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Words by London-based photographer David Solomons.
See photographic work here.

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20 February 2008Mr. Karanka blogs Brazil

Joni Karanka has asked me some questions about my Brazil work in his blog. 47rpigeon.jpg
Copacabana beach, Rio de Janeiro, 2002

http://jkaranka.blogspot.com/2008/02/spotlight-brazil-by-david-solomons.html

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30 January 2008in-Public’s newest member

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I’ve recently joined in-Public as their latest member. Thanks to everyone there for giving me this opportunity to belong to the home of street photography,  I look forward to meeting up soon and that we can continue to produce excellent work. Cheers all :)

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8 January 2008Black and White book in the pipeline.

Whitehall

Whitehall, 1998

I’ve been scanning over the last couple of weeks lots of old negs from my archives in preparation for a black and white book I’ll be producing a dummy copy hopefully around February or March, with a view to publishing it in the near future. I’ve decided it’ll just be the street stuff, as I think the few portraits I do have probably won’t fit amongst the rest of the work. Details to follow.

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6 December 2007Seaside photography, the end of an era?

Clacton-on-Sea

Clacton-on-Sea, 1995

Back in the days when Tony Ray-Jones took many of his classic photos of the English at play around the coastal resorts of Britain, photography was considered an innocent if eccentric pastime ranking alongside painting and rambling.

In the 1980’s Martin Parr produced his classic work ‘The Last Resort’ the general public were still accepting of this but things soon began to change. Parents in particular started to become increasingly paranoid about their little nippers being spied upon by sexual predators and this was in turn was exploited by the tabloid media as an ever increasing number of paedophile cases hit the headlines culminating in the Ian Huntley case a few years ago and of Madeleine McCann’s disappearance earlier this year.

In the last few years things have become increasingly difficult for innocent photographers to go about their pursuing their beloved pastime without incurring the wrath of either parents or the authorities wanting to question said photographers motives for pointing their cameras anywhere in the vicinity of anyone under the age of consent.

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