Nottingham Centre for Photography and Social Engagement
Photo Parlour
Unit 8, 18 Queensbridge Road,
Nottingham,
NG2 1NB


Every last Wednesday of the month at 6pm
Nottingham Centre for Photography and Social Engagement
Photo Parlour
Unit 8, 18 Queensbridge Road,
Nottingham,
NG2 1NB


Every last Wednesday of the month at 6pm
GOSH!! Just watching an episode of Minder “Car Lot Baggers” Starting at 19:35mins …. I found a very interesting mention of travellers / gypsies. AND ….. they even drive past the Mutiod gaff in Freston Road …. See if you can spot it 🙂 [22:22mins]
St.Patrick’s Day : Comhaltas Ceoltóirí
Market Square, Nottingham
Playing with fire, relaxing at the allotment
January 29th 2018
by CQ
Nottingham Trent University (NTU) BA and MA Photography alumnus, Alan Lodge, comes from a free festival and traveller background. Living in old buses, trucks and caravans, he drove around the country on ‘the circuit’ with his family and friends. Since the late 1970s he has been photographing events and the people around him.

Documenting all aspects of alternative lifestyles and sub-cultures, Alan has photographed many free and commercial events, environment protest, land rights demonstrations, and rave culture. Giving an insightful view that only people who have been accepted into a community can really achieve, his aim has been to present a more positive view of people and communities that are frequently misrepresented. The process has not been easy, as many people are suspicious of anyone with a camera and their motives. Conflict with the police in more recent years has become a fact of life, as has eviction from land and squats, and difficulties with children’s education when being continually moved on. Alan had produced work for publications, galleries, events, and public spaces. Moving beyond photography, he has experimented with mixed media involving printed and projected text.
During his MA at NTU, Alan specialised in issues surrounding representation, presenting himself in print and audio-visual format. A member of the National Union of Journalists, he is a documentary photographer, a photo-journalist and ‘storyteller’ always on the lookout for another tale to tell.
Please visit Alan’s website for more details about his work.
© Alan Lodge
https://www.creativequarter.com/articles/learn/one-eye-on-the-road-by-photographer-alan-lodge
StandWithUkraine #Ukraine #Protest #Nottingham
Tash’s Proper Old Playlist on Spotify
This year, the UK-based free party turns 30 and looks back at some of its most outlandish raves
In April of 1992, the Conservative Party were voted back into power for the fourth consecutive time. The victory sparked protests and riots amongst those who had already suffered through 13 years of Thatcherite policies. Around the same time, shortly after the perpetual police chase for acid house parties in the late 80s, the left began rallying around the free party movement across the UK as a way to protest, if not subconsciously, through partying.
In the same year, Sheffield laid eyes on the first-ever Smokescreen party. It was a chilly November day in 1992 when revellers took to the woodland outside Sheffield to put into motion what would become a veteran party for most, inaugurated by siblings Vickie and Laurence Ritchie. With comfort in the knowledge that partygoers would return, Smokescreen began to pop up time and time again across the UK in secret locations, whether it be woodland, quarries, or disused warehouses.
The soundsystem even found its way aboard the protest vans where revellers would sit and chant against the new Criminal Justice Bill in London or, most notably, demonstrations to Reclaim The Streets in Nottingham, shifting Smokescreen into a place of security for the uber progressive.


Alongside kindred friends DiY Soundsystem formerly set up in the Midlands, Smokescreen trickled through the fingers of the police with increasingly bigger, stealthier, and more mischievous free parties. “The young, the restless and the skint moved away from the clubs and started to find alternatives,” said Smokescreen’s Osbourne Daniel.
With a continued spirit of autonomy and liberation and ethos to rejoice through music, the soundsystem would set up outside the gates of Glastonbury in the summer of the new millennium, where the group played to crowds over the course of three days under steady sunshine before finding legal residencies at nightclubs across the UK. Smokescreen later spawned Drop Music, the UK-based house label releasing the likes of Inland Knights, Crazy P, and Sonny Fodera, and now celebrates some of the top underground releases of the early noughties.
30 years later, Smokescreen continues the legacy of those iconic raves that stamped history in the electronic underground. “We made our own world and currency which went way beyond a party. Life skills and the free party spirit can be added to any walk of life,” longtime Smokescreen resident, Steve Littlemen, told Mixmag. 2022 marks the 30th year since those tumultuous times in UK politics, and while the grass still isn’t much greener, Smokescreen Soundsystem still provides that same unifying value.
Take a look with us back through the early days of this iconic soundystem to celebrate their 30th anniversary.
Find out more about Smokescreen’s forthcoming parties here.







Gemma Ross is Mixmag’s Editorial Assistant, follow her on Twitter
Protesting the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Market Square, Nottingham
Some speeches

Who are you with a camera in your hands? You are likely less distracted, or less anxious. Maybe you are more interested, or more alive. But now that we are here, looking out over the smoking ruins of a year that has hardly begun, what should we do?
For me, it all started in a friend’s bedroom. He was called Alex, and we went to school together and used to hang around doing nerdy things. One time he showed me how he’d blacked out his bedroom windows, lined up three shallow trays of liquid which could turn your fingers yellow, and hung up a light that filled the room with a steady red glow, as warm as blood. Coming to the final tray, he showed me a sheet of pale paper transformed like a ghost, almost jumping into life, as if pulled from another realm and into this one.


Now in 2022, the headlines, the bombed-out apartments, the famines, the chaos, the sheer villainy of it all, it’s hard for us photographers — we, who feel — not to retreat backward, to withdraw, to remain shrouded and unmoving. But who else is there to directly mark the times that we’re in? Who else at the demonstrations, can transform what happens in the blink of an eye: the people, the feelings, the hope, and the despair?
I don’t want to put down poets, painters, musicians, writers, or artists, but none of them can show you so directly what happened. And because of this, what you as a photographer do and how you respond to the world we live in now is so critical. Perhaps your image will be the one that changes us all, that gives us all the ability to see something new… or perhaps the only person your image-making will change is you, but even if only that, isn’t that enough?





These photographs were taken over a few hours, on a couple of days, and I had to change things on the second day. I’d been in a groove, and it had been working, but it wasn’t working anymore. It didn’t feel right, and I started to lose the superpower that my camera gives me. Being a photographer, you’ll know all about that — it’s like you no longer fit the measurements of the world that you find in front of you.
I was using my new Nikon Z9. I’ve been a Nikon shooter since I’ve been a professional; my first job was on an F3 35mm film camera. I’ve been through a few major photographic changes, the first going from manual focus to autofocus — that was a bit rocky. The next was going from film to digital. That was really tough as generally the clients didn’t have a clue and talked nonsense! And the next major change, well, that would be mirrorless, I’d guess.


One of the biggest difficulties in shooting film, especially when it’s a paid job which you’ve got to deliver on, is the gap between what’s in front of you, and the photograph you take of it; that gap of a few hours was, for me, always the scary bit. And I think that’s the revolutionary part of mirrorless: you can actually see the photograph before you’ve even taken it!
Electronic viewfinders are something that have never worked for me, up until now and with the Z9. Taking these pictures, there were many times when I clean forgot that I wasn’t looking through an optical viewfinder, and I always found it shocking when I remembered and realized! There’s no noticeable lag, and the viewfinder is always switched on by the time your eye gets up to it. Even with the camera switched off, if you turn it on as you bring it up to your eye, like a sharpshooter in a western, you can’t catch it out — by the time you get there, it’s there too. I was put off by the Z9’s lower pixel count EVF when compared to the Sony Alpha 1, but it never judders, locks, or blacks out while you shoot, and because I forget that it’s electronic rather than optical, I can’t fault it, resolution or no.




The focus of the Z9 (another mirrorless advantage) astonishes me, it’s almost magic how it can lock on to a person’s eye, and follow them around the frame. Many of these shots are composed differently than they would have been if I’d been shooting a DSLR, just because when the camera can track the subject around the frame, you have so much more choice in how you compose it. That coupled with a live histogram makes the shooting experience of the Z9 so much more efficient for me than with any other camera I’ve used. Now I’ve got the Z9, I won’t be picking up my DSLR again.
But that brings me back to the second day and the difficulties that I was having. It was nothing to do with the camera: the limiting factor was the headspace that I was in (as it usually is). Even if I’d returned to my F3, I wouldn’t have been seeing right, and that was nothing to do with the camera or what was in front of me. The problem was that I’d lost my superpower, I’d lost the special ability that the camera gives me.



In my case, that’s the ability to talk to other people! When I used to shoot weddings, and thank god I don’t anymore — it’s the hardest job in all of photography, am I right wedding photographers? — it used to amaze me that I’d feel like I’d got to know everyone, but if I went to a wedding without my camera, I’d not speak to anyone! It was by coming back to that realization, and connecting with that internal fact, that I was able to put my cape back on and get back to work.
https://petapixel.com/2022/03/03/the-world-needs-photographers-now-more-than-ever/
Shrovetide ‘Mob’ Football, Ashbourne, Derbyshire 2022
… an earlier example : Shrovetide ‘Mob’ Football, Ashbourne, Derbyshire 2020
just thought I’d mention it …. in the current situation!
https://www.facebook.com/tashuk/posts/10159040447171799
A selection of pictures at the protest in Nottingham : Public post on my Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/tashuk/posts/10159035703991799
FREE TO PROTEST: THE PROTESTOR’S GUIDE TO POLICE SURVEILLANCE AND
HOW TO AVOID IT
https://privacyinternational.org/sites/default/files/2021-06/FREE_TO_PROTEST-UK-EDITION.pdf
tomorrow the policing bill goes back to the commons. after almost a year of resistance to the bill on the streets and inside both the commons and the lords, this is the final stage before it becomes law. here’s what to look out for and what’s at stake…7:36 PM · Feb 27, 2022·Twitter Web App98 Retweets5 Quote Tweets405 LikesTweet your reply
ReplyBen Smoke@bencsmoke·Replying to @bencsmokeback in january you may remember mammoth sitting in the lords in which govt suffered historic defeat to amendments it had attempted to sneak into the bill after it passed commons. those amendments (which inc. protest stop + search + more) were voted down + cant be reintroduced.1222Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·mps will decide on amendments lords made to the bill. where part 3 (protest) is concerned these are: removing noise restrictions on protest removing criminalisation of single person protest amending offence of wilful obstruction of highway to only include strategic road network1315Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·government will seek to reintroduce the above, all of which are pernicious threat to protest in this country. particularly look out for those tory mps who’ve spent the last few days praising anti-war protestors in russia who will tomorrow vote to criminalise similar protest here.1931Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·elsewhere in parts 2 and 10 of the bill, the lords passed the creation of a new serious violence duty (based on prevent) and serious violence reduction orders, but with dulling amendments. on serious violence duty lords added amendment to exclude confidential patient info1111Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·on svro’s lords added stipulation for robust pilot + further parliamentary vote before rollout. MPs could accept these but its assumed govt (with its massive majority) will whip to vote down amendments.119Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·back in december, an amendment designed to protect gypsy, roma and traveller way of life to counter the devastating provisions elsewhere in the bill was tied in the lords (171-171) so did not pass. the only way mps can now thwart those provisions is to vote down the whole bill.1714Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·lords also included an amendement which would repeal the vagrancy act (1824) which is used to criminalise rough sleeping and begging. mps will get to uphold or strike down that amendment.2212Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·gonna level with you- it’s unlikely the (fairly meagre) amendments from the lords will pass in the commons. we have to, as we should have been for a while now, understand that the majority of this will become law, and will be enforced against our communities soon. we must resist.1218Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·what does that resistance look like? well! for the last couple of months i’ve been chatting with activists across the country to figure out where they’re are and what they’re planning. more on that coming this week!1214Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·elsewhere this week, the IPCC report is released tomorrow (at 11am). i’mma be up late tonight zooming through it so i can try and break down the key bits for you over on @HUCKmagazine as soon as the embargo lifts!1110Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·i should also say, big h/t and ty to @libertyhq for all their hope in helping report on this legislation over the last year – make sure to give them a follow and keep an eye on their feed for stuff about the bill (and other stuff!) tomorrow and onwards!1110Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·*all their help in reporting it’s been a long day lmao23Ben Smoke@bencsmoke·an update on the vagrancy act:Quote Tweet
Jodie@jodietbeck · 1hReplying to @bencsmokesomething positive is that the Vagrancy Act amendment was accepted by the Gov last week so it isn’t going to be debated – only caveat is that the Gov have said there will be a “commencement period” during which they may try to introduce some Vagrancy Act provisions in a new Bill