Somewhere In-between
  • Publications
    • Framelines
    • Normal Service Will Be Resumed
    • No Smoking After 4pm
    • Portmanteau
  • Black & White
    • Darkroom Workbook
    • Black & White Gallery
  • Commercial
    • Family
    • Portraits
    • Product
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Menu

Matt Peers

  • Home
  • Work
    • Bourke's Regulars
    • The Future's Bright
    • Portraits of Employees Deceased, Left, Retired
    • From Around These Parts
    • Pictures of People in Public Places
  • Short Stories
    • Bye Bye Baker Building
    • Demolition
    • New Faces
    • On the Steps
    • Out of Season
    • Socially Distant
    • The Touring Shroud
    • Somewhere In-between
  • Publications
    • Framelines
    • Normal Service Will Be Resumed
    • No Smoking After 4pm
    • Portmanteau
  • Black & White
    • Darkroom Workbook
    • Black & White Gallery
  • Commercial
    • Family
    • Portraits
    • Product
  • Blog
  • Contact

Going in close... I wasn't really going to be hit...honestly.

An evening with Bruce ...

May 15, 2014 in Photography skills, Portraits, Street Photography

....Gilden. A few weeks ago I was lucky to see a talk by the Magnum celebrated street photographer Bruce Gilden. Not only was the event inspirational, it was held in the lovely new Library of Birmingham, through their photographic enterprise GRAIN and cost the unbelievable amount of £3! His work focuses on the people he finds ‘interesting’; many are on the margins of ’normal’ society, and his work is often considered shocking for the in your face confrontational style. Ironically, for a man who has traded blows on the tough streets of New York, taken candid images of real Russian and Japanese gangsters and witnessed voodoo rituals in Haiti, the people that scared him most were the ones he met  on the West Bromwich high street! 

Did he or did he not play football for West Bromwich Albion in the late 70s? The Secret Footballer by Me and I Photography

What struck me most about his talk was not his desire of the dangerous or the exploitation of the certain members of society, but to talk to people and listen to their stories. In doing so, his images are challenging, thought provoking and at times, down right hilarious. 

Walking past a city centre building site presented me with a marvellous portrait opportunity.

Permission was granted before this shot  was taken.

There are a growing number of online photographic and sociologic projects such a people of new york and the people of soho , capturing real people and their stories. Now, I can only dream that my efforts one day get close to Mr. Gilden’s work, but I’ll continue to talk to people and hopefully take a good image or two...

The lit advertising board was a great impromptu lighting set up.

In the food Market by the Festival Hall, South Bank,  I looked like any other tourist with a camera.

For some reason it's aways easy to get a portrait by the National Portrait Gallery...

His eyes seemed to look straight in to my non religious soul.

Till next time...

 

Matt Peers

 

Tags: Inspiration, Birmingham, Portraits, street portraits
Prev / Next

Latest Posts

Blog
Normal Service Will Be Resumed - The Ilford Blog
Normal Service Will Be Resumed - The Ilford Blog
about 8 months ago
Ready for launch
Ready for launch
about 8 months ago
Framelines Feature
Framelines Feature
about 9 months ago
Behind the Image #29
about 5 years ago
The shifting verticals and horizontals of Milton Keynes
The shifting verticals and horizontals of Milton Keynes
about 5 years ago

I was obviously a good boy in 2019, as at Christmas, Santa Claus flew via Japan and got me a 75mm f4.5 shift lens for my Pentax 67II. Where better to test the precise verticals than the clean lines of Milton Keynes…

Not being Vivian Maier - a sort of review of the Rolleiflex 2.8f
Not being Vivian Maier - a sort of review of the Rolleiflex 2.8f
about 5 years ago

It has nearly been 12 months since I got my hands on a Rolleiflex 2.8f, and whilst I'm not usually a reviewer of equipment, I'd like to share my experience of using this iconic camera and the inspiration behind me finally owning one.

Behind the image #28
about 6 years ago
Kent Light
Kent Light
about 6 years ago
Three Billboards
Three Billboards
about 6 years ago

Three Billboards in Digbeth

A Notion of Heritage
A Notion of Heritage
about 6 years ago

What you doing?"

"What you doing that for?"

"Why here?"

I get these questions regularly when I'm out shooting, but never more so than my recent couple of visits to Milton Keynes.