
The Land Behind: Conversations on Photography, Perception and Place
by Peter Holliday
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Recent episodes
11. Simon Roberts: Landscape Photography as Social Commentary
Sep 19, 2023
Unknown duration
10. Joakim Eskildsen: Views from Home
Aug 8, 2023
Unknown duration
9. Nicholas J. R. White: A New Path Across a Well-Trodden Place
Jul 25, 2023
Unknown duration
8. Emanuel Cederqvist: The Margin of Error
Jun 6, 2023
Unknown duration
7. Leander Knust & A. P. Bergeron: Being a Lighthouse
May 29, 2023
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9/19/23 | 11. Simon Roberts: Landscape Photography as Social Commentary | Peter speaks to the Brighton-based British photographer Simon Roberts about his experience photographing England’s social landscape in the decade preceding Brexit. Whilst Simon’s unique large format perspectives draw their significance from a long and rich tradition of British landscape representation, they demonstrate a challenge to traditional stereotypes and idealised cliches of Britain’s visual geography. Simon’s photographic depictions of Britain's high streets, beach resorts, national parks and leisure piers reveals an England which Turner or Constable would not recognise. Rather, Simon's work exists as a critical social commentary on the conflicting perspectives of Britishness from the midst of Britain’s post-industrial, post-imperial landscape of the early 21st century.https://www.simoncroberts.com/Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 8/8/23 | 10. Joakim Eskildsen: Views from Home | Peter speaks to the Danish photographer Joakim Eskildsen about his three-decade long career and the deep connections he has forged along the way. They touch on many topics, including Joakim’s current show at the Fotografisk Center in Copenhagen as well as his experience making a book with Steidl. They also discuss the meaning of home and consider what the 19th century Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard can teach us about the nature of beauty. Joakim also discusses his formative years as a student in Finland and shares the experience of his encounter with Finnish photographers including Ritva Kovalainen, Pekka Turunen, Pentti Sammalahti and Jorma Puranen, as he considers the impact these mentors have had on his approach to image-making.https://www.joakimeskildsen.comJoin the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 7/25/23 | 9. Nicholas J. R. White: A New Path Across a Well-Trodden Place | Peter speaks with the Dartmoor-based British photographer Nicholas J. R. White about the interests and concerns that motivate his long-form, research-based and environmentally-situated large format practice. A graduate of Plymouth College of Art, Nicholas draws many of his motifs from the surrounding British landscape, and much of his photographic work can be characterised by underlying questions of land ownership and environmental rights. https://www.nicholasjrwhite.co.uk/Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 6/6/23 | 8. Emanuel Cederqvist: The Margin of Error | Peter speaks to the Swedish Gothenburg-based photographer Emanuel Cederqvist about his book The Margin of Error. Born in Stockholm in 1863, Axel Hamberg is remembered today as a geographer, a scientist and a cartographer. What is perhaps lesser known about this man is his talent as a photographer. At the beginning of the 20th century, Hamberg began journeying to the glaciated highlands of the Scandinavian Mountains to conduct a number of geological surveys in the region of Sarek. These studies were carried out over a period of several decades, and in 1922, Hamberg’s photographs from these expeditions were published by the Swedish Tourist Association in his book named The Mountains of Sarek. Almost a century later, Emanuel Cederqvist would happen upon the weather station built by Hamberg at Pårtetjåkkå during a hike through Sarek National Park with his father in 2013. Over a subsequent period of six years the Gothenburg-based photographer returned to this region of the Swedish Arctic to continue a dialogue with the history of Axel Hamberg. The photographs from these explorations were eventually printed alongside Hamberg’s archive images in Cederqvist’s own book The Margin of Error, self-published in 2019 via the artist book collective Blackbook Publications. The Margin of Error is an important and valuable work exploring the convergence between two distinct historical perspectives within the same space. Its pages invite many deep and complex questions, not only about the ways by which we come to perceive and understand landscapes, but about the essence of the documentary medium itself.https://emanuelcederqvist.se/Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 5/29/23 | 7. Leander Knust & A. P. Bergeron: Being a Lighthouse | Peter speaks to the site-specific musicians and installation artists Leander Knust and A. P. Bergeron in conversation on the other side of the North Atlantic Ocean. For two weeks, Leander and A. P. have been collaborating together at an artist's residency aboard a 19th century lighthouse off the east coast of Long Island. During their conversation, many questions are asked; Where and how do artistic endeavours begin? How can technology mediate the artist's connection to the natural world? What are the ways by which artists represent the relationship between themselves and their environment?https://bangklang.bandcamp.com/album/an-arctic-requiemJoin the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehindPhoto: United States Coast Guard | — | ||||||
| 5/20/23 | 6. Robert Darch: The Island | Peter speaks to Robert Darch about his new self-published photobook 'The Island'. As a self-described “artist-photographer”, Robert was born and raised in the Midlands. In the early 2000’s, he studied his BA in Photography at Newport in South Wales before falling seriously ill for a number of years. After his recovery he found himself in Devon, where in 2013 he returned to study his MFA at the University of Plymouth under the guidance of Jem Southam. Drawing inspiration from his personal life experiences, Robert's work is a profound reflection on the complex nuances of the histories to which our cultural existence belongs. His latest photobook 'The Island' is a visual response to the psychological impact of political events, in this case the resulting social consequences of the Brexit referendum in 2016.https://www.robertdarch.com/Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 5/9/23 | 5. Richard Beaven: All of Us | Peter speaks to Richard Beaven from his home in upstate New York about his experience being a British photographer living and working in the post-9/11 landscape of the United States. During their in-depth conversation, they remember the deep and complex geological, cultural, political and colonial histories of the Hudson River Valley where Richard now has his home, and what these multi-layered narratives of the Hudson watershed might reveal about the tensions and possibilities of the current state of American society itself. Having previously worked in the corporate world of advertising, Richard began to pursue a career in photography in 2011. Since then he has worked on assignments for clients such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Guardian. In 2020, he published the monograph All of Us in collaboration with the publisher Daylight Books. Focusing on the post-industrial and agricultural landscapes of upstate New York, Richard’s artistic practice seeks to reveal the spirit of the Hudson Valley in the faces of the people who inhabit it. As he alludes to during his discussion with Peter, his portraits are grounded in an air of empathy, hope and discovery. With this attitude in mind, he stresses the importance of interpersonal dialogue in his practice, including the imperative of being open to different ways of looking at the world.https://www.richardbeaven.com/Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 4/30/23 | 4. Siân Davey: Confessions of a Photographer | Peter speaks to Siân Davey to discuss how Siân's faith in humanity continues to shape her perception as a psychotherapist-turned-photographer. With reference to her photographs, Siân considers the restorative power of gardening during times of crisis. Throughout their conversation, they touch on the relationship between trauma and hope, Sian’s life as a mother, and the ways in which Buddhism has influenced her artistic practice. Meanwhile, Peter considers what a visit to the dentist can teach a photographer about what it means to live a life subject to the phenomenon of time. https://www.siandavey.com/ Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 4/24/23 | 3. Alys Tomlinson: Being Human | Peter speaks with the London-based documentary photographer Alys Tomlinson. Motivated by anthropological considerations such as the relationship between faith, identity and place, in 2018 Alys was the winner of the Sony World Photography Awards. In 2020, she was awarded first place in the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize. Having just published her new photo book Gli Isolani inspired by cultural events and traditions specific to the Mediterranean islands of Sicily and Sardinia, Alys speaks about her upcoming documentary film Vera, based on the hidden life of the Orthodox nun after which the production assumes its working title. Peter also asks Alys about the parallels between photography and anthropology. Together, they consider the ways in which the documentary image can represent the concerns and conditions that make us who we are as human beings, with the dignity and openness the photographer's subject matter deserves.https://www.alystomlinson.co.ukJoin the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
| 4/14/23 | 2. Tim Ingold: Ecologies of Perception | Peter speaks to the ecological anthropologist Tim Ingold. During their in-depth discussion, they consider the nature of human-animal relationships and ecologies of perception. Meanwhile, they break down the false dichotomy between culture and nature, and consider the natural environment as the meeting place between earth and sky. With a distinguished career spanning over five decades, Tim is the author of 14 books and numerous articles. While he is known for his extensive research on the nature of landscape perception and the phenomenon of human-animal relationships, he has also written on artistic practises and has suggested ways of rethinking architecture, including how we might come to inhabit landscapes again. After graduating from the University of Cambridge in 1970, he spent 16 months with Sámi reindeer communities in northeast Finland. Following a year teaching at the University of Helsinki, in 1974 Tim became a lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Manchester. In 1999 Tim moved to the University of Aberdeen to assume the newly established Chair of Social Anthropology. As well as being a fellow of both the British Academy and the Royal Society of Edinburgh, he holds an Honourary Doctorate in Social Science and Art from the University of Lapland in Rovaniemi, Finland. https://www.timingold.com/Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
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| 4/6/23 | 1. Simon Murphy: Upon a Common Ground | Peter speaks with the Glasgow-based documentary photographer and lecturer Simon Murphy. In a wide-ranging discussion, they explore the landscape of Govanhill as a crossroads between different ways of seeing, not least between photographer and subject. They also reflect on the photographer’s responsibility in representing the face of another, and consider the gift of vision itself.https://www.instagram.com/smurph77Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
6 placements across 5 markets.
Chart Positions
6 placements across 5 markets.











