WEEKLY REFLECTION #25

GRAVE YARD HUNT DAY TRIP

As I have mentioned previously, my big plan to have a road trip around East Yorkshire Cemeteries was making me really excited.

It was my pleasure to set an alarm for 7 am and start my journey early. The sun was out and I was in a good mood. The phrase that you probably don’t hear much – I look forward to going to a grave yard. But I really was – it was important for me to explore that part of End of Life and see the British culture specific grave yard arrangements, grave stones and the nature of cemeteries.

The night before I prepared a list and planned the route starting from the furthest  – Withernsea.

  1. Withernsea (on the Way to Withernsea)
  2. Burton Pidsea
  3. South Cave
  4. Anlaby Cemetery
  5. St. Martin, Beverley
  6. Hull, North Cemetery
  7. Hull, Spring Bank

The first 4 was the important ones, the rest – if I get some time.

Grave Yard #1

[I haven’t been back to check the name of it]

I arrived early, the sun was just warming up the grounds and it was quite.
I was not quite sure how to start this weird thing of photographing strangers graves, so I kept my camera in the bag and just thought I have a wonder around. Also I was looking if the small cemetery church has got CCTV, just to be sure that I won’t get caught.

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I was surprised how beautiful everything is. It reminded me of the Eden gardens – peaceful and you could expect angels coming down from the blue sky.

I had a little wonder, took a few pictures of grave stones, flowers, teddy’s and items left aside the grave. It was like walking through many different life stories.
Some grave stones really amused me by what’s been left as a signifier for the person buried, some made me sad as I can see that there have been no visitors to the grave.

My attention was drawn to a man who appeared from the car park..oops, I thought I am in trouble. I slowly placed my camera in the bag and pretended to be “normal” visitor. Just to discover five minutes later, he has come to have his morning coffee and sandwich alongside someones grave – I can just guess if it is a wife, children or a friend, maybe parents. It was really sweet, but as he was there for a bit I felt the pressure to leave.

I took quite a few photographs around the grave yard from different points and angles and tried to spot something that is more extraordinary than a average grave.

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This grave stone and items alongside the grave just tell the story about the person leaving to wonder if he died from drink driving, or it was his passion – ride a motorbike and have a pint with his friends in the pub. And that picture – one the one hand – his family has picked a photograph that is probably not the most popular, but on the other hand – having this exact image gives the story more reality and truth about the person.

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At one point some work men/gardeners came and started to sort out the mole traps located around the grounds [yes, there is a “peeing in the bushes story”] and left this unattended for a while. I thought this image just shows that for someone this is a day job, walk all over graves and keep them company, also keep the place tidy, grass cut and litter-free.

From all, the image below is my favourite. It represents the visit, the project, the personal vision of grave yards and has a great composition, with little water drops in the grass

All Saints’ Church Roos Cemetery

This was an unplanned stop, as I was driving to the next destination. I thought it was an abandoned church and old grave yard.
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Through the mud and rotten leaves I found my way to this amazing place.

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Only further down I discovered that this is not derelict church and and grave yard. There was a “fresh” grounds full of graves.

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I was amazed by this hidden gem and thought to have a good look at the church.
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As I was composing this very picture, a man came up to me and told me a story about the church.
Church is still open and up and running.

I learned that Roos is the name of the village/place and the first recordings about the ground where the church is build is around 867 A.D.

This church first appears on writings in 1220 A.D.
The volunteer man invited me to have a look at the inside of the church and the organ they are restoring.

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It was really beautiful and I could smell the history.
The organ had its first opening in 1881 and it will soon be re-opened when the restoring is finished.

Here are the new pipes – hand painted.

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It was a lovely addition to my road trip and I had more images to reflect on.

Burton Pidsea

When looking the information about this cemetery I imagined it to be big, but at arrival I discovered that it is quite small. Large part of the grounds is old grave yards.
The church was beautiful and the sun just highlighted the detailed building.
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The grave yard that I was more focused on had a similar style of layout and I had a little wonder around just in case I find something photographically interesting and story-telling.

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This image is one of my favourites from all grave yards, I deliberately cropped the head off. The white figure represents the beauty of such sculptures against the grass, leaves and other elements.

South Cave Cemetery

South Cave is my favourite visit by far. I have seen the cemetery for a few times whilst driving past it and even before I took the project on, always wanted to stop and have a look. It has got certain appeal that probably can be explained by the overall landscape that promises peace and quiet.

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South Cave Cemetery has a certain mood that feels like it is filled with love and celebration of life. Yes, I think out of all cemeteries I’ve been to, this one really celebrates the “End Of Life”.

The decor, little touches and the little, cute church really filled my heart with joy.
My only problem at this visit was the man who was cutting grass on the grounds. So I had to hide my camera quite a lot.

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I was starting to get into the project and the road trip. There was a lot of stories to photograph within the grave yard.
I guess there could potentially be a larger scale project just photographing cemeteries up for grabs, as not many people are aware of the cultural trends of grave yards. That would not be first choice for visiting an exhibition of this kind, but could make people more comfortable when dealing with loss, death and grief.

At one point the man approached me and I had to make up a story that I am a history student and photograph old cemeteries.
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We had a little chat about the cemetery and his job. He said that he likes working here – here he can get his peace and quite from busy family life [wife] and just enjoy the silence.
her told me that people have to pay over £850 to get a place here, so we discussed the expenses of funeral and that saving up for your own funeral is just common sense these days.

He said that I need to come back when the cherry trees are blossoming. OHH, I have an official invite.

Few minutes later friend of his arrived and I had to leave.

I took last picture and came to a conclusion that grave stones are such an important legacy left behind, that my project will have a value at some point.

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When I was pulling out of the drive way, I noticed that both man are now sat on the side of an old grave and having a cigarette – I wish I’ve taken that picture.

Anlaby Cemetery

I was still buzzing and excited to continue my journey. Anlaby Cemetery looked very popular and well groomed. It was quite big with many different areas.

There was a few people about, so again – I was kind of sneaking and hiding my camera.

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Again – many different stories to be found and discovered. Green grass and fresh air gives that feel of freedom and peace. I imagine that people come here to clear up the old flowers and say “hello” to their loved ones, are looking forward to spend some time there.

As there was quite a few people about, I thought I test my comfort zone. I wanted to capture some interaction between the people and the graves.

It was scary to sneak behind the bush and point the camera in a shameless way, but I did not have the guts to go and ask, if I can take their picture next to the grave. There might be 1 out of 100 people that would say yes, but there was only sex people about…

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This is THE IMAGE of a man taking care of a loved ones grave.
I was feeling the guilt and sentiment, but when later on looking at the image, I discovered that it is his wife and the grave says: “will always be your pet lamb” and that nearly brought me to tears.
Yes, it is kind of wrong and ethically questionable, but we can all relate to this photograph and find the connection to the subject of the “End of Life”.
And that is the purpose of this project – get people talking openly about life, death and how we all celebrate the “End Of Life”. Because we all celebrate without even noticing it.

This cemetery also revealed something that I have read before in my research – about Kitsch and Death in one of the Gillo Dorfles essays.

“Even in the case of extremely famous examples of architecture, kitsch always manages to creep into furnishings and all sacred iconological material.” (Dorfles, 1969, p. 142)

Some of the grave yards scream “Kitsch”, because of the age group and the decade they lived in.

Again, I can’t really ignore the love for the Kitsch within this project, but I have to be careful not to offend anyone or be bias.

Just before leaving I had a conversation with a grave digger/gardener. We both agreed that it is expensive to die and people never stop paying for something – even after they die.

Also to a question about how he feels being surrounded by death, sadness and end of life on daily basis, he said – it is OK, life cycle is something that we are all aware of, but it gets really hard when a child dies and he has witness the funeral and mourners.

 

Definitely would like to come back here for more images, as the cemetery is big enough to sneak and be invisible.

Conclusion:

I am so pleased about the outcome. I am pleased about the discoveries, lessons learned and images. Could this be a big turning point in my project?

WEEKLY REFLECTION #24

“BEFORE I DIE” WALL AT YO-YO FESTIVAL 1st of May

 

BEFORE I DIE WALL is something that I have mentioned before as a really interesting aspect of talking about “End Of Life”.
It has started as a way of dealing with grief and depression after loss.
“After losing someone she loved and experiencing deep depression, artist Candy Chang created an interactive wall on an abandoned house in her neighborhood to create an anonymous place to help restore perspective and share intimately with neighbors while remaining an introvert”

Source:
Before I Die Wall Story

Since then the concept has spread around the world and has been very popular amongst communities and people.

Since the first time I heard the word “Before I Die” wall, I have been excited to try and set one up in Hull. Together with eskimosoup  it came to life in YO-YO THE FAMOUS INDIE ROCK N ROLL DISCO  Festival.

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You can see the full report and images here:

BEFORE I DIE WALL @YO_YO Festival

 

 

“BEFORE I DIE” WALL AT YO-YO FESTIVAL

The “BEFORE I DIE” wall is something that was mentioned to me whilst discussing my Final Major project. It seemed like a fantastic idea that unites people from all over the world, allowing anonymously say something that you might not discuss with your family and friends. We don’t seem to live our lives constantly thinking about the day when we might die, we want to live and do great things.

The wall is world wide project created by artist Candy Chang . He created an interactive wall on an abandoned house in her neighbourhood to create an anonymous place to help restore perspective and share intimately with neighbours while remaining an introvert.

BEFORE I DIE WALL WEBSITE

The success of this idea is incredible. As website describes “After posting a few photos online, the images spread and she received hundreds of messages from people who wanted to make a wall with their community. She created this website with resources and now thanks to passionate people around the world, over 1,000 Before I Die walls have been created in over 35 languages and over 70 countries, including Kazakhstan, Iraq, Haiti, China, Ukraine, Portugal, Japan, Denmark, Argentina, and South Africa.”

Before-I-Die-photo-Certificate-of-Appropriateness

I was super keen to set up one in Hull. City of Culture/2017 is coming and this could extend the community involvement, be creative and show the greatness of the people living in Hull.

Photographic aspect would be used to spread the word and record the “life” of the wall.

I happened to have great people around me being interested in the wall as much as I was and that’s where the project was born and started to take shape.
John and Jenni from eskimosoup had a realistic idea of how to make this happen. The first stage is to set up a smaller version of the wall [low cost] and see what the public reaction is. Jenni had a great idea to test the wall at the Bank Holiday Weekend YO-YO Festival on Princess Avenue created by organisation established in 1995 YO-YO THE FAMOUS INDIE ROCK N ROLL DISCO.

The festival was family friendly, covers different times of the day and pretty much is an ideal festival for the first “BEFORE I DIE” wall.

We set up in the morning, I felt like the preparation is essential to photograph as we are doing this from scratch.  Jenni already had prepared the wall [great job] and we just had to set it up. We also thought to extend the wall to the pavement and allow people to express themselves.

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Later on the day, when festival was two hours in, I popped down to the venue and checked if people have been near to the wall. We really hoped that people will get involved and we will be able to take the project further, responding to the thousands of interests [high expectation haha].

I was happy to see that people have written they wishes and some have used the pavement and chalks to express themselves.

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Then later on the night we went down to see what is happening again, plus enjoy the festival – music and atmosphere.

We were super happy that people have continued to write on the wall and pavement.
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It was interesting to see what the messages are.

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The experience was a learning curve for the “BEFORE I DIE” wall. We have learned that people will get engaged we just need to give them the space and tools.

We know that kids love it too, so do we need to create a kids “before I die wall” in the future?

My personal preference would be 3x bigger wall and we will be working towards that for the future reference.

We have some great plans for Hull and “BEFORE I DIE” wall, so keep you eyes and ears open.

As for the festival, I did love the atmosphere and so I did love a bit of live music.

My personal favourite was NINETIES BOY and his “gang”. Just loved the 90’s cheese and tackiness, his presence was ace and OHH, the lyrics…

 

Overall – happy to announce that the wall and the festival was great success, thanks Jenni and John for great work and support, it’s my honor to be part of this.

WEEKLY REFLECTION #23

Email to photographer Colin Gray.

I have mentioned Colin Gray as part of my research previously and also stated that he inspired me to consider my project as photographically doable.

His personal project “In Sickness and in Health” has received world-wide recognition for all the right reasons.

It has showed the insight of being part of someone’s death, loved ones death in particular and sends a powerful message across about witnessing the end of life, grieving and absorbing what is happening through amazing and emotional photographs.

As Colin Gray website states:
““In Sickness and in Health” forms the final stages of “The Parents” series. Begun in 2000, it shows his parent’s deterioration and, ultimately, his mothers’ death. The hospital and church visits became more frequent, the ailments more serious, the drugs regime ever more complex. Whilst his father struggled with his new role as a carer, Gray found that his photographs helped make sense of the deterioration and loss he was experiencing. Having reached the age his parents were when he started the project, Gray now sees their history in his own future.”

You can look through photographs and his other projects on his official website:
Colin Gray

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Colin Gray has been a reminder through out my project development how photographs can change the way we see the world and ordinary things around us.
I feel deeply every single image from series, I can relate to it in both ways -personally and professionally.
Also these series are inspiration to achieve the same reaction with my project.

In my future project development I will continue to refer back to Colin Gray and do more research.

But as for my current project direction, I was very keen to get advice from him of how to approach hospices and hospitals, people and organisations and in general see if he can share his views on death and end of life.
At first I just thought I will quickly brief my project, give the link to my blog and ask few questions, but as it turned out – I am only capable of writing essays.

Here you can read full document:
EMAIL TO C GRAY

 

He replied the same night “Anete, there’s a lot to take in, will get back to you. Thanks for the kind comments”

It would be awesome to hear back from him so fingers crossed.

WEEKLY REFLECTION #22

Press release to Hull Daily Mail

After discussion with John Gilbert and making a conscious decision to take another step towards finding a potential funerals, I started to work on my press release.

I had to look up a few websites in addition to the template that I was given to get it perfectly right and get the article in the paper.

A complete guide to writing an effective press release – The Marketing Donut

What should go into a press release?

Answer the following questions about your news:

  • Who? Who are the key players — your company, anyone else involved with the product? Who does your news affect/who does it benefit?
  • What? What is new?
  • Why? Why is this important news — what does it provide that is different?
  • Where? Where is this happening/is there a geographical angle/is the location of business relevant?
  • When? What is the timing of this? Does this add significance?
  • How?How did this come about?

 

You need to get all the information into the first paragraph. The test of success is whether the story can be understood in its entirety if only the first paragraph was reproduced in print.

The second paragraph expands on information in the first, giving a bit more detail.  Often, the third paragraph provides a quote. The fourth paragraph outlines final information, such as referencing websites and ordering, or mentions other products in development, for example.

_________________________________________________________________
The plan was to focus on Funeral Photography in order to appeal potential families and people to allow me to photograph their funerals.

One really good tip from John was to write every thing in third person and quote myself in order to make publishers life dead easy and give more of a chance to get published. I also had to pick few good images that describe my project.

I was convinced that discussing my Latvian heritage and background was important too, because the idea has grown from my personal experience.

It was interesting  again to overcome the issue of not being able to describe my project in few words and have exact idea in words, but as the time was running out and  wanted the article in the same day as the radio show, I had to focus really hard and get the job done.

At the end, I was really pleased and proud. Another great experience to go through and from now on, I will be more confident to get in a story if needed published.

Here you can read the full document:

Press Release Hull Daily Mail

In order to reach someone directly, I had to ring up the News Desk and get a contact. Once I had that I send the Press Release and few hours later Ben Blosse rang me back for a quick chat.
I was really pleased to hear that he thinks that the story is worth publishing and I have done a lot of work for him. He asked me to talk through the project, my background, so I did.
Again I was not particularly prepared to discuss the project – the communication is still lacking, but I think I nailed it at the end. At the end of the day – I am lucky to be truly passionate about the project, everything comes from me and my crazy mind. So the communication is just one thing I need to be working on.

To my happy surprise the next day, just before the radio show I was in the paper!
Wo-hooo!!!!

Hull Daily mail Anete Sooda, Photographer

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To my surprise, in the article there was a lot of repetetive information, but in a good light, positive and supportive. Although there was not a lot of text [info] from the press release, the reporter used information I gave him over the phone.

It was a good experience and gave me an insight of how its like when you are a local celebrity for a day [not really, I was just over the moon that my plan worked and I made the most out of the opportunity]