The Milton Keynes Project – 23 years in the making
As some may be aware, I’m finally hunkering down on a project that most people I’ve told about it are scratching their heads about in equal measures of bemusement and amusement. A photo study of Milton Keynes. Unusual for someone who generally really likes landscape photography but not that unusual if you know me. I’ve got quirky interests and I’m happy for it to stay that way.
- New 3/5/09 : Milton Keynes: The Future
Why am I doing this?
I’ve always had an equal appreciation for the built environment as I have the rural landscape. I know what I like and I don’t. I hate the Twyford Down cutting, but I love the spot near Greatham Bridge. I feel somewhat repelled by Leicester but thoroughly enthralled (obsessed perhaps is closer to the truth) by Milton Keynes. It is bizarre but there you go. I can only explain it’s because the many times I went there when I was little and the massive impression it made on me when I was little. I’m trying to explore that wonder in this current work.
What is it? Aims and Goals?
It’s a mixture of landscape photography and street photography. I’m seeking out what I find pleasing and even beautiful about the place, and also the people that truly make the place. I’ve gone in with a fairly open mind and acknowledge (and you will see it in the final book) that not everything is perfect and that some of the commonly cited ‘issues’ with MK on a couple of counts have some decent grounding behind them. My aim is a personal one, to capture why I like the place so much and why I feel it is important to Britain as a whole. Goals are for ambitious people and I am not doing this for world peace or something profoundly impossible. My goal might be for a few people to pick it up and have their perceptions changed or at least a seed of intrigue to be sowed.
I’m very cautious of ending up with a Pittsburgh Project and if I am utterly honest: I think this is my Pittsburgh Project, but I’m putting a start and end on it for impression:mk – for my own sanity and the project’s success. I’m not suggestion I have even 1% the brilliance of W Eugene Smith, but I can see a thread of similarity. After all, arguably this is a project I started when I first visited the city in the 80s, thought about photographing at school and then began slowly in 2004 before taking a 5 year hiatus on the project. I was meant to start again late 2006 but other issues tainted progress.
Where can I read more about this project and inter-related issues?
What does the project name mean?
Milton Keynes is abbreviated MK all over the place, and I can’t think of anyone who lives in MK that wouldn’t know what you meant if you said MK to them. The impression part is in the literally sense an impression, a subjective view of a topic/subject. It’s also a direct nod to impressionism and one of my all time favourite paintings: Impression, Sunrise. Finally, as with many current developments, the names of them seem to follow a pattern e.g. Stadium:MK, the hub:mk and the centre:mk
How am I doing it?
Largely I am using my Leica M2 and I’m visiting often, all seasons and spending weekends and sometimes longer (depending on if I can get time off work and annual leave allowance permitting!) staying in the city and walking and driving around. I’m a very keen walker so some visits I have walked upwards of 30 miles in one weekend but its one of the few ways to really get to grips with the place. Intentionally you can’t see much from the car from the grid roads.
I’m also using a Canon EOS 3 for the night exposures and any telephoto based shots (which are minimal.)
Unusually for me, the project is largely in colour although I do have some very nice black and white shots but I’m inclined to keep them back as I’m concerned that consistency will not be achieved by mixing between colour, duotone, black and white etc.
So far I have used colour wise: Kodachrome 64 (bulk of daytime work), Fuji Provia 100F (remainder of daytime work and pretty much all night time long exposure work) and for black and white Kodak Tri X at box speed and pushed to 1600, and Fuji Neopan Acros for the finer daytime work. Black and white development has been by myself (originally using ID11, now using Xtol) and processing for Kodachrome has been done by Dwayne’s in Kansas, USA. E6 processing by Peak Imaging.

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