Photographers

Working the location

Working the location

The Art of Adventure - Bruce Percy

Just a short post today about some of the beautiful images made on my recent Eigg workshop.

I’ve enjoyed coming here this past fifteen years because it’s a great learning environment: We are able to repeat locations each day because we only have two.

The weather, as well as changes in tide can transform a landscape, and I have never found this place to be limiting to what one can shoot. I also particularly enjoy the fact that the group get to ‘know’ the place, and go back to work on a particular part of the beach that they find interesting.

Rostislav Gerasimov, Israel

It would be easy to assume that over fifteen years of running a workshop here, that I would have seen everything by now, but this has never been the case.

Rosti’s image above proves this point to me, as does the other two images featured in this post today. Shot on the most northern beach on Eigg, I have often found that this particular beach is either a hit for the group or not. Some weeks I come here, the group either find they can’t see much here, or they wish to return every day because they are finding so much. This week’s group found the beach engaging and I saw different compositions here that I have not seen before.

Philippe Beekmans, Belgium

On the first morning we came down to the beach and it was one of those ‘rain hanging in air’ sort of days. Where there is a fine mist of rain on everything. Hard to stay dry and hard to keep the lens dry as well. But we got plenty of nice images. Philippe had said upon first arriving that he did not feel there was much here to photograph. I think this is a common problem for many: being able to get beyond what they see, or perhaps to overcome how the feel about being in bad weather. Rarely does one look at a photograph of bad weather later on and think ‘how horrible!’. Mostly we tend to enjoy the tones and atmospheres present. The image above is such a case. The quality of the light that morning - particularly at twilight gave off a ‘teal’ colour which I think very beautiful.

Andy Coulter, Northern Ireland

Andy’s photo of Laig bay is interesting. The shot made a few minutes earlier was nowhere near as interesting as this shot is - all because of a shallow tide that came in over the green and red rocks in the foreground. This brought on a less defined, low contrast foreground. It is a subtle minimalist study that I have not seen before on Eigg and which I enjoyed very much.

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