HULL CITY OF CULTURE – 2024 – STILL

…and here we are, here I am. 2024 and ongoing great city for culture, events, communities and friends. The city that is home and place to grow, stay and root yourself deep.
2024 has been a storm for me and very last day of it I am lastminutedotcom, because life. Life that is busy, work that is changing and challenging, free time that is little. I wasn’t sure if I will get to this point to summarise my year with culture in Hull, I silently wanted to give this up, but I couldn’t. I have realised that I have to hold tight to what I do good until I can’t, including being in the city with camera and deliver this every year.

Time and technology has been my enemy to achieve this and I have sworn a lot, so words will be less. But hello to all people who was part of my year, amazing organisations, events, clients to make my day/week.

I have visited Ferens Art Gallery three times this year and it truly is one of the best free to enter art galleries in the UK.

Jason Wilsher-Mills: Are We There Yet?

I remember from around 2017/18 visiting Artlink for one of his exhibitions, meeting him and thinking how unique he is. And here he was, in Ferens exhibiting large scale masterpieces. Really really good. Even though not directly interactive, it felt like we, the members of public, are part of it. The art was for us.

Round two at Ferens Art Gallery:

Ferens Open Exhibition

Two visits worthy, 2024 delivered extraordinary work. I have been to Ferens Open Exhibition every year since 2015 and this was my favourite. It was rich with variety and mind boggling art work. Children’s section was adorable, will never forget the cute fox painting.

Ferens Art Gallery change the in-house exhibitions too, so most times it is a treat for the eye. At my visits I don’t squeeze through crowds of people, and it nice to consume art in piece.

Humber Street Gallery/Absolutely Cultured

Absolutely Cultured have truly kept the momentum going since 2017. With new directors board, events/exhibitions/workshops/talks have carried on being exciting and definitely resumes to be the heart of cultural scene in Hull.

Humber Street Gallery/Absolutely Cultured have truly kept the momentum going since 2017. With new directors board, events/exhibitions/workshops/talks have carried on being exciting and definitely resumes to be the heart of cultural scene in Hull.

YOU AND ME IN HU3 – Russell Boyce and George Norris

Fellow photographer and friend Abby reminded me of the opening night event and after a long day I did drag my tired ass and I am so glad I did. It was a great exhibition, especially considering how many people it brought to the gallery and touched heart strings.

At the opening night it was more of a catch up and socialising, enjoying being there, so I probably saw two photos. So I went back again with a purpose to see the exhibition.

You and Me in HU3 presented the work of two artists, Russell Boyce and George Norris. The exhibition wove together a series of black and white photographs taken over 40 years ago with ongoing work shot in colour. Through this duality, You and Me in HU3 charted almost half a century of change across an area of Hull which has seen vast social transformation since the decline of the fishing industry in the mid 20th century.

Composed of distinct series of images, the exhibition reflected a breadth of social issues whether historic or contemporary. In “Changing Times”, Russell presented an intimate set of photographs documenting daily life for a young mum during the 1980s housing crisis, whilst “Rag-Bone” explored the once prevalent but now declining occupation of the rag-and-bone man. George’s series “Gypsy Childhood” was a set of images born out of the artist’s sustained generational relationship with one of Hull’s horse-trading Gypsy communities, meanwhile “A Love Letter to Hull” was a celebratory ode from the artist to his city, loaded with warmth, love and familiarity.

Source: absolutelycultured.co.uk

LIVE LIKE LEGENDS

The opening was full house bonkers amazing, which I was lucky to be part of. Bursting with street art culture, graffiti, photographs, installations, a screening, good vibes, music, good people, possibly true rumours that Banksy himself was there, it was truly one of the highlights of the year.

Live Like Legends is a bold and compelling celebration of Hull’s Street Art and graffiti scene. Taking place across two floors at Humber Street Gallery, the exhibition explores some of the joys and complexities of this unique form of public expression which has had a striking presence in the urban landscape of Hull since the early 1980s.  

Bringing together many generations of artists who have made critical contributions to the development of this vibrant and far-reaching cultural scene over the past forty years, Live Like Legends presents newly commissioned artworks highlighting the diversity of creative practice within this artistic community.  

Working collaboratively, the artists and an eclectic mix of contributors celebrate self-expression through highly stylised graffiti and multimedia work, alongside curated archival material including photography and previously unseen footage. This important cultural archive provides context to how the graffiti scene intersects with other aspects of street and youth culture, and alongside society more broadly.  

Included in this exhibition is work by Detour, Ekoe, K148, Kev Le Kat, Leebo, Lonny POP, mike sprout, Mr Joe, NoHone, OBOUT, Oman, Paris, Pesh, Pinky, SI2, Skeg, Sophie Cash, Spamdog, Vrok, Xenz, Yours and Ziml. 

Source: absolutelycultured.co.uk

ARTLINK HULL- COLD JUNCTION

Cold Junction by Luis Bustamante/Sebastian Bustmamante

Luis Bustamante is a Chilean photographer. He and his wife, Carmen, arrived in Hull in December 1974, as political refugees. Their son, Sebastian Bustamante, is a British-Chilean artist, curator, and researcher.

On 11 September 1973, a military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet seized control of the South American country of Chile. The coup deposed the socialist president, Salvador Allende. The Pinochet regime launched an extensive and brutal terror campaign against Allende’s supporters, including kidnapping, arbitrary arrests, torture, and executions. Groups in Britain and elsewhere worked to highlight these abuses and to support victims and their families. The Humberside branch of the Chile Solidarity Campaign organised for 30 Chilean exiles to move to the city—Luis and Carmen were among them.  

As well as continuing his studies at the University of Hull, Luis walked the streets, photographing what he saw. “The camera had two purposes: it was a connection with a new life and a shield that enabled me to look at it,” he later said. These images vividly capture a sense of everyday life in Hull in the mid-1970s, a period of significant social and political change.

To mark the fiftieth anniversary of Chilean refugees arriving in Hull, Cold Junction unites Luis’s photography with Sebastian’s ongoing project El Otoño. Bringing together objects, photographs, and video, Sebastian’s work explores his status as a second-generation exile. El Otoño honours those who were disappeared, those who stayed, those who left, and those still trying to build a better future in Chile. 

This exhibition is co-curated with Tom White.

Source: artlinkhull.co.uk

For the start, I haven’t been in Artlink space for years and I was amazed how beautifully the space is renovated, especially top floor kept with so much light and features.

The exhibition was very very good, the curation was exceptional. Me and my partner thoroughly enjoyed it. I was drawn to small details in a space that has so much breathing space and light. The story humble and perfect content for photography touching topics even more relevant today.

FREEDOM FESTIVAL 2024

In the past I have worked for the festival and it is a intense job. After I winded down with photography in 2022 and stopped focusing on always being the photographer at major events in Hull, I didn’t have much content to show-off. This year in my career was focused on estate and odd creative projects, so I really wanted to be at the festival as a photographer. It was a great day, day for myself, with fluid brief created for myself. Highlights was the Parcel Project and Sync or Swim by Tamara&Jo

Sync or Swim by Tamara&Jo

These two powerhouses always deliver. It was burst of colour and wackiness. As per usual crowds loved it. So did my camera and my photographers soul. And, hell, I was so glad to see so many familiar faces in the audience.

Freedom Festival overall was full of sunshine, the crem-de-la-crem of Hull’s finest people, great events and happy vibe, Hull transformed for the festival duration of busy busy bee town.

At the festival I bumped into Curiosity Hull which leads me to a little job I did for them few months ago at Pipe&Glass.

Curiosity Hull is a movement toward greater understanding, increased knowledge and ingrained accuracy. Taking questions, queries and requests from members of the population of Hull, Curiosity strives to provide the best, correct guidance and answers. 

All content is made by the people of Hull, scrutinised by librarians from Hull’s public libraries and presented as accurately and helpfully as possible. 

Curiosity is brought to you by the James Reckitt Library Trust, which has dedicated the last 100 years to increasing the provision of public libraries in Hull. 

Source: https://curiosityhull.co.uk/

Here are the team in Hull at the Freedom Festival. We had a lovely chat, we talked Hull, David Burns from Radio Humberside, Clive Sullivan Way and what I do.

This was a quick but grand opportunity. The team travelled to Pipe& Glass in South Dalton to recreate ancient biscuit recipes by a Michelin Star Chef for a feature. Stunning location and a unique opportunity. Good biscuits too.

As you might of heard, I have had an interesting year in my career, so sometimes my planned culture ventures didn’t happen. Like this one below. Hull Central Library exhibition space was suppose to have an street art exhibition, but I missed it and instead I had a quick look at the James Reckitt legacy.

The year brought the usual: pretty regular jobs, new opportunities, projects, but I more and more struggled for time to have free time to do self-imitated work or culture ventures. The consequence is not very much content and some cool events missed. But I don’t dwell on it, I am trying to learn to understand that I can’t have it all.

In early 2024 I had to deal with a new challenge and I started freelancing(in a way) in estate/property photography industry. It wasn’t the plan, but I started building a portfolio and planned to have a separate business branch. I didn’t want to, I don’t think the industry is in line with other photography pay-wise, it is not about the heart of photography, I quickly learned that it is about “quick-shit-fast-turnaround” and as usual I wanted extra better. Spring/summer in my memory will be like a storm of shit where I tried to succeed and built the presence in the new industry, but I also looked very hard for sustainable alternative. Our Big Picture came together again and we mingled, went to Leeds Photo Festival, I stopped hosting photography classes and closed that chapter for a bit and was busy printing personal archives.

Our Big Picture now has concluded until further notice, but we had few exciting things at the end of the project.
Stories Of Water Exhibition
Leeds/Photo North Festival
Workshop
Visit to Cleethorpes

Stories Of Water Exhibition was an unexpected/quick turnarounds opportunity where I actually went out and created work and here you can read all about it: https://anetesoodaphoto.blog/2024/08/28/our-big-picture-stories-of-water-2024/

Leeds/Photo North Festival was OBP organised day out and we had an amazing time. I met my muse Peter Dench, shook his hand and saw some insane curation and great photography from around the world. Again: actually blog post exists : https://anetesoodaphoto.blog/2024/04/17/photo-north-festival-24/

We also had a little meet-up and workshop hosted by Wes at the gallery.

And then we went on a walk in Cleethorpes as a collective to be with the place. It was interesting and insightful to walk round the edge of Cleethorpes and talk. Initially the requirement was not to treat it as a photo-walk, but I soooo cheated.

Our Big Picture is not quite Hull, but it is close enough and very important part of my 2024, so I have included this in the summary.

Our Big Picture Gallery and organisation is a vital part of North Lincolnshire culture/arts scene, listed building is a home to small and cosy exhibition space, recommend a visit.

The decision to stop hosting photography classes was a little difficult, but at the time I couldn’t justify the energy I invested versus money it was bringing and I paused it for a bit, but after great feedback and encouragement from my students, I am hoping to start my own “thing”. Last workshop hosted didn’t quite work out like planned, but never the less, it was very good and I felt very lucky with my last bunch.

Last but not least

HULL COMEDY FESTIVAL 2024

This festival is family. Jed and Gary working hard every year to bring the festival together to make Hull laugh. I try and visit at least 3 shows and this year it was very good selection.

Other small things happened: visit to Warrington to see fellow Latvian photographer Lasma Poisa’s exhibition Motherhood Uncovered for a little research for my own ongoing personal project.

Did some outings to scout for Halloween shoot locations and came close to discover a real local gem, but the fence/cameras stopped me to get closer [guess where this is]

Here we are, still cultured.
I really want 2025 to be more, but I am not making promises. The incentive to go out and account for it at the end of year feels like the last remains of my creative practice and work, but it is not true. I am still alive, here and people in Hull are keeping me on my happy toes. it just gets busy and I wish for more hours in the day, while dealing with the hours I have.

Thank you to all the clients, friends, organisations and my family for being my heartbeat.

Happy New Year
Love
Anete Sooda

HULL – STILL CITY OF CULTURE – 2023 EDITION

it’s that time of year, friends.

Spread across twelve months my wonders around the city of Hull as a resident, friend and a photographer sixth year running. I have mixed feelings about this year’s blog: glad to still be partially committed, very pleased to look back at another good year for the city in various areas of culture, but also disappointed with my performance, because “best I could do with the time I had” is not good enough for me, my ego is sliced. I miss being involved and available, miss meeting people, networking and exploring small and big culture ventures, I miss having the luxury of time. But I really did my best in one of the busiest years OF MA LAIF.

I will show you events, spaces/places done on work basis, as well as stuff I did purely for the blog and some random beautiful memories that hope inspire us be in presence of culture in 2024.
Some of my city ventures are through new thing I have been doing in 2023 – hosting photography classes in various subjects. Bit of teaching photography, but definitely exploring the city and its treasures, networking and photographing with other people.
Also quick mention of Through Our Eyes exhibition that happened in early 2023 (link to my blog)) that hopefully will carry on as a “thing” next year.

LET’S GO THEN:

March – THE AWAKENING part of Freedom Festival Trust

The event that was so waited to drag us out of winter gloom and it sure did light up the city in all its meaning.

Celebrating the change of seasons from winter to spring and our great city’s maritime identity, heritage, folklore and mythology, audiences explored the history-rich streets of the city centre from Queens Gardens, down Whitefriargate, across Trinity Square and up to Zebedee’s Yard. The Awakening 2023 was free to attend, spread across two evenings, bringing opportunity to explore world-class installations and performances, with Hull’s historic areas lit up with giant figures and forms. Indoors audiences could experience musical offerings from local favourites including a special edition of Trinity Live in partnership with Trinity Market and Sesh Events, and at Ferens Art Gallery, there will be another chance to catch the RE:SCORE films and a special live performance by Broken Orchestra.

Source: Freedom Festival Trust

My memory of this was that through the weekend I was manic busy at work, but really wanted to go. So I lied, plotted and scammed to be able to attend ( no one was hurt the process). And I am glad I fitted in the visit. Little magic.

THROUGH OUR EYES EXHIBITION – CELEBRATING FEMALE PHOTOGRAPHERS FROM NORTH – OUR BIG PICTURE – GRIMSBY

Full story available on my blog (link above), it was a fabulous start of the year – new people, opportunity to exhibit my creative work, tell my story and be part of a great project. We have new plans to carry on in 2024, so hopefully I can share some news in January on my socials,

In spring I also started my new part time hobby/job of teaching, hosting photography events. I have always wanted to teach higher education in photography, but that’s a long term future desire that requires some thought and prep that I haven’t had time for. The opportunity came unexpected and I grabbed it. Many and awesome events done and it has become a big part of my “photographers” duty. I love being the instructor, the educator, but at the same time mingling with various people who have different interests and skill levels, exploring genres and scouting Hull for gems to suit the topic, has been fantastic. I have grown a little friendly network and I have so many great plans for it in 2024. I also learned that I needed to revisit some basic photography key elements, and never the less it has given me an opportunity to be a photographer outside of work and have fun (cheeeeeeessse).
We have done Street Photography, Urban, Portraits, Manual Settings, Night, Light Movement, Flatlay and many others.
Here are some best of the best:

In Spring I also visited the POP-UP SPACE down Humber Street – funny how city grows and changes so quickly, I did not know it existed.

The artist exhibiting at the time was Holly Bright. She basically educated me about the space and it was lovely meet the face that lit the room like sunshine and her art was beautiful. It is an art in itself to be able to make a space yours and she really made the warehouse-type of space welcoming and brighter than it was before.

On a separate culture wonder with my partner I purposely went there to see who has taken the space at the time. The POP-UP space is one that changes the host, so each time you go, you can see something new.

Sadly I have lost and haven’t traced back the artists name, so if you recognise this talented person, please let me know in comments, so I can credit them. It was a really good visit, the artist was more than happy to tell the stories behind the work, shared how he used found materials to give them another life, and work was stunning, not all light and fluffy, some deep colours and string textures.

This year I have also been invited to do some stuff for the famous Middle Child Theatre Company for their Out Loud Scratch Nights. They collaborate with Silent Uproar – an award-winning theatre company creating fun nights out to engage a younger, funkier, and punkier crowd, aims to get theatre more accessible and affordable, fun and engaging for 16-25’s.
Middle Child is one of the best up North and they just know good stuff. They put Hull artists at the heart of their creative process, our growth and our successes, they really are the heart of local and real theatre.

I did two shows this year, one in July with two play scratches and one in October.

Out Loud: 1988 and Shit Life Crisis was ACE. To the point I managed to get photos whilst completely disappearing in the story. Shit Life Crisis made the audience tear up, I did tear up.

In October I was invited to photograph scratch by Chris Pearson “Cuckoo”

Again, very local and relatable to our “problems”, entertaining, gripping. And yet, still work in progress, all read from scripts.

All these events focus on audience feedback and discussion after the play, its purpose is to hear feedback and listen to audience on how they received it, raise a conversation.

Humber Street is definitely a hub of art. Humber Street Gallery, Pop-Up Spaces, lovely shops, beautiful doors and best views both ways: Tidal Barrier on one side, Hull Marina on the other. Great spot for a walk, few hours out, good food and candy for the eye for good portrait backdrops. There’s been several visits to the Humber Street for work and leisure, but on this one particular crisp day I went for a location scout.
came out satisfied and full belly with yummy brunch from Thieving Harry’s.

Speaking of scouting for spaces. Brew Hull is my 2023 favourite. I went there for a coffee and a snoop for my Flatlay Photography event. Let’s start with the fact that they make good coffee and the space has got something very appealing about it. What is great too is that they independently without any outsourced funding host small exhibitions for local artist. How cool is that. I hope to visit some in 2024 for sure and maybe one day pitch an idea for on ow my own (wink wink).

The summer of 2023 was busy. I was focused on estate photography and it was hard to get my game on for anything else: it was hot and super tempting to leisure. On top of only three months of summer I went away for quite a bit to Latvia and Scotland.
However I was invited to work for Absolutely Cultured Peel Street Festival and this is one I really want to share, because the small scale local community festival is the core of culture, the very beginning-from people. The festival involved local Spring Bank community – the parade was for them with them. All the masks and props made by people at workshops. The festival had stalls, Beats Bus Records, crafts and food, how can you not smile.  Absolutely Cultured are really making a mark in Hull. They reach out to various communities and get them involved, educate and make it accessible. Marianne is an angel and has a strong team around her. This year I have done few bits for them and it’s really lovely to see their work making the difference. After the City of Culture rebrand it could have gone in a different direction, but they kept it for us.

FREEDOM FESTIVAL 2023

The best festival of every year in Hull. I will be honest, it happened that I was swamped in other work in the festival week and on Sunday I rushed to get what was left of the festival. I am aware that I probably missed the festival vibe and can’t really say that I went to the Freedom Festival. Anyway. After looking at the programme, I was hopeful that there is just enough left to close the summer.


Refuse by Company Cameleon at Princess Dock Street and ENCORE UNE FOIS by Tripotes la Compagnie at Zebedees Yard

WE AGREE TO DISAGREE by Collectif Malunes is a contemporary circus and they pulled of a great show. Entertaining, engaging with great stunts and charming Belgian accent. We laughed and fried in the Sunday sun, we turned to the stage and applauded the flying performers.

Ferens Open exhibition was another must have for the 2023 tales.
I went twice this year, one to see and capture, another to enjoy and view as a judgmental participant (just constructive criticism), both times I made sure I have another pair of wyes to share the experience with. In my view, this year was one of the best ones I have seen since 2018. It was good, plenty of quirks, humour, fine art, beautiful frames and colour.

On my first visit I managed to catch the last day of Tomorrow by Freedom Women Collective. As it states on the poster at the entry: Tomorrow is an enduring reference to hope, belief and self-determination. In every language tomorrow can be a promise, a practical arrangement or a philosophical proposition.
My memorable moment with the exhibition was the encounter with a Ferens Gallery employee who asked me and my friend: “have you ever seen a tree in a exhibition?” Those few sentences brought us to the exhibition, we are curious beings, so I am glad my curiosity lead to a great find.

In general, Ferens Art Gallery is a landmark in East Yorkshire and beyond for a great and free art gallery, it is always worth a visit. Work exhibited does change often enough to include the gallery visit on your Primark haul and Costa coffee day out.

On another not so Hull note, I really wanted to include the fabulous and epic GAIA in Beverly Minster. Beverley is the wealth cousin of Hull and we seem to treat ourselves in Beverley and I imagine a lot of Hull people went to see The huge Earth installation at the Beverley Minster.

Though there is a little story. First time visit was a bit of a fail on my side. Me and my partner used a day off to “treat” ourselves to Beverley and I wanted to include the GAIA visit for the blog. All went well until I realised that I haven’t got a card in camera.
OBVIOUSLY I had to plan another visit. I sat down with a cup of cappuccino and thought to myself: I need to make the second visit better. How can improve the image, who can I tempt to visit Beverley.

Two things: my best friend had a mid week day off and she was totally up for a visit and turns out she’s never been to Beverley Minster. So she gain so much more than I expected from this little trip out. The other thing, more technical. I thought to try and capture people movement with a planet Earth still. Which is a great idea on paper, until I stared at the installation and realised that it spins, as an actual Planet Earth does. But at least I had a CF card in camera and I had a really good day with my bestie.

Location and the vision of the art installation was pretty epic, it was a throwback to the Moon installation in Hull at Hull Minster few years ago.

On of my ultimate favourite exhibition of 2023 was the BOOTLEG SHREG & FRIENDS with Bruce Asbestos at Humber Street Gallery. The visuals below will be self-explanatory of why it is in my top list. I managed to catch it last minute and told everyone to go, when it was already too late.

I am sorry, give adults some inflatables to play with and we will be over the moon. Interactive art makes the distance between yourself and the art shorter and you can become part of it. It does incredible things, when you see relatable, squeezable and fellable stuff, when the art is there for you not hidden behind glass case or yellow barriers.

Since 2016 I have been involved in Hull Comedy Festival and even at busy times of my own, I always make sure I photograph at least couple of shows. They are my extended family, especially Gary and Jed, local legends that organise the festival and bring the laughing game to Hull. This year we had generous shows, including a comedy show OH MY DOG where as the title gives away: dogs are the stars of the show.

First show I did featured: Avery Knight: Stuntman For Hire and upcoming star An Evening With Frankie Monroe

Due to early next day morning, I missed other acts on the evening, so the crowds enjoyed more acts that evening.

The third show was Hull Comedian of the year with many great acts from various spots of UK. It was totally worth the late night.

In autumn I was invited to do another gig for Virtual Horizons at Hull Truck Theatre. Interactive, VR set included theatre in an intimate space talking about flooding. Last year I was lucky to work with Risky Cities and the big project, so this was another follow up to the topic.

Two vital Risky Cities’ team members, Jack Chamberlain and Maureen Lennon, have continued their creative work on Hull’s watery stories in a new show featuring VR and theatre. Both were involved in delivering Risky Cities’ intensive community engagement programme, experiences that they have built on to develop their ‘Virtual Horizons’ as freelance creatives.

Source: Risky Cities Hull

These guys have brought art, community and science together to openly and educationally discuss flooding. The project last year was big and achieved a lot, it was great to see Jack’s vision virtual Reality taking form at Virtual Horizons. The interactive play was sweet, funny and generous.

This autumn I also for the first time visited Polar Bear and Sesh.

Friend of mine invited me to see his girlfriend sing and I shot two birds with one stone. Ellie Pollard is a voice powerhouse teaming up for a new collaboration, plus I got to see the famous white Polar Bear and link Humber Street Sesh (in my brain and music knowledge over the years haha) with Sesh at Polar Bear with Mark Page at the front of this amazing place.

My December started with little Christmas event for Absolutely Cultured in Gipsyville. It is another gem that Absolutely cultured host every year – adorable Christmas parade for Gipsyville community with Christmas tree light-up, parade, carols and hot chocolate. After that I was tiptoeing in the Christmas spirit, I just couldn’t resist.

Last but not least is not so Hull, but close by little venture of Burton Constable Hall. Yes, not quite Hull, and not quite culture, but two reasons. I was testing out my adopted gear Sony 6700 and I have never been inside in this luxurious manor. It is culture, but from a different decade. It was sort of a hunt for Christmas market replacements for the day, and I am really glad I went, as it was pretty spectacular. We went there at 3 PM just as the bright winter sun sets and lights up the gold interior, we talked about the hygiene of the times and how this building preserves a family history to this day.

And here we are, last moments of this very hectic, but beautiful year. 2023 has been busy in all areas of life, but I am happy and I can pull of 90% of my wish list. The wish list is long, the “to do’s” are plenty, the word boredom is not in my vocabulary. L I F E

I am doing a small personal paragraph in my iPhone notes of resolutions for 2024, because there are some bad traits in “busy”, so I want to improve on quality, not quantity, so I need to make compromises with my petty 24 hrs a day. But that being said, I am gonna try and commit to more cultural ventures in my “out of work” hours, because the show must go on.

Thank you to every single person and organisation who invited me along to be their photographer.

Happy New Year sausages, let it be great for us!


Love
Anete Sooda Photo

SPRING IN PERSON

and yes, it is way over estimated spring peak of daffodils and grass cutters coming out of their dungeons, first warm day and sun biting your nose at 11 am, but you know how life doings suck you in and you wake up on the 8th of May and want to welcome the spring via blog

Basically me in a nutshell : always behind the schedule or just hitting the deadline.

It has been a while since I have casually posted some photographs because of pure love for it, its been a while since my last culture blog (disclaimer: not hitting my targets for 2023 so far) and it’s been a while since I actually had a room in my head to just create silly little nothings of life through photographs.

My camera is usually carried to and from work, CF card copied on to my hard drive for the next available hour to do post-processing, or 70% of my time these days I will work with 360 cameras, and so the work dust layers on my Canon for months. It goes without saying that I miss being a creative.

And the arrival of the spring welcomed some external changes to my life, almost made my life a little less difficult, so I am positive that I will be able to make some internal changes too (all these above are purely adult life shit, professional bollocks, I am happily in love if you are asking).
I started with my new tradition (three years in a row) to visit a location in South Cave over the Easter for a little spring walk and photograph the detail of the spring. It may seem random, but I tried to photograph what I am feeling with my skin, smelling in the air and seeing with my eyes, and the awakened ground I walk on. It may not be the ultimate portfolio content, but it is something for myself, to retrieve my senses and relationship with the camera.

The things I have done in the last few months outside of everyday work included an exhibition (blog coming very soon about this) and I have ran two photography classes for a company based in Australia (ORBLE) in Hull (ask if interested as this will be an ongoing business). Both did miracles to my none-working side and reminded me in a very cliché way of why I ended up being a photographer. Meeting likeminded creatives, exhibiting a very personal body of work in a perfect place for a photographer from North, meeting enthusiasts and learning photographers, passing my knowledge and love for it has been so helpful.
It has worked as a driving force to make impossible possible, switch on the double-ninja energy I embody and get shit done.
Full time photographer for an estate is a big commitment that I have signed up for, always making sure that I keep my freelancing going, so the leftover time has to be used up to live, feed, indulge in physical hobbies and have a life, but I am determined to create work and be a photographer for myself too.


Back to spring.
I don’t really rave about the arrival of spring as majority of people, I always like the stretch of February and linger in winters’s safety, but there is a moment when it hits my brain with a happy wave. Passage between hibernating and summer busyness. Because I love summer: that’s when the best plans come to life, my body and face gets sun-kissed, have a lot of warm nights and go on holidays (mainly go back home to Latvia and cut grass)or local trips. After summer comes my favourite season autumn, then my birthday and then Christmas, and then back into hibernating.
So these photographs is a moment right before the spring kicks in as a welcome. Today I can say that I am already buzzing for some of my summer plans: work and leisure, so it kind of is a delayed reaction, but I wanted to share this with you.



We all have our own ways of making our way through life: professional life, adult life, leisure and personal stuff and I know that occasionally it is a guessing game, but we just have to keep going. I keep going regardless of what shit shows I face, so for a change I can tell you : I am great. It isn’t easy, but the sole fact that I am writing this in peace, at my desk with no errors or stresses is a great and promising start.

Happy spring my chickens

Love
Anete Sooda