Sunday, 17 February 2013

Unit 23 Architectural Photography


Architectural Photography

The task for this unit was:-
1. to identify a building worthy of photography
2. research the subject, eg. construction date, function, materials
3. consider the definition of "architecture" to produce images of a specific building.

My research and and interpretation of architecture influenced my style and production of my imagery.



Victorian mansion called ‘The Towers’

http://didsburycivicsociety.org.uk/didsbury-village/local-buildings-and-monuments/the-towers/


If Didsbury is overwhelmingly a product of the 19th century, architecturally speaking, the crown must be the ‘grossly picturesque’ Victorian mansion called ‘The Towers’, off Wilmslow Road.  The architectural historian Sir Nikolaus Pevsner called it “the grandest of all Manchester mansions”.   Thomas Worthington, architect of the Albert Memorial in Albert Square, Manchester, designed it.   It was popularly known after it was built (from 1868-1872) as the ‘Calendar House’ since it was said to have 12 towers, 52 rooms and 365 windows.
It was built originally for John Edward Taylor, founder of the Manchester Guardian, and was sold in 1874 to the engineer, Daniel Adamson. The decision to build the Manchester Ship Canal was taken in the drawing room of the house by Adamson and a group of associates in 1882.
The house and its estate were bought in 1920 for the use of the newly established British Cotton Industry Research Association.  One of the cotton spinners, Mr W. Greenwood, met a large part of the costs and and asked that the place be named after his daughter Shirley, hence its being named the ‘Shirley Institute’.
Purpose built laboratories were subsequently opened on the site.   Even though much of the fourteen and a half acre estate has been developed as a business park with some striking modern architecture, the BCIRA’s successor, the British Textile Technology Group, still retains a presence.









 



Didsbury Library


Alderman Fletcher Moss was dismayed by Didsbury's lack of a library, and persuaded one of the richest men of the time, American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, to pay for one.



Didsbury Library was designed by Henry Price, the Manchester City architect and was erected in 1915. It is a curious building, looking even more ecclesiastical than Emmanuel church next door – a temple to learning. It was, however, well designed for its purpose and has served Didsbury for almost a century.





1 comment:

  1. I am just commenting on te images, not the exercise as this was set by Richard. You have produced some strong mages here, the first of the civic society look very grand, I was not aware that this palace existed! The inclusion of the artificial light source over the door adds a good variation in white balance. I have a problem with the doorway detail and the wider roof shots. For images like these you really need to be shooting square on to the building to avoid the verticals from being distorted.

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