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Stephen Taylor Court in Dezeen12.22 / 90for90 – Vajrasana Buddhist Centre03.22 / Bath Abbey in L+D10.21 / 100 Liverpool Street in arc10.21 / Bath Abbey on FCB Studios Blog04.21 / Knole House in Lighting Journal03.21 / Green Heart Birmingham in arc02.21 / Westminster Abbey in A1 Lighting10.20 / The Prince Akatoki in arc06.20 / #onephotochallenge05.20 / Norwich Cathedral in L+D03.20 / Tombola House in RIBA Journal12.19 / Illuminated River at Lightspace11.19 / Illuminated River in Architectural Record11.19 / The Architecture of Intuition10.19 / Gasholders in L+D10.19 / Up and Down09.19 / Tombola House in AJ09.19 / Illuminated River in arc09.19 / Royal Academy in Lighthinking06.19 / Watching Paint Dry06.19 / Glover’s Alley in B-EAT05.19 / English City Gardens in Arc05.19 / Gathering Light04.19 / Signs of Life03.19 / The (un)Illuminated River03.19 / Gasholders in Lighting10.18 / Architectural Photography Awards 201810.18 / The Royal Academy09.18 / T5 First Wing featured in Arc02.18 / Mithras image in Architectural Review02.18 / Bloomberg London in AJ12.17 / Lansdowne Club in FX05.17 / Take it as it comes01.17 / Made of Light Too website launched01.17 / Where is Everybody?11.16 / Arcaid Images Architectural Photography Awards10.16 / Appropriate Light, Serpentine Pavilion10.16 / Gasholder 8 in mondoarc10.16 / No Drama10.16 / Every Day is a Good Day09.16 / Sunset + 20 minutes09.16 / Appropriate Light, Turner Contemporary Margate08.16 / Guinness Storehouse in Lighting Magazine06.16 / 71 Queensway in the AJ05.16 / In Context04.16 / CP Hart Showroom in darc magazine03.16 / Fuzzy Boundaries03.16 / Oxford Brookes in Blueprint02.16 / Personal project on Documentary Platform01.16 / Oxford Brookes in Lighting/Blueprint12.15 / Is it possible to photograph the lights going on and off?07.15 / Feature in Lighting04.15 / Restoring the Light04.15 / Waiting for a Solar Eclipse03.15 / In Praise of Darkness10.14 / Sensing Spaces01.14 / Creative Review Award11.13 / Nocturnal Change06.13 / The Logistics of Space05.13 /
Stephen Taylor Court in Dezeen12.22 / 90for90 – Vajrasana Buddhist Centre03.22 / Bath Abbey in L+D10.21 / 100 Liverpool Street in arc10.21 / Bath Abbey on FCB Studios Blog04.21 / Knole House in Lighting Journal03.21 / Green Heart Birmingham in arc02.21 / Westminster Abbey in A1 Lighting10.20 / The Prince Akatoki in arc06.20 / #onephotochallenge05.20 / Norwich Cathedral in L+D03.20 / Tombola House in RIBA Journal12.19 / Illuminated River at Lightspace11.19 / Illuminated River in Architectural Record11.19 / The Architecture of Intuition10.19 / Gasholders in L+D10.19 / Up and Down09.19 / Tombola House in AJ09.19 / Illuminated River in arc09.19 / Royal Academy in Lighthinking06.19 / Watching Paint Dry06.19 / Glover’s Alley in B-EAT05.19 / English City Gardens in Arc05.19 / Gathering Light04.19 / Signs of Life03.19 / The (un)Illuminated River03.19 / Gasholders in Lighting10.18 / Architectural Photography Awards 201810.18 / The Royal Academy09.18 / T5 First Wing featured in Arc02.18 / Mithras image in Architectural Review02.18 / Bloomberg London in AJ12.17 / Lansdowne Club in FX05.17 / Take it as it comes01.17 / Made of Light Too website launched01.17 / Where is Everybody?11.16 / Arcaid Images Architectural Photography Awards10.16 / Appropriate Light, Serpentine Pavilion10.16 / Gasholder 8 in mondoarc10.16 / No Drama10.16 / Every Day is a Good Day09.16 / Sunset + 20 minutes09.16 / Appropriate Light, Turner Contemporary Margate08.16 / Guinness Storehouse in Lighting Magazine06.16 / 71 Queensway in the AJ05.16 / In Context04.16 / CP Hart Showroom in darc magazine03.16 / Fuzzy Boundaries03.16 / Oxford Brookes in Blueprint02.16 / Personal project on Documentary Platform01.16 / Oxford Brookes in Lighting/Blueprint12.15 / Is it possible to photograph the lights going on and off?07.15 / Feature in Lighting04.15 / Restoring the Light04.15 / Waiting for a Solar Eclipse03.15 / In Praise of Darkness10.14 / Sensing Spaces01.14 / Creative Review Award11.13 / Nocturnal Change06.13 / The Logistics of Space05.13 /

Signs of Life 03.19
Architecture in use (in photography speak) means having people in the pictures. I try to include people when possible but I am still guilty of doing this ‘within reason’, it has to be the right people in the right place for the photograph, people tidied up. The space is also usually tidied up, clean, new and presented in its best state for the photographs. Is this just the appearance of buildings in use?
What about the results of this use? Mess, wear and tear, the input of occupants rather than the design team. Should we, as photographers, show more of this? The results of a ‘building in use’ may not be suitable for project photography on first glance, but they are the result of the project in action. A building has a function and people fulfil this functionality through use. Wear and tear is visual evidence of a project ‘working’ and fulfilling its purpose – is this not evidence of its success?
I have been thinking about empathy and how to communicate this through photography. Having people in the photographs is not the same as enabling the viewers to put themselves into the photographs, illustrating something ‘in use’ is not the same as enabling someone to imagine themselves being there. Memories and emotions have to be triggered in order for the viewer to relate to what they are looking at, signs of life acquired through previous use/occupation could be ways of jogging these memories.
The film director Andrei Tarkovsky, when talking about his use of dilapidated buildings in his films, suggests that “we tend to project our feelings of empathy and compassion on scenes of damage and erosion, whereas perfected structures do not call for, or need, our sympathies as they present themselves self-sufficiently through their rational and instrumental values.” This also sounds like an analogy for the comparison of photographs and CGIs, the visual triggers that bring a photograph to life and make them more than illustrations are the imperfections, the flaws, the human elements. Humans placed in a photograph might actually add to the visual perfection of a scene, they are visible but they leave no trace. Humans using a space will leave evidence and thereby show more about the function of the building unintentionally than any level of staging ever could. So next time I am about to tidy up for a photograph I will try to think about what I might be about to miss.