Creative Course: Caminos Altos / this morning…
After a day’s intermission in the studio, caused by a little snow, normal service was resumed. We got a little altitude, around 1400m / 4600 ft. and also got the view…
After a day’s intermission in the studio, caused by a little snow, normal service was resumed. We got a little altitude, around 1400m / 4600 ft. and also got the view…
Previous (and future) resident artist with Joya: arte + ecología at Cortijada Los Gázquez, Trish Scott is exhibiting her performance/video Stone Shoes (2010) ©2010 Trish Scott at Space Station Sixty-Five, 65 North Cross Road, London SE22 9ET. 7/12/2010 - 24/01/2010.
The sequences in her performance/video were all taken during her residency here in the Comarca de Los Vélez, Andalucia.
This was day 14 of our trek across Zanskar. These are our pack animals silhouetted against the Tsarap River below. The trek is so long and high that it’s nearly impossible to complete whilst carrying your own provisions on your back. There are no handy little gas bottles up here, it’s kerosene and a large burner and a pressure cooker to throw everything in.
We had to hire mules, one each and one for the mule man. But then he was travelling back to the Kulu Valley for the potato harvest with his friend Krishnan (along with his mules). In the end it appeared as if we were part of a nine strong mule train picking across the narrow paths high in the Himalaya.
… and for those sceptics who might suggest I have altered the values on this image in Photoshop I will vigorously deny any such accusation. I did use Photoshop but only to re-size the image for this blog.
These are some of the best months for photography in Andalucía as the lower sun on the horizon can create some fantastic atmospheric effects.
Zanskari landscapes from 1997. This time we are approaching Sengge La 5000m. The extreme contrast of light and dark is caused by huge cumulus nimbus clouds. At this altitude in the thin air with the very high levels of ultra violet and such a vast landscape the contrast is much more pronounced. It’s a great spot for landscape photography as it’s so painterly.
That night we camped close to Lingshed and the Gelukpa gompa. The next morning we observed the monks at prayer and drank yak butter tea. Mmmm (not).
We’ve been tidying up the office and came upon our old slides of India. I love digital photography but I do miss a good roll of Fuji Velvia. This young novice monk lived in Lamayuru monastery in Ladakh. Ladakh is ‘little Tibet’ in the far north east corner of Jammu and Kashmir and is more or less totally Buddhist.
Lamayuru was the starting point of our epic twenty one day trek from Ladakh, across Zanskar and into the Kulu Valley. We were really fit then doing ten passes over 5000m in the first nine days. Below is a village called Photksar. The landscape is so huge here photographs create a misleading perception of scale. This could be a close up until you notice the little houses…
Cortijada Los Gázquez and Joya: arte + ecología are looking forward to the residency of Fine Art photographer Mary Maclean. Her work explores the representations of the experience of place, questioning the relationship between the photographic image and the subjective experience of socialised, architectural space.
Awards include an Abbey Award at the British School at Rome, the Pollock Krasner Foundation Award and Visiting Fellow in Painting at Winchester School of Art. Maclean lives and works in London and teaches Fine Art at the University of Reading.
Cortijada Los Gázquez and the Joya: arte + ecología residency are looking forward to receiving Brooklyn artist Sarah G. Sharp to the mountains of the Comarca de Los Vélez…
Casteller from Mike Randolph on Vimeo.
Thanks Ben for showing me this. It’s one of those things that makes Spain such a great place.