Saturday, August 08, 2009

Coming Very Soon : The all new Eyewitness Images website

8/Aug/09

In just a few days the new Eyewitness Images website will go live.

In the meantime you can have a sneak preview at how it's shaping up by going to its beta url at:

http://web.me.com/eyewitnessimages

Friday, January 30, 2009

Where has the website gone?

Unfortunately, due to the recent collapse of Digital Railroad (DRR) the Eyewitness Images website has disappeared into the ether for the moment.

A new website is currently in planning and will be online as soon as possible. Thank you for your patience!

http://www.pdnonline.com/pdn/content_display/photo-news/stock-and-syndication/e3ic75447be81df667c0ca16538437d79b2

Monday, September 29, 2008

Friday, March 21, 2008

P. J. GRIFFITHS R.I.P. (1936 - 2008)

Quotes from the great man who sadly passed away on Wednesday:

"I can think of nothing more wonderful than being a photographer because it's just you, this little box and the world and it's up to you to arrange that world in a rectangle...What better thing could you be doing?" P. J. GRIFFITHS

"I believe that we can't ignore a simple, simple fact, and that is that the world is being dumbed down, P. J. GRIFFITHS

Monday, March 03, 2008

Just to re-enforce the implications of my previous post

Have a look at this on EPUK, a story about police officers from the West Midlands force illegal actions against photographer Lawrence Looi, 31, a staff photographer with news agency News Team in making him delete images from his camera!:

http://www.epuk.org/News/818/police-officer-forced-photographer-to-delete-images

Who comes up with these ideas?!?!


I've not posted for quite some time now but I just wanted to share this with you all, especially any photographers reading this blog. (Thanks to Sion Touhig, have a look at his blog and post on this subject at: http://sionphoto.blogs.com)

The Metropolitan Police have come up with a new series of posters, that are also to be adopted by other British police forces including Greater Manchester, in their fight against terrorism but how many photographers out there like me, started shaking their head saying "oh no" or other such expression of disbelief at this latest marvel of modern policing that will only serve to make the working, law abiding photographer's daily job so much harder and create so many more misconceptions about photographers and our rights to freely and legally go about our business?

Friday, August 10, 2007

Tony Wilson loses his battle to cancer

This is so, so sad.

I never knew or met Tony personally, and only ever saw him twice in person on stage introducing New Order at the Hacienda, which are such good personal memories for me.

I think that its more tragic that some of his recent work on XFM Manchester and on TV recently on Sunday's was still so brilliant. Aside from his musical legacy, Tony was Granada local news in the North West for so many years and he paved the way for so many young journalists.

On the day that the High Court ruled against Alzheimer's suffers, Tony's plight at the hands of NHS pen pushers and accountants is just so, so disgusting to people who, like him, thought the NHS was there for everyone and not just a postcode bingo.

He will be sadly missed and my sympathy goes to his family, friends and all those who have been lucky over the years to work with him and know him and, like me, watch him and be inspired and infuriated at the same time.

Tony, you were a big character and a real broadcasting legend.


----------------
Now playing: Joy Division - Atmosphere
via FoxyTunes

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Cameras in conflict: the changing face of war photography

Recommended forthcoming Frontline Club event:

"Thu 12th July, 6.30pm (Please note the early start)
Drinks reception at 6.30pm

With Horst Faas, two-times Pulitzer-prize winning photographer and former picture editor of AP, Oded Balilty, AP’s Jerusalem-based staff photographer and Santiago Lyon, AP’s director of photography.
Moderated by John Owen (Executive producer of Newsxchange and Chairman of the Frontline Club Forum)
Location: The Hilton London Paddington, First Floor, Great Western Room 1 and 2, 146 Praed Street, London, W2 1EE. Click here for directions


Two times Pulitzer Prize winner Horst Faas, this year’s winner Oded Balilty and Santiago Lyon from AP discuss the dramatic changes in war photography as both war and camera technology become increasingly high tech.

Join us on a photographic tour of dark places in wars from Vietnam to Iraq and from the dark room to the digital age.

Horst Faas covered the conflicts in Vietnam, Laos, Congo and Algeria. In 1962 he became AP’s chief photographer for Southeast Asia and was based in Saigon until 1974. His unflinching images of the Vietnam war won him a Pulitzer Prize in 1965. In 1972 he collected a second Pulitzer for his coverage of the conflict in Bangladesh.

As AP’s picture editor Faas ensured the publication of two of the most famous images of the Vietnam War - the notorious picture of the "Saigon Execution" by Eddie Adams and Nick Ut's famous "Napalm Girl”.

As well as covering the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine Oded Balilty covered the 2004 Ukrainian elections and demonstrations, the 20th anniversary Chernobyl and the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 2007.

Santiago Lyon is director of photography of The Associated Press, responsible for the AP's global photo report and the hundreds of photographers and photo editors worldwide who produce it. He has 23 years' experience in news service photography and has won multiple photojournalism awards for his coverage of conflicts around the globe.

Under Lyon's direction, the war in Iraq earned the AP its 48th Pulitzer Prize in 2005, for work by a team of photographers. The AP's winning entry, its 29th for photography, consisted of 20 photos from Iraq by 11 different photographers, five of them Iraqis.

In 2007 the AP won it's 30th Pulitzer Prize for photography for an image by Oded Balilty showing an Israeli woman attempting to block a line of Israeli riot police.

The evening will also mark the official UK launch of Breaking News: How the Associated Press has covered war, peace, and everything else. This is the first book about The Associated Press since 1940, taking readers into the bureaus and out to the field to experience firsthand AP’s groundbreaking reporting on war, politics, crime, disasters and sports. It features almost 200 images from AP's photo archive, many of which will be on display. Copies of the book will be available for purchase on the night."

Multimedia pieces on photojournalist Jim Lo Scalzo, his work and forthcoming book due out on 1st November 2007.

Thanks to Sion Touhig for pointing out thess multimedia pieces on photojournalist Jim Lo Scalzo, his work and forthcoming book due out on 1st November 2007.