The Lloyd’s Building, London.
Designed by architect Richard Rogers, The Lloyds Building stands alone amongst its peers by having all of its services (lifts, staircases, power, ventilation etc) on the outside. This leaves the internal space free from clutter and creates an outline that contrasts heavily from the clean cut edges of the buildings around it.
Flowers Test.
This is a test shoot to experiment using a Large Format camera coupled with a digital sensor for macro work. I used a Schneider lens, MPP Camera and a Canon 5DmkII sensor to image with. The setup is shown in the image below. There is no physical link between the MPP camera and the 5DmkII, when taking a photo i placed a black cloth over the two cameras to stop any light spill on the sensor. Now the technique has been tested I will set it up again with proper lights to really see how far I can push this equipment.
Boundaries. Doors. Entrances. Exits.
Shot in Berlin using a TLR camera. The film was Lab developed then scanned manually using a light box to place the film on then imaged using a Large Format camera coupled with a digital sensor.
Xtal – Aphex Twin
Aphex Twin – Xtal. ‘Xtal’ referring to the component symbol for a crystal oscillator in an electronic circuit. The time keeper of all modern electronics from music and computing to mobile phones and cameras.
Space Matters – Mehmet Ali Uysal.
“The ‘Space’ records-internalizes- what is gone through in it-the human experience- along with the ‘Time’.
It absorbs; quietly observes lots of things related to the human being.” – Mehmet Ali Uysal.
Langauge Barrier.
“…The sound installation Confusio Linguarum, which is on view in our Corner Space, refers to the birth hour of languages. From a tower of speakers, recordings of the text passage Genesis 1.11 read in various languages can be heard, the story of the Tower of Babel. By overlapping sound passages, Müller reconstructs the Babylonian confusion of languages, and refers at the same time to a different failure, the failure to build the Tower of Babel.” - http://www.galeriethomasschulte.de/
One of the six pieces by Michael Müller on exhibit at the Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin. Its size, combined by the small size of the space it is exhibited in, make this a very confrontational installation.











































































































