Welcome! This is your one stop shop to find out all about the events the miniclick photography talks have planned for the future, as well as photos from previous events and other bits of news.

To view what’s on the way, click “Upcoming Events” above.

The miniclick photography talks are curated and organised by Jim Stephenson and Lou Miller. If you have any questions at all about any of the events, would like press info for any of them, or would just like to get in touch, please email us at miniclick@clickclickjim.com or join the facebook group.

After working with Brighton University for events in April and May, and traveling to Liverpool for LOOK/13, normal service is resumed in June with a talk at The Old Market from one of our favourite photographers, Jim Naughten.

The Miniclick team have been talking about Jim’s work for some time now, so we’re really pleased to have him coming to Brighton for what is sure to be a great evening. Thursday June 20th, 7pm (doors at 6pm). Free Entry at The Old Market.

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Thursday June 20th, 7pm (doors at 6pm). Free Entry at The Old Market.

For little other reason than that we like a party, on Saturday 4th May, we’ll be having a bit of a knees up, upstairs at the Fitzherberts on New Road, Brighton.

No talks, no panel discussion, just some good music and good times. We’ve DJ sets from previous miniclick speakers, friends of miniclick and photography legends James Kendall, Ali Tollervey and Ewen Spencer.

In addition, we’ve organised a special lucky dip for the night. We’ve sent 20 disposable cameras out to 20 amazing photographers and on the night you’ll be able to reach into the Miniclick bag and pull out one of the undeveloped cameras for you to get prints from and create your own private album from the photographer who used the camera.

Photographers involved in the Lucky Dip include… Mark Power, Jack Latham, Matt Stuart, Jim Stephenson, Kristina Salgvik, Laura Pannack, Alex Catt, James O’Jenkins, Chris Floyd, Stuart Griffiths, Matt Martin, Richard Rowland, Kevin Meredith, Harry Watts, Murray Ballard, Jenny Wicks, MacDonaldStrand, Alex Bamford, James Kendall and Jean-Luc Brouard.

And one more thing – we’ll have the special Miniclick merchandise stand in attendance to sell copies of Publication#1 as well as badges, tote bags and our super limited edition screen printed T-Shirts. The t-shirts have been designed by Angela Chick, Laura Manfre and Adam Campbell, with Emily MacCauley designing the tote bag.

So, come along for a good old party!

Saturday, May 4th. Doors at 7pm. Free Entry, upstairs at the Fitzherberts, New Road, Brighton.

We’re really pleased to be working with Liverpool’s International Photography Festival, LOOK/13 to put on Pulse – an afternoon of short talks on their opening day, Saturday 18th May.

Curated by the Miniclick team and Patrick Henry (director of LOOK/13), Sara-Jayne Parsons (The Bluecoat), Colin McPherson (LOOK/13) and Simon Bainbridge (British Journal of Photography), 10 of Liverpool’s, and the UK’s, finest photographers will be doing short talks on the subject “Who Do You Think You Are?”.

Saturday 18th May, 2:30pm ’till 4:30pm. The Bluecoat, Liverpool. Tickets are £7 (£4 conc.) and available on The Bluecoat’s website.

Our lineup includes…

Alma Haser

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Born in Germany in 1989, Alma Haser moved to the UK in 1995 and gained a BA in Photography from Nottingham Trent University before moving to London in autumn 2011. Her shortlisted portrait, taken in her house in South London, is of friends Luke and James who have known each other since they were 12. Struck by their hairstyles, an East London bowl cut, Haser initially planned to take separate portraits but it was difficult to get them to focus so decided to photograph them together. She says ‘I asked them to sit on a tiny, wobbly coffee table, forcing them to almost cling onto each other. I wanted to exaggerate their amazing size difference, by making Luke slouch and James sit bolt upright. The title is designed to help the viewer make up his or her story about what is going on.’ Haser’s work has been included in over 10 exhibitions internationally, her work received third place in the People’s Choice for Foto8 Summer Show 2012, and Fourth prize in the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Awards at the National Portrait Gallery in London.

www.haser.org

Chloe Dewe Matthews

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After graduating from Fine Art at Oxford University, Chloe Dewe Mathews spent four years working in the film industry.  Since dedicating herself to photography, her subject matter has been diverse, from Uzbek gravediggers on the Caspian coast, to Hasidic Jews on holiday in Wales.  In 2010 she hitchhiked from China back to Britain, which became a recce for a lifetime’s work ahead, informing her work both at home and abroad.

She has been awarded the BJP International Photography Award, the Julia Margaret Cameron New Talent Award, PDN’s 30, the Flash Forward Emerging Photographer’s Award by the Magenta Foundation and was nominated for the prestigious Prix Pictet.  Her work has been exhibited in London, Berlin, Buenos Aires and Toronto and magazine clients include The New York Times, the Telegraph, Le Monde and the Sunday Times.

Over the next year she will be artist-in-residence at St John’s College in Oxford and METAL in Southend, developing a new body of work about the river Thames.

www.chloedewemathews.com

Eva Vermandel

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Eva Vermandel is a photographer born in Belgium in 1974 who relocated to London in 1996 to live and work. Known for her still and timeless portraits which often bear references to painting (the Flemish Primitives, Ingres, Bronzino), her photographs have appeared in a wide range of magazines such as The Wire, Telegraph Magazine, Independent Magazine, The New York Times Magazine and W (USA). She has collaborated with PJ Harvey, Cat Power and Sigur Rós, doing an extensive tour with the latter in 2008 which resulted in the book “Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust”

Vermandel has had solo exhibitions at the Douglas Hyde Gallery in Dublin (coinciding with the book ‘Alabama Chrome’, 2006), Whitechapel Gallery and the ICA, London. Her work is in the collections of the V&A, London, the National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh and the National Portrait Gallery, London. In September 2013 Hatje Cantz will be publishing a monograph on her series ‘Splinter’.

Martin Barnes, Senior Curator,  Photographs, Victoria & Albert Museum, London: “Eva Vermandel’s photographs capture the intangible – the spaces in between the mechanics of daily lives – in which we can often find moments of reverie. I can see how some people resist the camera as a device that enables this feeling, as we too often think of it as recording the tangible and the ‘now’. But Eva seems to be using the camera against itself – or rather cancelling itself out, as something deliberately ‘out of phase’ (to coin a term from physics that is also known and used by musicians). In any case, it is not the camera, but the eyes and heart behind the lens that make the work.”

www.evavermandel.com

Jack Latham

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Jack Latham is a Welsh photographer currently based in Brighton. He graduated from the University of Wales Newport, Documentary Photography BA (Hons) degree course in 2012. Jack is now pursuing a career in and around contemporary photographic practice. His work focuses on more conceptual subject matter and is often presented in form by using large format photography and self-published books. His most recent project saw him traveling 5000 miles across America, retracing the Oregon trail and photographing the current social landscape.

www.jacklatham.com

Jenny Wicks

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“I am a visual artist and sometimes work with audio. My work is primarily concerned with people and their environment, with particular interest in how our communities can determine who we become.  I have recently completed a residency with The Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research at Glasgow University.  In this research I explored key components surrounding the notion of ‘them and us’.

During my research on the justice system and perceptions of society on the imprisoned, I responded by creating two bodies of work; They are us and we are them and Working Places Punishing Spaces. Both series challenge stereotypically held notions that we can pass judgement on a person based on photographs of their face and surroundings.  In response to how the media have used the mugshot, I have used photography to offer a more nuanced view of the individuals caught up in this system.
An exhibition “Correct: the meaning and construction of space” which consisted of They are us and we are them and Working Spaces Punishing Spaces has recently been on show at The Briggait Gallery, Glasgow.

My work Root Ginger (an exhibition, book and film project) is a tribute to a trait that is most common in Scotland and Ireland but is scattered around the world. My photographs explore the genetic lottery we all play taking the biological perspective of a recessive gene such as red hair and how we assume we know more than we really do about our genetic make-up. The series of portraits take on an ethereal quality with a touch of almost scientific sampling which echoes the biological aspect of the work.

Playing on my interest in sub-groups and sects, the photographs show that the “every day” and ordinary can quickly became fascinating or exceptional when they are looked at in isolation.
Red hair conjures up a plethora of images and provokes a range of reactions from people. The work looks at the social aspect of having red hair and how society views and treats a minority group. For many it is considered the last bastion of political incorrectness.

I have been published extensively and exhibited nationally and internationally and I am represented by Millennium Images in London.”

www.jennywicksphotography.co.uk

Jim Mortram

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Jim is a documentary photographer and environmental portraitist based in East Anglia, UK. Jim’s work is centred on creating an expansive long-form photographic essay, Small Town Inertia, which explores the intimate and untold stories of marginalised individuals in the small rural community in which he lives. He is also a Carer within his family home and a member of the photo/film collective Aletheia Photos. His photography has been awarded and published widely.

www.smalltowninertia.tumblr.com www.jamortram.posterous.com

Maja Daniels

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Maja Daniels is a Swedish photographer based in London. Using sociology as a frame of research and approach, Daniels’ work focuses on human relations in a western, contemporary environment.

She is the recipient of the Taylor Wessing Portrait Prize, and was a second prize winner of the Sony World Photography awards 2012. She was a participant in the 2012 World Press Photo Joop Swart Masterclass and selected as one of the 2011 and 2012 Magenta Foundations Flash Forward Emerging Photographers.

Daniels photographs have been included in exhibitions at the Royal Academy of Arts (London), The Photographers Gallery (London), The National Portrait Gallery (London), Belfast Exposed (Belfast) and Getxophoto (Bilbao).

www.majadaniels.com

Niall McDiarmid

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Niall has been an editorial photographer since graduating from the London College of Printing in 1993. He works for magazines and book publishers in the UK, Europe and US. 

In January 2011 he began the Crossing Paths project, photographing people he met as he travelled across Britain. The series has been profiled widely by photography blogs, news websites and magazines and was awarded a Lucie International Photography Award in 2012. The project is ongoing.

www.niallmcdiarmid.com

Sophie Gerrard

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(Sheep farming, Lauder, Scottish Borders)

Sophie Gerrard (Scottish, b.1978) is an award winning documentary photographer specialising in contemporary environmental and social issues.

Sophie began her career in environmental sciences before studying photography at Edinburgh College of Art and completing an MA Photojournalism and Documentary Photography at The London College of Communication in 2006.

Sophie’s first major project E-Wasteland won a Jerwood Photography Award, a Magenta Award for emerging artists and was exhibited and published widely in the UK and overseas. Since then Sophie has spent a great deal of time working and photographing in India for NGOs, editorial clients and on personal projects.

Currently based in the UK, Sophie’s work has been published by clients including The Telegraph Saturday Magazine, The Guardian Weekend Magazine, The Independent on Sunday, Portfolio Magazine, Foto8, Greenpeace International, Scotland on Sunday and Geographical Magazine. Sophie’s work has been exhibited internationally, and is now held in the Sir Elton John Photography Collection.

Sophie is represented by The Photographers’ Gallery and Eyevine in London.

www.sophiegerrard.com

Tadgh Devlin

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Tadhg Devlin is originally from Dublin but left Ireland in 1993 to study photography in Falmouth. After leaving Cornwall he worked as a freelance photographer in London for a variety of clients for over ten years before moving to Merseyside in 2011.

His work ‘The Fifth Province’ is a study of contemporary Ireland through the eyes of the returned emigrant. Ireland is made up of four provinces; the fifth is where the Irish diaspora resides.

www.tadhgdevlin.com

Saturday 18th May, 2:30pm ’till 4:30pm. The Bluecoat, Liverpool. Tickets are £7 (£4 conc.) and available on The Bluecoat’s website.

We’re really pleased to be working with Liverpool’s International Photography Festival, Look13 to put on Pulse – an afternoon of short talks on their opening day, Saturday 18th May.

Curated by the Miniclick team and Patrick Henry (director of Look13), Sara-Jayne Parsons (The Bluecoat), Colin McPherson (Look13) and Simon Bainbridge (British Journal of Photography), 10 of Liverpool and the UK’s finest photographers will be doing short talks on the subject “Who Do You Think You Are?”. The lineup will be announced very soon…

The event runs from 2:30pm to 4:30pm. Tickets are £7 (£4 conc.) and available on The Bluecoat’s website.

Last year we got together with the Brighton University MA Photography course to put on a Pecha Kucha night, with each member of the course doing a short talk on their work on the same night. It went so well, that we’ve decided to do it again with the new batch of final year students.

Pecha Kucha is a lively format of presentations, whereby each photographer is restricted to 20 slides and 20 seconds on each slide, resulting in a series of quickfire talks lasting exactly 6 minutes and 40 seconds each.

Wednesday, May 1st. Doors at 6pm, talks start at 7pm. Free Entry at The Old Market, Brighton & Hove.

The lineup includes 11 speakers in one evening…

Alastair Rodgers

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Alastair originally studied a Ba(hons) in fine art at the Cardiff School of Art & Design, it was there he first began to work with photography as a medium. Graduating from his undergraduate degree he signed up to the Ma photography course at Brighton, wanting to learn more about photography in an environment geared specifically towards the subject.

At the moment his current project is based around the idea of the surface, in particular surfaces found within landscapes and portraiture. The idea being to juxtapose the two against each other to create a strong visual aesthetic and reflect on the limitations of portrait photography.

www.alrodgers.tumblr.com

Andrew Pengilly

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Andrew’s interest in photography has until recently been part of his graphic design practice. Andrew Studied BA Graphic design at Brighton were he won a national photography award, the judging process required submitting a portfolio of work fortunately the chair of the awards committee was Alan Fletcher, founder of Pentagram a leading international design agency Andrew’s portfolio of design projects resulted in him also being offered his first job as a graphic designer.
 
He went on to become creative director at a number of London agencies  before moving to Paris as creative director of Carre Noir, with responsibility for the agencies design for print division. He has won numerous design awards and judged at D&AD. In 2000 he created his own agency A2 design.
 
He has recently rekindled his interest in photography by doing an MA Photography at University of Brighton, returning to pick up photography he left off 30 years ago. His interest has developed around observations of place, light vision and imagination while observing the effects off the break up of the digital file. His work and projects have a close tie to 19th century painters, Turner, Whistler and Goethe’s observations of the effect of light. His work also references the camera obscura and Daguerreotypes.
 
His interest in graphic design has been fundamental to presenting his work in book form, believing in some instances the book form can strengthen the presentation of a photographic project.
 
While producing his own book projects he noticed the absence of a quality service for artists wanting to produce books in limited editions. To fill this gap he applied his extensive experience and knowledge of design, print and binding to offer a quality bespoke self publishing service under Format Editions

www.formateditions.co.uk

Charlie Smith

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Charles Morgan Smith is a photographic artist based in Brighton. He received a BA (Hons) in Photography from Southampton Solent University in 2010 and is currently studying for an MA in Photography at the University of Brighton. Through his work Smith responds to the aesthetics of astrophotography and the ways in which scientists depict the cosmos.  His interests include the ways in which photography is utilised as a means of representation and interpretations of beauty and the sublime. Through his most current work; UDF and Emissio, Smith has used images of the banal and everyday and created a series of ‘astrophotographs’, exploring notions of scale, aesthetics and the limitations of photography and representation.

Elin Karlsson

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Elin Karlsson is a photographer based in the south of England. She grew up in Sweden and moved to the UK in 2007. She is studying an MA in photography at Brighton University while running the online photography magazine Introdex. She is a part of the artist collective Interlope.

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“I chose to study finance in the university since I wanted to found my own music label then and was well aware that capital budgeting is one of the most crucial part of running it. However, after seeing the album cover photo of The Clash’s “London Calling” in the sophomore, I changed my mind about entering music industry. Just at that time I totally realized how powerful a photograph could be, as it condenses emotions and concepts. Being affected by the dynamic image, I aspired to immerse myself in the study of photography as a step stone to create contagious works.

Therefore, I joined the photo club in my school and took several related courses in the next few years. The most influential and inspiring one was the one taught by Taiwanese fine art photographer, Ben Yu. Through making a series of self portraits in his course, I realized the process of producing a body of works could be the process of constructing deeper intimacy with self. Moreover, to me, the pleasure of knowing how I could perfect a work is equal to creating a fine one, and this belief reinforced my desire to pursue a master degree of photography.”

James Finlay

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Following a career in international advertising management James began a new journey that inspirited a talent in photography. His image making began as travel photographic journals that soon caught the attention of The Royal Geographical Society where he first exhibited his initial body of work in 1999. He continued his practice within the commercial, editorial and charity sectors instigating and receiving commissions for numerous projects around the UK and USA.  

In his career to date Finlay has had work published in educational and reference books along with being exhibited in numerous galleries in the the UK and USA.

Currently Finlay is completing his MA in Photography at the University of Brighton working on Union looking at the relationship of England and Scotland in light of the Scottish Referendum vote on 18th September 2014. His self initiated book projects with Henley Royal Regatta and Lord’s Cricket Ground working alongside Getty Images are due to be published in the Autumn of 2013.

www.jamesfinlay.com

Joy Stacey

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Joy Stacey’s work examines visual representations of political subjects, exploring the relationship between the subject, photographer and audience. Her current works in progress include a project on Immigration Removal in Glasgow, an examination of the visual fetishisation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and a collaboration with former Islamist and founder of the Quilliam Foundation Maajid Nawaz.

Kayung Lai

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Kayung Lai is a British Chinese photographic artist; her practice explores cultural identity within the context of globalisation through avenues of postcolonial theory. She is interested in using photography as a way of seeking and deconstructing cultural signs, to reveal the operation of myth and fantasy underlying our cultural processes. In 2011 she received a BA (Hons) in Photography from Falmouth University, and upon graduation she was selected as a finalist for Source Graduates and published in Source Photographic Review. In 2012 Lai was a finalist for the Art Catlin Guide, which marked the annual showcase of emerging art graduates in the UK. Following this she has been a finalist in various competitions, most recently at the Salon Art Prize 2012. Lai is currently studying a Masters in Photography at the University of Brighton.

Rich Cutler

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Rich Cutler has a degree in chemistry. That might not be the most obvious statement with which to announce his interest in photography  – but what drew him to science lies at the heart of his fascination with lens-based images. There is of course the natural connection between the two of silver, but it is their common drive to explore and understand that compels him.

Rich came to photography rather late in life, but it took a deep hold on him, and he was awarded an Associateship Distinction in Visual Art by the Royal Photographic Society, which also exhibited his work internationally. But, with his strictly technical background, Rich felt the lack of cultural and art historical context, and this led him to apply for a master’s degree in photography at the University of Brighton.

Rich is compelled by images of time and symbolism. Despite depicting  decay and the past, his photographs are about life and the present: they may be seen as reminders of mortality, but in doing so they exhort us to take chances, to live life to the full: carpe diem.

www.richcutler.co.uk

Sharon O’Neill

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Sharon O’Neill’s photographic practice draws from the sphere of social documentary photography and concentrates primarily on people and places that from the outside seem unexceptional, and by the very nature of their everyday-ness, are overlooked.
 
Through her photography she explores the ebb and flow of life, the ordinary, and the external factors that can alter the delicate balance of a place or a community.  Her work gently observes it’s fabric and details and incorporates archival and reference material both personal and historical to build a portrait of the lives she is focused on.
 
Born in Kent, Sharon currently lives in London and has over 15 years experience in the photography industry. She now divides her time between her photographic practice and her work as a picture editor at The Sunday Times.

Yuxi Si

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“After four years’ study in Beijing Film Academy as photography major, I still want learn more about photography. Therefore, I came to the UK and studied MA photography. My works “Seduction and Confusion” were displayed in “2011 Jing Ao Collegiate Image. And work “Simple life” was displayed in Ping Yao International Photography Festival.

Recently, I interest in the relationship between two person. One day, I was on the bus, I notice that two road was crossing. It real likes the relationship between two person (half and half). Everyone have own character. When they have been together, they need to take out the half of themselves to give a space for their partner. It should be equal to everyone in a relationship. People should forgive or compromise each other and find a balance. In the arithmetic of love, one plus one equals everything, and two minus one equals nothing.

I trying to visite some couple, who came from different countries, like England, China, America, Malaysia, Turkey, Taiwan, talking about how to train the capacity of managing their relationship. They fall in love for some years from 1 year to 10years. Through interview, I found that everyone have their own the way they deal with their relationship, like make a concession when they are fighting, keep own space in same space when they have different hobby. They always find a balance between insistence and compromise in the relationship. Therefore, theme of this project is “balance”.”

Mu-Tien Tammy Ho

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Taiwanese photographer, currently living in Brighton, UK.

Tammy’s works started as black and white urban landscape. After few years of darkroom experience, she turns to digital equipment to explore scenes of everyday life she is personally related to, as some works include performative and self-portraits. From exterior to interior, now she keeps observing the space where human activity takes place and the cultural phenomenon within it.

www.mutienho.ftp.cc

Wednesday, May 1st. Doors at 6pm, talks start at 7pm. Free Entry at The Old Market, Brighton & Hove.

To celebrate the 21st anniversary of the University of Brighton’s acclaimed BA Photography course, the current crop of students are putting together two publications to showcase their own work and that of the cream of the graduates from the last two decades. To raise money for the book, 36 alumni and several past and former staff have each donated a print each to be auctioned online. In addition this year’s final year students are anonymously selling limited prints of their own work at £20 each.

You can now view the auction prints and bid on them here.

As part of the evening Mark Power, Lisa Barnard, Stuart Griffiths, Laura Pannack and Martin Seeds will join in a panel discussion to reflect on the question “what would you tell your student self now?”.

Monday April 22nd. Doors at 6pm, panel discussion starts at 7pm. Attendees will have the chance to view all the prints and bid on them at an exhibition on the evening. Free Entry at The Old Market, Brighton & Hove.

Alumni and lecturers from the course include Mark Power, Stuart Griffiths, Laura Pannack, Ewen Spencer, Liz Hingley, MacDonaldStrand, Lisa Barnard, Richard Rowland, Emma Critchley, Kim Thue, Paul Reas, Aaron Schuman, Danny Treacy, Murray Ballard, Martin Seeds and many more.

Mark Power

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Mark Power’s work has been exhibited in numerous museums and galleries across the world, and is in several important public and private collections. He has published five monographs: The Shipping Forecast (1996), a poetic response to the esoteric language of daily maritime weather reports; Superstructure (2000), a documentation of the construction of London’s Millennium Dome; The Treasury Project (2002), about the restoration of a nineteenth-century historical monument: 26 Different Endings (2007), which documents those landscapes unlucky enough to fall just off the edge of the London A-Z, a map which could be said to define the boundaries of the British capital; and The Sound of Two Songs (2010), the culmination of his five year project set in contemporary Poland. His latest book, Mass, will be published in January next year.

Mark Power joined Magnum Photos in 2002, becoming a full Member in 2007. Meanwhile, in his other life, he is the Professor of photography at the University of Brighton.

www.markpower.co.uk

Martin Seeds

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“Much of my work is driven by curiosity that leads me into investigations  and searches. These endeavours more often than not are quests for an  unknown answer. I work in this way to reveal something to myself, and  as I discover through experience or journey I welcome and embrace  contingency as part of my practice. I use the photographic process as a  means to gather information that I organise, examine and mine for more  detail before being presented as findings.”

“My background is in Information Analysis and this reflects my interest in the image as information and its ability to reveal more through process, association and context.”

Martin Seeds is an artist from Belfast, Northern Ireland. He currently lives and works in Brighton, England.

www.martinseeds.com

Laura Pannack

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Laura Pannack is a London based Photographer. She was educated at the University of Brighton and Central Saint Martins College of Art.

Her work has been extensively exhibited and published both in the UK and internationally, including at The National Portrait Gallery, The Houses of Parliament, Somerset House, and the Royal Festival Hall in London.

In 2010 Laura received first prize in the Portrait Singles category of the World Press Photo awards. She has also won and been shortlisted for several other awards including The Sony World Photography Awards, The Magenta foundation and Lucies IPA.

Her art focuses on social documentary and portraiture, and seeks to explore the complex relationship between subject and photographer.

Laura is driven by research led self-initiated projects. In her own words, she does all she can “to understand the lives of those captured, and to present them creatively”.  She is a firm believer that “time, trust and understanding is the key to portraying subjects truthfully”, and as such, many of her projects develop over several years. Her particular approach allows a genuine connection to exist between sitter and photographer, which in turn elucidates the intimacy of these very human exchanges. Her images aim to suggest the shared ideas and experiences that are entwined in each frame that she shoots. Laura largely shoots with a film camera on her personal projects, allowing her process to be organic rather than being predefined by fixed ideas, thus removing additional pressure on the sitter.

‘Laura’s remarkable ability to build trust and respect with her subjects allows her to express a gritty vulnerability that is as sincere as it is elusive to capture.’

Terry O’ Neill – photographer

www.laurapannack.com

Lisa Barnard

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Lisa Barnard’s photographic practice is connected to both fine art and documentary genres. She has undertaken numerous photographic commissions and residencies, receives regular funding, and has been published in 8 Magazine and Photoworks. Her work connects her interests in psychological aesthetics, the limits of photographic film alongside the documentation of both the real and the imaginary.

Barnard’s practice has developed to encompass research into more political theories of aesthetics and the possible connections between post-Marxist and Kleinian theories, in relation to the current debates surrounding conceptual documentary photography and the existing political climate.

Her current project, 32 Smiths Square, examines the architecture and ephemera of the former Conservative Party Headquarters in London.

Barnard is a regular visiting lecturer at both Brighton and Newport universities.

www.lisabarnard.co.uk

Stuart Griffiths

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Stuart Griffiths began using photography as a young paratrooper whilst serving in Northern Ireland.

In 1997 he graduated from University of Brighton with an Honours Degree in Editorial Photography. His photographs are focused on self directed projects on autobiographical experiences. A documentary about Griffiths’ life and work Isolation (Institute for Eyes) premiered at the 2009 Edinburgh Film Festival and toured  Picture House Cinemas across the UK. In 2010 Griffiths won a bursary from the National Media Photography Award and was winner of the  Brighton Photo Fringe OPEN 2010. His first solo show Closer explores Griffiths personal feelings towards war and conflict, and responds to the unseen consequences of the campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan.  His first monograph The Myth of the Airborne Warrior was published by Photoworks in 2011.  His second book Pigs Disco is published in October 2012 by Ditto Press. 

www.stuartgriffiths.net

Monday April 22nd. Doors at 6pm, panel discussion starts at 7pm. Attendees will have the chance to view all the prints and bid on them at an exhibition on the evening. Free Entry at The Old Market, Brighton & Hove.

On March 28th, 2013 we launched the first issue of the Miniclick magazine – Publication #1.

Our first issue concentrates on Women in Photography, coming at the end of a month of events we put on to discuss that same theme. Coming in at just under 70 A4 pages, we feature the work of 8 different female photographers, plus we have eight different features written exclusively for this magazine by a range of writers.

Photo stories come from Abbie Trayler-Smith, Agata Pietron, Alma Haser, Chloe Dewe Matthews, Jo Metson Scott, Laura Pannack, Maria Gruzdeva and Natasha Caruana, while features come Eleanor O’Kane, Lou Miller, Joy Stacey, Maja Daniels and Laura Pannack, Louise Hobson and Natasha Caruana and Afshin Dehkordi.

The magazine was design by Stanley James Press and printed by Stampa.

Please note: there’s 75 special edition copies available that have a letterpressed cover and saddle stitch binding (hand stitched by one of the Miniclick team). These are first come, first served and pictured here on this site. All other copies are exactly the same as the photos and video, except they have a printed card cover and stapled binding.

+++ PUBLICATION#1 IS NOW SOLD OUT / PUBLICATION#2 DUE END OF JULY +++

As we are a not-for-profit organisation and Publication #1 is non-profit making project, all purchases of the magazine are treated as donations. Many thanks!

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Writer and educator, Miranda Gavin is our editor, with Miniclick co-curator Lou Miller as sub editor and Miniclick founder Jim Stephenson as commissioning editor. The magazine was designed by Stanley James Press and printed by Stampa.

Designed, Printed and Bound in Brighton, UK.

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