Archive for the ‘London’ Category

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20 Dec 2009

Churchill & New York City

What a truly random combination of work, but it’s what I have to discuss right now!

As I prepare to prepare (yes, I’m that far behind) for my trip to Ireland, I’m doing my best to finish editing my NYC photos.  It’s a fair bet, however, that while I may post them in my gallery on my website, nothing new is going to make its way to my prints until I’m back.

I encourage you all to take a  look at the NYC photos I’ve posted thus far and will likely add to in the next week (so check back).

Mark Tisdale – Sept 2009 in NYC Gallery

There’s already some photos in there of which I’m very proud.  And as is often the fact, I look at them and ponder when I might make it back to explore more of what I saw.  Not tomorrow by any stretch, but someday I expect.

Lady Liberty Lifts Her Light

Lady Liberty Lifts Her Light

Knowing my sometime predictable luck,  it should be no surprise that the boat ride on my first day in New York was as close as I ever got to the famous Statue of Liberty.  Bad weather the morning I intended on visiting left this my best view, but it was not bad at all.  The statue is a true treasure, and my photos that day gave me an excuse to do something a little more artistic, creating this many layered image to resemble an old color postcard.

New York Rhythm

New York Rhythm

This is one image I was quite taken with.  It does require a small amount of explanation, though.  I am quite near sighted and have an astigmatism.  I would not get far in the world without my glasses.  I was on a night tour of the city and took my glasses off for a second and glanced down a side street.  This is more or less what I saw.  And I loved the view, the city boiled down to its chaotic best.  Lights without form!  It suddenly occurred to me that I could reproduce this for my camera by putting it out of focus.  So, you can see the world as I saw it.  I played with this off and on the rest of the evening, and may post more but this first try was my favorite.

And now that you’ve seen some New York City, I can jump to Winston Churchill, because the connection is obvious isn’t it?  Maybe you don’t know that the iconic prime minister of the United Kingdom, in fact, had American ties?  His mother was born in Rochester, New York, and was raised in Brooklyn and New York City.    So yes, there is a connection between New York and the famous British Bulldog. However, truth be told, there’s a different reason I’m posting this one.  A couple of days ago, I was contacted by a would be buyer who really liked my photo of the statue of Winston Churchill silhouetted in front of London’s Big Ben.  However, she had a special request that I fulfilled.

She wanted me to include the Churchill quotation that I have always included with the description of this piece on the print itself.  And I think it was an excellent request!  I’m really happy with the result and wanted to share it.  I think it definitely helps anchor and explain the image and it was almost as if I left that massive base just for this purpose.  I wish I could have been that forward thinking!  Anyway, here’s hoping she enjoys it when she receives it!
4 Oct 2009

London Tate Modern

It took four visits to London to finally make a call on London’s Tate Modern.  In my defense, I had visited the British Museum (twice), The National Gallery, The National Portrait Gallery, and the Victoria And Albert Museum.  I think I may be missing a couple in that list.  The point is that London overflows with opportunity to take in the arts and the history of said human activity.  I am less so a fan of modern art than what we would term traditional art, so it was not surprising that it took me so long to get to the Tate Modern.

Tate Modern

Tate Modern


This is a view of the Tate Modern from the opposite side of the Thames.  The Tate Modern actually occupies what was formerly the Bankside power station, a massive post-war building that embodies much of the modern in its blocky architecture.  The power plant was shuttered in 1981 and in recent years converted into a wing of the Tate musuem, housing modern and contemporary art from 1900 and forward.  Seen also in this view is the Millennium pedestrian bridge built to celebrate the 21st century.

Turbine Hall

Turbine Hall

The interior of the museum is as much a work of modern art as the extensive and revolving collection it houses.  Stripped of much of the original and mammoth machinery this building once housed, you get massive spaces such as this, the Turbine Hall, in the middle of the structure.  The lines of this place have to be seen to truly be experienced but I feel this print goes a long way towards conveying the proportions.

If modern art is not your thing, you’ll be forgiven for seeking out other places if you visit London with limited time, but if you have time to spare, or you are a fan of modern art, you must check out this place.  As with many of the galleries and museums in London, the Tate Modern is free (temporary exhibitions are the exception).

17 Sep 2009

St Pauls Cathedral

St Paul’s Cathedral is certainly an icon of London.  The images of the great dome standing above the smoke of WWII is certainly one that will live in our collective conscious for years to come.  Officially the Cathedral Church of Paul the Apostle, the church is at least the 5th St Paul’s to sit on this site.  The first according to Bede was built in 604 AD.

Crossing Over

Crossing Over

This photo was taken from the pedestrian bridge that connects Bankside with the City of London.  It’s taken at a very shallow depth of field in order to accomplish the dreamy feel of this image.  The only thing in focus at all is the dome and the mass of humanity before it become little more than a blur.    This church was built after the last was destroyed by the great fire in 1666.  The fire leveled the city but remarkably took no human life.  The fire shaped everything about the city we know today, built in stone to lower the risk of fire consuming it.  The dome was a point of much debate.  The architect, the renowned Sir Christopher Wren was determined that the new St Paul’s would have a dome like St. Peter’s in Rome.  Several iterations of the design were rejected before Wren decided not to show any more models to the public for criticism.  When it was completed in 1708, some loved it, some hated it, and others couldn’t care either way.  Today it’s hard to imagine the sky line of the old city without it.

Old And New

Old And New


Another view of St. Paul’s From Bankside.  The view is much changed since WWII.  The buildings adjacent to the Thames were destroyed in the war and newer generations of buildings have grown up between the River and the cathedral.  And more recently, the millennium bridge was built as a pedestrian walkway to connect the City of London with Bankside on opposite sides of the River Thames.  London as a city has never gotten stuck in a particular style.  As a growing metropolis, new and exciting architecture is always fighting for space beside the classics.  Much as the classics, these are sometimes met with mixed reactions.  When the Millennium bridge  was completed in 2000, there was a noticeable wobble and the bridge was closed, repaired and reopened in 2002.  This led to its nickname The Wobbly Bridge.

Iconic St Paul's

Iconic St Paul's

Another black and white image of St. Paul’s.  The depth of field and processing was intended to provide a little of the feel of the old images of St. Paul’s amidst the smoke from the Blitz of WWII.

To see more of London and Great Britain, please check out my Britain Prints Gallery.

2 Jul 2009

London Calling – Print Available

To date, my most popular print was taken on my second trip to the UK in May of 2005.  I have always had a fondness for the traditional British Red Telephone Boxes.  There’s something about them that immediately says Britain.  I simply cannot tell you how many photos I’ve taken of them in previous and subsequent trips.  In some ways, they have very much become dinosaurs in this age of mobile phones, but from Scottish Islands to city streets in London, you’ll still find these boxes dotting the landscape.

The first Red Telephone Box was the result of a competition in 1924 and was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott.  There were a few iterations culminating in the current design in 1935 to celebrate the silver jubilee of King George V.  This is the familiar design that has found its way throughout the United Kingdom and beyond today.

London Calling - Red Telephone Box

London Calling - Red Telephone Box

This particular phone booth was photographed near the Embankment Tube Station near the Thames.  It was taken with my simple point and shoot Olympus camera.  Obviously, I then utilized photoshop for the final product, converting the image to black and white and then with a virtual brush, removing the black and white layer just from the phone box to allow the booth to really shine.  While I’ve seen this type of selective color treatment done frequently, it’s definitely a style that requires just the right image.  I believe I found it in this case.

Although so far I have mainly created work that was destined to be printed for display, this is one work that I have also converted into a popular t-shirt which is also available.

London Calling T-shirt

London Calling T-shirt

10 Dec 2008

On The Horizon

I’m still working on photos from England in September and my next trip is literally on the horizon.  I’ll be in Costa Rica just a few days after Christmas, and in Nicaragua when the New Year rolls around.  I’ll accumulate more photos, so I really have to buckle down and finish with London already!  I know, harsh life I lead!  You all really have no idea how thankful I am that I have had the opportunity the last few years to see more of the world. It’s still only a taste of that wide huge world, and I hopea subset of many travels, but it’s more than many will ever get to do and I do appreciate that.

A couple of months later, and I already feel nostalgic looking at London photos.  A few minutes ago, I was looking at photos from Egypt, just now closing in on a year old, and the I felt the longing to see those places again.  It feels like a decade, not a year.

The trip to Costa Rica & Nicaragua is shaping up to be promising.  GAP Adventures has a web site with forums where one can post to chat with others on your trip.  So far, only three of us have posted, all into photography. That spells awesome to me!  Hope I’m not jinxing myself by saying that!

Anyway, on with some photos from the London album.  The new ones since the last post start here at the bottom of page 10 and there are many.  So, please check out the gallery for more.

London Vogue - Millennium Foot Bridge

London Vogue - Millennium Foot Bridge

This shot was taken on the Millennium foot bridge over the Thames.  It’s viewed from the direction of the south bank.   Iconic Saint Paul’s Cathedral dominates the skyline while.  I knelt here for a bit and took several shots, waiting for someone to hit the mark so to speak.  These two really made this photo for me, my favorite of the lot.

London City Hall

London City Hall

This was shot with my fisheye lens, which is exaggerating some of the lines a bit, but believe me, this is an impressive modern building.  You might expect London’s city offices to be in some centuries old building, but this is new millennium stuff here.  It’s a Norman Foster design and truly shows that London is still a city willing to take chances with the fabric of its ever growing and changing city.

Uniquely London - Tower Bridge

Uniquely London - Tower Bridge

I took a ton of shots of Tower Bridge bathed in the afternoon sun, but this is my favorite, the one where I had the good fortune of seeing a plane coming into view in the sky above.  This was the icing on the cake.

Crossing Over - Saint Pauls Cathedral

Crossing Over - Saint Pauls Cathedral

One more from the south bank, this time another shot of St. Pauls, but this time I used my 50mm lens and went for very low depth of field throwing all the people crossing the millennium bridge ahead of me out of focus.  Only the dome is in focus.  I was trying to get something that was a little edgy and a little classic in shape.  I like how it turned out.

I do hope you’ll all check out the gallery and updates as I skipped a ton of shots, like one of Tower Bridge in the up position.  I had to laugh, 4th time in London and I had never seen the draw bridge up.  In one trip, I saw it no less than 3 times.  I was so jaded by it,I’m not sure I even took a photo the last time.  Also more red phone booths, London City Hall, Tate Modern, and the Millennium bridge.