The Caravan Gallery
On the waterfront, Wirral, 2013
Archival inkjet print on 310 gms paper
60 x 85.4 cms
23 9/16 x 33 9/16 ins
Series: 4. Sense of Place
11189
Exhibitions
extra{ordinary} Photographs of Britain by The Caravan Gallery, touring exhibition 2015 - 2016. Venues: Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art, Sunderland; Impressions Gallery, Bradford; Diffusion Festival, Cardiff; Museum of Lancashire, Preston; Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art; Showcase Gallery, Southampton.Merseystyle, Museum of Liverpool
Modern Nature. Photographs from the Hyman Collection, Hepworth Wakefield, 2018-19. (This print)
Literature
extra{ordinary} Photographs of Britain by the Caravan Gallery, The Caravan Gallery, 2015
From the edition of 5. The photographers have explained: 'The best view of Liverpool's spectacular waterfront is from Wallasey and Birkenhead on the other side of the River Mersey, or...
From the edition of 5.
The photographers have explained:
"The best view of Liverpool's spectacular waterfront is from Wallasey and Birkenhead on the other side of the River Mersey, or 'over the water' in local parlance. There has been a great deal of regeneration on the Liverpool waterfront - notably Albert Dock, home to Tate Liverpool - and there are plans for an ambitious scheme to transform both sides of the Mersey. In the meantime, the once thriving docklands provide a tranquil place to sit and read the newspaper in solitude. The muted colour palette and calm water reflect this feeling of serenity, a welcome retreat from garish signs, rules and regulations."
The photographers have explained:
"The best view of Liverpool's spectacular waterfront is from Wallasey and Birkenhead on the other side of the River Mersey, or 'over the water' in local parlance. There has been a great deal of regeneration on the Liverpool waterfront - notably Albert Dock, home to Tate Liverpool - and there are plans for an ambitious scheme to transform both sides of the Mersey. In the meantime, the once thriving docklands provide a tranquil place to sit and read the newspaper in solitude. The muted colour palette and calm water reflect this feeling of serenity, a welcome retreat from garish signs, rules and regulations."