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Analogue capture on Agfa APX 100, developed with "Melissal"

 

For Yantra

....the results vary.

two different papers used

 

b&w anemone

lumen prints

 

digital print below

digital print on silk, perfume, braided cord, suede, plastic clips

No, it's not finished. No, I didn't mean for it to look like a crotch. And yes, I know it's fucking ugly. It won't be ugly forever, trust me; I can whip this bad boy into shape with just a few more layers, I think (perhaps starting with a whitewash over the whole lot?).

Impression sur papier Canson Arches Velin Museum 315g.

Pour tout demande d'info : francois-bizet.fr

I mentioned in an earlier post that I knew County Hall, and the Greater London Council (GLC), very well in the 1970s. That was because I was local government researcher and correspondent for Thames Television – in those days, the national ITV station that also served the London area.

 

Thames took its local government reporting very seriously (and received plaudits for it). And so we come to this TV studio photograph – the set of our open-ended results programme not of a general election, but of the local election across the 32 London boroughs that comprised the GLC.

 

We've just completed a run-through and it's shortly before we go on air on 9th April 1970. That’s me on the left in shirtsleeves talking to Roy Fewins, the floor manager. Seated to the right at the election results desk is the legendary Alastair Burnet with Peter Tiffin, the studio director (standing). Then Peter Taylor, who’s discussing possible election outcomes with a psephologist whose name I can’t now remember.

 

And just look at the cutting edge technology… that election ‘swingometer’ next to Alastair!

 

By today’s television standards, the set design was very simple: 'GLC 70', underneath which are 32 squares, each one representing a London borough.

 

Boy, did we all work our socks off – and the programme delivered the results. We came off air at around 2am, adrenalin flowing like mad, knowing we’d done a good job for London.

 

Digitised Kodak Ektachrome print

 

These Cartoon-style illustration were created using Color pencil, Watercolor , Mixed media. After completion some digital rendering was applied so the final format for these artwork is the digital print ( maximum size 13 inch by 24 inch)

You can see more of my fashion inspired artwork at my new website www.fashion-accent.com

detail: untitled (shard /void surface)

2016_01_30

digital print on manila tagboard

18" x 12" (45.7 x 30.5)cm

signed edition #1 of 2

Matt Niebuhr

West Branch Studio

www.mattniebuhr.com

shop.mattniebuhr.com

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