


The life, loves, art works and inspirations of a young photographer.






Recently I went up to London and noticed all these colourful, beautifully made model elephants around. I went to Trafalgar Square, Oxford Circus and Southbank and throughout my journey I kept seeing these elephants. Turns out there are over 250 of them all over London, each elephant has been decorated by a different artist or celebrity and is a conservation campaign that shines a spotlight on the urgent crisis faced by the endangered Asian elephant due to their habitat being torn down. Every elephant is for sale by auction and every bid you place is a bid for habitat. For more information visit http://www.elephantparadelondon.org/
I absolutely fell in love with this event, which is London's biggest outdoor art event on record, therefore I am planning to do my own project on these wonderful elephants. I am back home in a weeks time so I am going to download the route map provided on the website, which shows were all the different elephants are situated, and try and photograph all of them. I have not quite got all the details of exactly how I am going to do it yet but I know it will be good fun... 

However, the catalogue was a little disappointing compared to how great the exhibition was. It didn't contain the whole exhibition and some of my favourite images weren't included. Although Irving Penn's other books are definitely a lot more successful in my opinion, this one was still worth buying just as a momentum of the exhibition as unfortunately there were no postcards of it for a sale, which I was a little annoyed about as I like to collect a few postcards of my favourite images from any exhibitions I go to. The exhibition is only on for another few weeks and so I encourage anyone and everyone who gets a chance to go see it!
I also visited the Tate Modern as I hadn't been there for a while and always love the variety of exhibitions they have on as well as their permanent exhibition, which is always worth going back to! There wasn't anything in particular I went to see but two exhibitions were really enjoyable.
which I knew nothing of and suprised me at how much I liked it! It was a unique and exciting chance for van Doesburg's work to be seen for the first time in the UK and his follows in the footsteps of a series of exhibitions looking at different aspects of Modernism, conceived by Vicente Todolí, Director of Tate Modern. 
The project was a fascinating documentation of people's homes and I loved the whole concept and technicalities behind the body of work. However I thought the way the photographs were displayed in the Tate Modern was a little... well sloppy. Each images top corners were nailed to the wall and whilst I liked the simplicity of the display, I felt that all four corners should have been secured down as the bottom was flapping away from the wall which slightly ruined the impact from the mass of images. Yet still a fantastic project with a great idea and wonderfully colourful images. Another exhibitions worth seeing and I will definitely be looking up more of Gill's work.