36 Views of Burges Park

Photographs and Text by Raphaël Castillo

BA (Hons) Interaction Design Arts

Forever inspired by the Ukiyo‐e work of Katsushika Hokusai and Utagawa Hiroshige, each of whom have a series of prints titled 36 Views of Mount Fuji, but also by Burges Park and the parks of London in general, I started working on a series of prints and documentary pictures which focus on the subconscious relationship between nature and the urban citizens reflected in parks. Though nature has always been alluded to in my work, in times of successive lockdowns, many of us have started to perceive parks differently. 

In the illustrations of the Japanese masters, I had always been fond of the balance between the attention given  to  the  interaction  of  the  Elements,  and  that  given  to  the  things  of  human  culture. Their way of working in series and the overall process of printing, make their work key influences for the original development of photography and has long impacted my way of writing pictures. Though one major change is to be noticed. Most of the works in the two masters’  series  contain  human  figures,  dancing  with  their  respective  tools  in  the  middle  of  intricate landscapes. This adds much liveliness and warmth to their images, one which I feel could be missing from mine. However, photography itself is a technological process, and the technology which was then shown in a sophisticated balance with nature, has now taken over the whole landscape, as well as human activity.

I have found serenity in keeping these images quiet, letting whatever technologically induced noise you already have around do the noise. 

www.raphaelfondation.com 

YOU WILL CALL IT FATE

Words & Photographs by Ryan Blackwell

MA Design for Art Direction

https://www.beyondphotography.online/

Ryan Blackwell is the co-founding creative director of Beyond Photography, a multidisciplinary platform exploring the way photography is changing in the digital age. 

This series of images is part of an on-going project which is being turned into a book called You Will Call it Fate. The book uses glitch, AI, and non-traditional photography techniques to explore our human relationship with the internet and how digital and real-life impact each other. The project developed out of lockdown. Daily walks along the same routes bring your attention to buildings, objects, and the landscape that usually are taken for granted. By playing with the mediums, it was possible to create different results on every walk which formed the concept for this book.