THE SLOW PHOTOGRAPHER

JOANNA MACLENNAN

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one. two, three, four, five, six ...... click.  Joanna is quietly counting as I, while enjoying the soothing sound of the soft clicks from the camera, try to stay still in order not to create movements outside the lens which in turn can affect the light and shadows in the pictures. 

Joanna Maclennan is an English photographer, now living in southern France together with her artist husband and daughter.  Her photos are published in countless magazines and books. She is mainly into interior photography but her portraits are also something really special. 

Joanna is faithful to her old Hasselblad camera. The camera needs time, long shutter in order to expose to pictures to the right amount of light (therefore the counting). Originally the old Hasselblad captured images on 6X4 films, but a back was created to deliver photos digitally as well. Nevertheless, the process is slow compared to more modern cameras. She is dependent on getting that "one shot right"  as opposed to the tendance of our time to snap thousands of mobile photos hoping that at least one  will be ok.  In return, she gets this wonderful feeling of depth and sense of texture in her photography.

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les objets qui parlent

 
"I  love photographing places with history, a story to tell, ‘les objets qui parlent, qui portent un histoire’.
The more dust, patina the better.
"
 

Looking at her instagram and website galleries it is obvious that Joannas has a "thing" for vintage and antiques. Furniture and textiles that have lived a long life. She shoots the most beautiful still life photos and holds a sort of subtle sense of something I cannot describe other than "passed time».  

 

REAL REAL SLOW PHOTOGRAPHY

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As if this way of working would not be slow enough, Joanna is also learning to do wet plate photographs (also called collodion). This is a very early photography technique using different chemicals on glass negatives allowing the light to engrave visual memories onto wet plates. You will need a darkroom to develop the photos and the process is both difficult and somewhat dangerous, but the result is breathtakingly beautiful. It is an extreme opposition to today's rapid "mobile snapshots". The wet plate photos will be full of imperfections and marks and give a strong notion of calm presence. 

 
Joanna in action with her Hasselblad camera.

Joanna in action with her Hasselblad camera.

 

ATTEND OUR WORKSHOP IN SLOW PHOTOGRAPHY

Would it not be wonderful being able to work a bit like Joanna in order to shoot better still life photos?

This August we will host a workshop together on the Art of Slow Photography here in Oslo. If you find this appealing, please read more about the workshop here.

To see Joanna’s work, visit her website or find her at instagram @joannamaclennanphotography

Marianne Vigtel Hølland

Slow Design Studio is a creative studio, working to counteract fast life and the disappearance of local traditions. Through a Slow approach to design and communication, I want to promote reflection and a more conscious approach to how the everyday choices you take has consequences, for yourself and others. Slow Design is not a pace, it is a mindset.

http://www.slowdesign.no
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