‘Some things leave a lasting scar’

Shown a s part of a Pop up exhibition at BirdHouse, Forres with BirdHouse Photography Collective

‘Some things leave a lasting scar’

Made of flesh, Made of blood, Made of memories, Made of love

This summer I took a cycle tour to Burghead travelling along the beach in front of Roseisle Forest to Findhorn. The soft sand on the beach made for slow progress on
my bike.

I had a plan to photograph the Pill Box buildings still visible just above the tideline. I took my Zeiss Ikon Ikonta medium format camera which is contemporary to the period the buildings were made.

What struck me the most that although some of the buildings were sitting at odd angles they remained for the most part structurally intact. It was obvious that the position of the buildings had changed the sand of the dunes beneath where they had stood had eroded by the action of weather and tides. The buildings had sunk intact on their foundations and their tumble towards the sea had been imperceptible.

This weekend marks the 100 year anniversary of the Armistice and the end of the First World War. Less than 20 years later Europe was cast into another horrific conflict.

The structures I photographed are now 75 years old built partly to defend the beaches and as practice grounds for the D-Day landings. Their slow migration down the beach and the changing appearance of the dunes, the only sign that any time has passed. Built to withstand missiles and bombs they remain on the beach as a reminder of the madness of the industry of war.

My dad was born in 1937 he has described to me how the losses sustained in both world wars had profound affects on prosperity, both to individual families and society due in no small part to the sheer numbers of people that didn’t return.

I’m lucky enough to be part of a generation that hasn’t known war on the same scale but at the same time I’m surrounded by these reminders of this past.

I counted fourteen Pill Box structures just on this one stretch of beach from Burghead to Findhorn. I photographed them all. I think I could repeat the project at any number of locations throughout the country. I was struck by the contrast between these immovable, dense, cast concrete forms and the fragility of the landscape and the humanity these buildings were designed to protect.

#armistice100 #armistice #exhibition

Jessica-Dittmer

“Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day workshop and celebration”


Chris Bird

BirdHouse
98A Dunedin Place
North Road, Forres
Forres, Moray, United Kingdom
Sunday, April 24, 2016

Come and join us to celebrate Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day on Sunday 24th April at the BirdHouse, Forres (opposite the Mosset Tavern) Create and develop your very own ‘Old Skool’ pinhole photogrpah and get it published on the Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day website.
2 sessions 10am – 12noon & 2 – 4pm
£3 towards materials please

Contact: Chris Bird [contact-form][contact-field label=’Name’ type=’name’ required=’1’/][contact-field label=’Email’ type=’email’ required=’1’/][contact-field label=’Website’ type=’url’/][contact-field label=’Comment’ type=’textarea’ required=’1’/][/contact-form]
Web Site: http://www.BirdHouse.place
3381

The ‘Bird House’

Visit the ‘Bird House’ for an exhibition of Pinhole Photography and Solargraphy ( extreme long exposure pinhole photography) by Chris Bird, 11am-5pm Saturday 26th September ‪#‎CultureDay‬ ‪#‎Forres‬ ‪#‎PinholePhotography‬ ‪#‎Solargraphy‬img207

logie-solargraph1-web

Promenade


#pinhole

Drift


cant help but wonder where about the origin of some of the objects found on the beach at Spey Bay