049: Mimi Mollica

 

© Mimi Mollica - part of Terra Nostra series

© Mimi Mollica - part of Terra Nostra series

© Mimi Mollica - part of East London Up Close series

© Mimi Mollica - part of East London Up Close series


We appreciate your support


Transcript 

Transcribed poorly by AI

00:00:03 Dan 

Welcome to the Idle Hands Society podcast. I'm Dan Higginson. 

00:00:07 Dan 

He's Paul bentz. 

00:00:08 Mimi 

Good afternoon. Morning, evening. 

00:00:10 Dan 

And we're joined. 

00:00:10 Dan 

Today, by the incredible the one and only winning elika. 

00:00:16 Mimi 

Thank you very much. Hello everyone. 

00:00:18 Mimi 

Thank you, Paul. Thank you, Dan. Thank you. 

00:00:21 Mimi 

General's introduction. 

00:00:24 Dan 

Fire introduction. Imagine. Yeah. Music festival. You get to choose the headlining act and the Support Act for the main stage. Is it gonna be? 

00:00:35 Mimi 

They're all dead. 

00:00:38 Paul 

That's alright, that's alright. 

00:00:41 Mimi 

Now you know I since I was very little, I was a a super fan of The Beatles. OK? And and I as a Cecilia, I'm born in 1975 he wasn't, you know very. 

00:00:57 Mimi 

Very you. You know very much along thing and I don't. Uh, a friend in school primary school they had the same passion of me. So we were the outcast. Listen to 60s music. 

00:01:12 Mimi 

But then my my taste of music became so loud and eclectic. 

00:01:20 Mimi 

That, as with the photography. 

00:01:24 Mimi 

I always find it very hard to answer these kind of questions, so I'm sure that if I answer to you positively with something. 

00:01:34 Mimi 

That I like. 

00:01:36 Mimi 

The moment after we repent and say ohh I should have included that I can try and I can say that I like of course The Beatles, but modern contemporary I would put outcast Alicia Keys I will put. 

00:01:39 Dan 

Alright, yeah. 

00:01:40 Dan 

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:01:55 Mimi 

Billy Eilish no bullish like, but no Billy Strings. Green green grass. Amazing. Really amazing. 

00:02:02 Paul 

OK please. 

00:02:04 Dan 

I don't know that. 

00:02:07 Mimi 

But then. 

00:02:09 Mimi 

I will also put the ocean wisdom hip hop, amazing British young kid, really great. But then again, jazz music. I I you know, keep Jarrett and all the jazz. 

00:02:24 Mimi 

Ladies, so you? 

00:02:25 Mimi 

See there? There isn't any any line apart from. 

00:02:29 Mimi 

And the passion that I have for for this music, if you listen to. 

00:02:32 Mimi 

My mix tapes. 

00:02:34 Mimi 

You would go from pop to jazz to classic to everything in no time. 

00:02:36 Dan 

OK. 

00:02:39 Dan 

Do you have your mixtapes on that Spotify? 

00:02:41 Mimi 

Or something they've been stolen. 

00:02:43 Mimi 

No, no. My actual mix tapes have been stolen in Spotify. The one main compartment, one tool box, which have the light sounds which I put randomly in. And I always enjoy. And then I have my few playlist. 

00:03:01 Mimi 

Depending if I have the people of adima where people are a bit of a Brazilian music, then I if I want to have a party or something like minus party classical back. 

00:03:20 Dan 

Yeah, properly eclectic. A little bit like your photography. Yeah, it's like. 

00:03:24 Mimi 

Very much. 

00:03:25 Dan 

From one moment to the next, there's like. 

00:03:28 Dan 

Like a real departure. 

00:03:29 Dan 

Right, that's pretty cool. Go on, Paul. What do you? 

00:03:32 Dan 

Reckon who are you? 

00:03:33 Dan 

Putting on your on the bent mainstage. 

00:03:36 Paul 

Oh, that's a really tough one. I'd really like Nick Drake myself. And maybe. 

00:03:43 Paul 

You know, job Bob Dylan, Nick Drake, Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin, they're kind of like that old folky, you know, flavor myself, rice, maybe the better band. 

00:03:49 Dan 

Oh yeah, yeah. OK. 

00:03:56 Paul 

The Who? The beat. You don't know who the Peter band is. Oh, my God. Well, I let me introduce you to. 

00:03:58 Dan 

I don't. 

00:04:01 Paul 

The Peter Band later they they're like. 

00:04:01 

OK, OK. 

00:04:04 Paul 

Like a Mogwai kind of. 

00:04:06 Dan 

I'm in, sold, sold. 

00:04:07 Paul 

Salt for that, but more than. 

00:04:11 Dan 

OK. 

00:04:13 Dan 

McGuire Scottish. But you're saying what? NN England, right? 

00:04:16 Paul 

Yeah. N England. OK, I bloody love Mogwai. You ever seen Mogwai live? I have. I saw the other. Why? Why? I've got Hall and honestly, it changed me as a person. I've never, ever. It's a music. Incredible. 

00:04:22 Dan 

Oh, it's like I'm really just experience, isn't it? 

00:04:31 Paul 

It's like you're in a wall of noise, right? And it's it's enveloping you is the only way you can describe it. And it keeps coming as waves. It's like you're on a. 

00:04:40 Paul 

Like you're in the sea and it just keeps coming and growing and growing and growing and there's these layers and then you're like, whoa, my brain is and you come out of it afterwards and you're like, like, you know, your ears are ringing and your body. 

00:04:50 Paul 

Is kind of in this state. 

00:04:52 Dan 

Everybody's really do. 

00:04:52 Mimi 

Of vibration. Wow. Well, you lift your legs. 

00:04:53 Paul 

Yes, they said that needs and. Yeah. Yeah. Honestly, mind. 

00:04:57 Dan 

Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:04:57 Paul 

Blowing it is. 

00:04:58 Dan 

Really incredible. Really incredible. I've been diving deep on music recently because I've been making a playlist like an idle hands playlist, so we're gonna start doing a newsletter and as part of that, there's gonna be this. 

00:05:09 Dan 

Churning cause I bloody love music, I. 

00:05:10 Dan 

Feel like all art? 

00:05:12 Dan 

Is all our wishes. It was music, right? Yeah. It's the one thing it can bring you to tears. It can make you. 

00:05:18 Dan 

Really happy. And it's like so fast. 

00:05:20 Mimi 

Immediate and complete. 

00:05:21 Paul 

You think the photo can do that? She's sorry. Do you think a photograph can? 

00:05:24 Paul 

Do that, do you think? 

00:05:25 Paul 

Do you have you? Have you ever been? Have you ever had that same experience with a photograph as? 

00:05:30 Paul 

You've had with a piece of music. 

00:05:31 Mimi 

Well, to me there is a. 

00:05:35 Mimi 

A major factor? The fact that how do you experience photography now? There is a different sense is involved. There is different times involved, so you see a movie which are you, you watch a movie or you look at for the book or an exhibition or you listen to some music, the senses that you operate. 

00:05:55 Mimi 

To absorb that whatever piece of art and the timings indeed are different to these sequential images, there is one single image that there's an impact of emotional or rational. Whatever tells a narrative that you can read. 

00:06:10 Mimi 

With your heart or with your intellect, there is, you know, a variety of things in in, in movies you have sound, audio, you have the the the sequencing as well with music it seems. 

00:06:28 Mimi 

That you you managed to absorb the sense of it. 

00:06:33 Mimi 

In a flash. 

00:06:35 Mimi 

And then this flash, it's when the music is good, it's only expanded and it doesn't take anything away from that initial sparkle. OK, so I think that music indeed is may need it, and I don't know, also promote the must have something to do with our. 

00:06:54 Mimi 

Frequency, vibrations and whatever we have stored inside ourselves somehow. 

00:07:02 Mimi 

So yeah, I I I don't think photography is a complete piece of art by any means. Nevertheless, it's very enjoyable and I I find a lot of pleasure when I take pictures. Yeah. And there is that kind of spark that happens. 

00:07:22 Mimi 

You you know what Carter Bryson used to describe as the, you know, that kind of moment nowadays, the more books I collect and read the, you know, go through. 

00:07:27 Dan 

Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:07:38 Mimi 

The more I'm starting to have a similar feeling when I turn a page and I look at something that really resonates so. 

00:07:48 Mimi 

I enjoy fully photography, but music. 

00:07:52 Mimi 

There's no competition, I think. 

00:07:54 Mimi 

It's amazing music. It's really, yeah. 

00:07:56 Dan 

Yeah, it's incredible. It's incredible. I can't remember who it is. That said all art aspires to be. 

00:08:00 Dan 

Music, but it's true. 

00:08:01 Mimi 

Like music is is understood to take and replicated by kids. 

00:08:07 Dan 

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:08:08 Mimi 

She's a boy and whatever we do is a different declination articulation of music and sound. We even when we whistle or when we hum or when we apply a rhythm to our steps. It's everywhere. Music in the rain, in the washing machine that goes. 

00:08:27 Mimi 

I have I have recorded my washing machine so many times in my life because there were some serious bits going on there. But in London and that is music. 

00:08:37 Mimi 

Too, yeah. 

00:08:39 Mimi 

So music is truly everywhere. 

00:08:41 Mimi 

And yeah, so yeah, the best. 

00:08:44 Dan 

Do you listen to music while you photograph? 

00:08:46 Mimi 

No, I never listen to music when I'm out on the streets. Never. I I'm a control freak coming to hear everything else that is around me. I never closed myself with with music, because for me is a very mercy live. 

00:08:54 Paul 

Me too. 

00:09:02 Mimi 

Experience music and I do what I want, or the other one. And you know by your friends that go on the bicycle or or walk or whatever from A&B and they have their own beautiful headsets. Whatever headphones. I could never ******* do that, you know, I. 

00:09:20 Dan 

You want to be plugged into the rhythm with the street, right? 

00:09:22 Mimi 

Yeah, totally. Totally. Also apart from the fact that it's dangerous, if you listen to the music and then listen to, you know, you might encourage action. But when I take pictures and the the accident is not in the equation, I want to be aware of what's going on. I've always been. 

00:09:30 Dan 

Yeah, yeah. 

00:09:41 Mimi 

For me, being aware, being sharp in the streets is the the first thing I mean sharp by. By saying sharp, I don't mean actually saw the because I also enjoy my drunk pictures whenever I'm in my past life I was going out often and take pictures at night time always. 

00:10:01 Mimi 

Have to be aware, even after a few drinks. 

00:10:04 Mimi 

Music would just absorb the the whole of me. 

00:10:09 Dan 

Distracting, right? What about when you're? 

00:10:09 Mimi 

I'm saying. 

00:10:11 Dan 

Like when you're editing or post processing. 

00:10:14 Mimi 

That one is more of a scene splits and music and whiskey or wine. They go very well. You had it in there, but then again the editing process as well, it's a complex one that happens. You know you can have a few intuitions, you can do something now, but then you need to sleep on it and you know, take it back. 

00:10:21 Dan 

Yeah, yeah. 

00:10:35 Mimi 

You are very sober. 

00:10:38 Mimi 

Sober and and and cold and clear. Yeah, totally. And we and we go back and forth between intuitions and reading, reading and intuitions, intuitions, and we, until you manage to do something that make a little bit of sense. 

00:10:40 Dan 

Like a revisit. 

00:10:56 Mimi 

Very difficult eating, editing, video and work really difficult. 

00:11:00 Paul 

I hate editing. 

00:11:01 Mimi 

I find it, but I mean, I prefer somebody else's work because I'm I'm freed by the constraints of your own ego. That has to drive everything that you know? Yeah. 

00:11:07 Paul 

Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:11:11 Dan 

OK. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:11:14 Dan 

And that feeling of. 

00:11:16 Dan 

What's what's the what's the adage? Do you need to kill your babies? Like it's really hard when you're looking at your own photographs to go ohh. This one isn't as good as the rest or doesn't fit this sequence. If you've got this attachment to it. 

00:11:29 Dan 

I think when you're editing someone else's, that's why I think it's so important to have somebody. 

00:11:33 Dan 

Else, look at your work. 

00:11:35 Paul 

Yeah. And you've got to get over that initially that. 

00:11:37 Paul 

That love for those photos. You just gotta let them go. You just gotta set them free. Almost. Right. There is a like you. 

00:11:43 Paul 

Just gotta be completely. 

00:11:44 Paul 

Like take this. There's gonna be something you're gonna love and some you're gonna hate. And I'm gonna trust what you say because I value your experience and you get a load of people. I think that that you get a kind of a, you know, 5678 people and you kind of working. 

00:11:57 Paul 

Bridges and what what works and yeah. Yeah, it's really. 

00:12:00 Paul 

Difficult though, isn't it? I still. 

00:12:01 Paul 

Find that really a difficult process, a torturous process, right? 

00:12:05 Dan 

Is is I still remember. 

00:12:07 Dan 

We were, so I helped Paul sequence. You bought a book out fairly recently. Not so far. Yeah. Why? No. I guess when was that? 

00:12:15 Paul 

Last year, no. 

00:12:16 Dan 

Was it really a year ago? But we had, what was it like 2-3 hundred prints? They're all up on that wall. We're kind of digging through them and having some pretty intense disagreements about what was good and what wasn't and. 

00:12:30 Dan 

Yeah, I don't know. 

00:12:31 Dan 

I feel like that process is super important. 

00:12:33 Paul 

I think it's the most important of them. 

00:12:34 Paul 

Right, I actually because. 

00:12:37 Paul 

Again, you've you've you've if you've photographed a project for a period of years, you almost become blind to it in a way, after a period of time and. 

00:12:44 Paul 

You you like. 

00:12:45 Paul 

You you forget what you've taken as well my memory like you know my short term memory is so rubbish that I might have taken a photo last week and I you know I'm taking so many photos that it's gone. 

00:12:56 Paul 

In is in some digital. 

00:12:58 Paul 

Drive is sat there and until you go back and look through the work again, I think that's the. 

00:13:03 Paul 

Other thing you. 

00:13:04 Paul 

Know going back and looking over your work continuously. Something I do. I love a slideshow with a bit of music. Yeah, and a spliff. I can just sit and watch photos. OK, I get it. Yeah. It's like it just takes you to that. I. 

00:13:17 Paul 

I think there's something like music. 

00:13:18 Paul 

Photos together I've. 

00:13:19 Paul 

Always loved those two things, so I chose. 

00:13:22 Paul 

Like that's my heaven. 

00:13:26 Dan 

Slideshows when you. 

00:13:27 Dan 

Do it on. 

00:13:28 Dan 

On those Apple computers, if you set up as your screensaver sighting, shuffle isn't on a. 

00:13:32 Dan 

Playlist they're just. 

00:13:34 Paul 

I like that frames one. It's only one. Do you know the one downstairs in the kitchen? And it's literally it just does random. And it what's interesting about that is it's picking random photos and putting them side by side. And sometimes something really interesting happened. Oh, ****. That's really cool. And that's just happening by coincidence by. 

00:13:36 Dan 

Yeah, I know. Yeah, I, I've. 

00:13:37 Dan 

I've got the. 

00:13:38 Dan 

Exact same one. 

00:13:52 Paul 

You know luck. 

00:13:53 Paul 

And now I think sometimes you just. 

00:13:54 Paul 

Gotta you know, trust that little spark, that that. 

00:13:58 Paul 

Puts you somewhere, then run with it for a bit. I think that's. 

00:14:00 Dan 

Really interesting. You know, So what are you looking for? What's what's a good? 

00:14:04 Paul 

Photo oh, there's no that's such $1,000,000 question and I right there's no good photo is. 

00:14:09 Paul 

There or every photo is a. 

00:14:10 Mimi 

Good photo. No, no, no, no. I think that you know there there is, you know. 

00:14:14 Mimi 

If you. 

00:14:17 Mimi 

When to address what is a good fault when I have immediately in the mind whatever comes from from, you know, from the street source. 

00:14:28 Mimi 

Material somehow. Of course there is the studio photographs, the portraits, the, the things that are amazing. But to me, the real essence of photographies within the streets and not because I define myself as a street photographer, but because. 

00:14:48 Mimi 

One element magical magical element of photography is that moment that encapsulates. 

00:14:58 Mimi 

You know, concepts, ideas, emotions that come together in the frame for one fraction of a cycle, and the photographers, the skills, the presence or the lack. We've captured that and and then everything else adds. 

00:15:13 Mimi 

To to eat too. You can find amazing. As I said, photo photographs that they belong to Portugal still life even anything really can be landscape but. 

00:15:25 Mimi 

The father was with. 

00:15:28 Mimi 

That works for everything within that frame. Makes sense. 

00:15:34 Mimi 

And is placed in the right position at the right time. That is something that we will. 

00:15:41 Mimi 

Emotions. Is there a picture that's bringing to mind right now that? 

00:15:45 Dan 

Feels perfect. It could be one of your own. It could be something else. 

00:15:48 Mimi 

Plenty less of the ones I took more of the ones. 

00:15:55 Paul 

Same same same. 

00:15:56 Mimi 

More of the ones that I've seen in the transition from, you know, from to Bryson to Alex Webb to, you know, to to, you know, you name it. 

00:16:04 Dan 

Oh my God, Alex claim. 

00:16:08 Mimi 

But but then again I I keep on discovering younger new photographers that are mind blowing and they are totally different from the tradition of Bryson and black and white St. photography. And they are more elaborate or just whatever you want to say. 

00:16:29 Mimi 

A 32nd tenuous source of inspiration for me. This is the reason why I utilize the social media on a daily basis. More to discover work more than more than, say, my own saying about things. So social media for me is wonderful. 

00:16:48 Mimi 

Because you know, you keep on being bombarded with the images that and and some of those are fantastic and we discover New York, new people, new things, new trends. 

00:16:58 Mimi 

Amazing. So yeah, great. 

00:17:00 Dan 

Is there anyone you found recently that? 

00:17:02 Mimi 

Yeah, but I cannot remember the names. I always forget them. 

00:17:05 Dan 

I know, I know. I've got the worst memory. 

00:17:06 Mimi 

There is an Indian guy. There is mind-blowing that utilizes a light that is fantastic. He's really cinematographic in in that it looks very much like staged kind of lighting. And it's not right. And he and he knows this guy knows how to capture light. 

00:17:27 Mimi 

It's like he has it. Within whom? 

00:17:30 Dan 

Sniff out you are totally. 

00:17:32 Mimi 

Is they must have for some sort. 

00:17:33 Mimi 

Of lie within. 

00:17:36 Mimi 

You see, these reminds me something that I was said to myself whenever I discover new photographer, I will screenshot to the Instagram account to whatever website and I will eventually produce a list. 

00:17:49 Mimi 

And I started doing these, but not with the new ones, only with the, only with the usual suspects that I needed to, at least during the election or whatever. But yeah, I will go back and and look at it. I have my phone in airplane mode at the moment, but. 

00:18:06 Mimi 

As soon as I will finish, I will go back and we'll go on Instagram or Facebook. And remember, even when I've seen it, we have seen it and we remember the name. 

00:18:18 Paul 

Yeah. Mimi, Mr. speaking. Spoken to a lot of photographers. Have you ever come across anybody with like, like the real self police, but all their images are great like. 

00:18:26 Paul 

OK, this is. 

00:18:27 Paul 

Good, this is, you know that real. 

00:18:28 Paul 

Like sort. 

00:18:29 Paul 

You need a ranker, but maybe not a ******. 

00:18:33 Paul 

Because I think he's a. 

00:18:34 Paul 

I think it's difficult as a photographer, if you if you do come across as arrogant or there's a fine line, right, but there's some, there's some. 

00:18:41 Paul 

I was thinking of. 

00:18:41 Paul 

Bernadette, who isn't a wonk who is an. 

00:18:43 Paul 

Artist, he's not. 

00:18:44 Paul 

A photographer, but she starts showing. What is she? 

00:18:46 Paul 

Yeah, but she has this. 

00:18:48 Paul 

Drive, which is really interesting that I I. 

00:18:51 Paul 

I believe in herself and. 

00:18:52 Paul 

Her work right and I. 

00:18:53 Paul 

I kind of it's quite. 

00:18:54 Paul 

I don't know. I kind of find that quite. 

00:18:58 Paul 

Attractive as a British person who's constantly, you know, the British whole thing is like we're. 

00:19:02 Dan 

A bit ****. 

00:19:04 Dan 

Very self deprecating. 

00:19:05 Paul 

Yeah, very self deprecating and I was just wondering considering you must have spoken to a lot of photographers over your time like has anybody ever come across some you have to make name names but who has that inner belief that their work is that good that it should be? 

00:19:19 Paul 

I don't know up there. Does that make? 

00:19:21 Paul 

Sense, yeah, I think. 

00:19:22 Mimi 

So yeah, well, I plenty. I mean, I'm from. 

00:19:26 Paul 

And do you think do you think do you think that matters like do you think in terms of achievement and achieving in the in the in the that's where I want? 

00:19:32 Mimi 

I think that the the there is a very good element of this. OK, you obviously you cannot allow these element to. 

00:19:43 Mimi 

Deplete into our organs and sheer stupidity, but believing in your work, appreciating and respecting your work, I think it's a very important step for you to move forward and to make you work in some sort of sense for others. 

00:20:04 Mimi 

And then from you, because if you believe in your work, you will want to create outputs. You will want this work to be seen and therefore you, you you start moving the whole machine and you. 

00:20:20 Mimi 

However, finding people that have a very good balance between believing in the work, thinking there is good and not being arrogant is, you know, unfortunately is a little bit more, uh, more thing and and also mind you be be always conscious of. 

00:20:41 Mimi 

Yourself when you confront yourself with others. 

00:20:45 Mimi 

Because yourself, for your own ego, when you measure yourself with others, can come in between and spoil you the reading that you would have of that person meaning. 

00:21:03 Mimi 

If you speak to someone who believes in in their work and the work happened to be fine, work and you. 

00:21:14 Mimi 

Look at that and you might sometimes have a little ego that you know as you know, start making you uncomfortable and you wish you were him or her and you wish you were believing in your work. And then your frustration come through and then your vision comes blurry. 

00:21:34 Mimi 

And you don't know anymore how to judge or consider the person so yourselves element when you can see those others is always very, very important. And I tend to struggle with my own ego and not. 

00:21:52 Mimi 

I don't have the ego. When I run my workshops. When I lecture, I I really become kind of Buddhist and that's magical for someone like me because usually my ego is far too big and comes very often in the equation and that is the way I experience. 

00:22:13 Mimi 

Older I experience things and I produce my own work. I wish I had the same few, the few very little tiny degree of of the time I have where I. 

00:22:27 Mimi 

Teach photography when I when I workshop. 

00:22:32 Mimi 

But you know you will not take it on. 

00:22:35 Dan 

Is that just putting the student first though? 

00:22:37 Mimi 

Totally. Yeah. You you know that you, your knowledge, your experience is at service of someone else and you have the moral obligation of making the most out of that. 

00:22:50 Mimi 

And they're also, if you are a real passion for photography, eventually you have to reduce your ego whether you like it or not, whether you want or not, it becomes an automatic thing. If your passion for teaching is true. And this happens quite naturally with me. 

00:23:10 Mimi 

In fact, I I have only had very great experiences with with my workshops and with teaching, really beautiful, and I feel that this is because I reduce my my ego. 

00:23:25 Mimi 

And and I like to I give space. 

00:23:29 Mimi 

Levels to present the world, to articulate the thoughts, and I can support that thing. 

00:23:35 Mimi 

Yeah, yeah. Having a supportive world more than anything. 

00:23:40 Dan 

Else, how long have you been lecturing now? 

00:23:42 Mimi 

Lecturing in the unit. 

00:23:45 Mimi 

Officially, only since a couple of years I started. 

00:23:51 Mimi 

Three years ago, something like that in Holloway, London met, and then I went on to London, met Algate and the University of East London. 

00:24:01 Mimi 

And I do only, you know, two days a week or one day a week from January, and which is cool because I have the time to do. 

00:24:08 Mimi 

My own things. 

00:24:10 Mimi 

But I've been running workshops since 2011. 

00:24:14 Mimi 

And the two things are not too dissimilar. 

00:24:17 Dan 

Do you feel like those workshops and those lectures have informed your own practice? 

00:24:22 Mimi 

100 percent, 100%. I've learned so much. 

00:24:27 Mimi 

And you know, I don't believe them. If I you learn from Stevens, you might get lucky to have a student. They inspire you. But to me, the the man beat comes from the fact that you are forced to break down concepts to study photographers, to analyze things in order to be able to acquire a cloudy. 

00:24:47 Mimi 

That allows you to deliver concepts, ideas and your information seamlessly and flawless, sly and these. 

00:24:58 Mimi 

This continues research. 

00:25:02 Mimi 

And continues thinking process then and reaches your own practice. 

00:25:09 Dan 

You know, that makes so much sense. 

00:25:11 Dan 

I've never. I've never thought about it like that. 

00:25:13 Dan 

The way that you. 

00:25:15 Dan 

You have to break down those concepts of someone. 

00:25:17 Dan 

Else teaches you I think you. 

00:25:19 Dan 

Considered that. 

00:25:19 Paul 

You have to do so much research, right? But your time is like Googling constantly, like different photographers the way. 

00:25:24 Paul 

They were processes. 

00:25:25 Dan 

Reading he's a. 

00:25:25 Paul 

Anyways, it's. 

00:25:26 Dan 

Google Ninja for sure. 

00:25:29 Dan 

Black belt in Google. 

00:25:33 Mimi 

No, but then then is is very important because you know you you know there there are authors such as the company who is such a marvelous genius or such a marvelous mind. Yes. Not only his profound knowledge, but the way he delivers extremely complex. 

00:25:40 Paul 

Yeah, Dave. 

00:25:43 Paul 

If knowledge, right? 

00:25:54 Mimi 

Bumps with as as he's drinking a clear. 

00:25:58 Mimi 

Glass of water? Yeah, it's it's. 

00:25:59 Mimi 

Unbelievable. And then you got, you know, it's like I get it, it's like. 

00:26:07 Dan 

Have you met? 

00:26:07 Mimi 

Marvelous. Always my very good friend. 

00:26:07 Paul 

David, have you ever? Yeah. 

00:26:09 Paul 

Is he OK? 

00:26:10 Mimi 

Interesting and and also he's gonna be one of them. Next special guest tutors of the CC for domestic class together with Maria Marotta. 

00:26:18 Mimi 

OK. 

00:26:19 Mimi 

But I I know David since, uh, many years since possibly 2002, 2003. 

00:26:26 Paul 

OK. 

00:26:27 Mimi 

I am very, very good friends. I love him. 

00:26:30 Mimi 

And he is 1. 

00:26:33 Mimi 

Guy that you know, I can definitely say that that he pushed me in my work and to do you know he he kind of offered me the very first big break. I'm in street photography now because of him. 

00:26:47 Mimi 

I was published in the C Photo magazine from Ivory Press. Because of him, I exhibited the yeah, the job with space because of him. And I found out the format of Terra Nostra in terms of book because of him. David is a precious person. 

00:27:07 Mimi 

And I owe him a lot. A lot. 

00:27:10 Dan 

As it as he lived. 

00:27:10 Paul 

It is used london-based David or not as. 

00:27:12 Mimi 

Ohh, in New York, London and then now more often in London. 

00:27:12 Paul 

He will. 

00:27:16 Paul 

OK, OK. 

00:27:18 Mimi 

Yes, but you know he introduced me to you know when when I was to. 

00:27:24 Mimi 

Producing feral ostra I wasn't sure about the size and format of the book, and I wanted to see David and we had a look through quite a few of these books and he showed me this incredible book by Jeremy Funker, A Czech photographer from the. 

00:27:41 Mimi 

Early 19199 up until 1950s, something like that 1940s. 

00:27:50 Mimi 

An incredible book called Photograph of photographs. 

00:27:56 Mimi 

Jeremy Funk and I took exactly the same format of the book and the same size, the same aspect ratio. 

00:28:05 Mimi 

And you know why? This is one of the. 

00:28:10 Mimi 

Many things that I have to thank David for and and he's the least one days of of importance. But when he introduced me to Stephen McLaren, the author of St. Photography now then a new chapter of my life, I don't remember. 

00:28:24 Paul 

How old were you then? 

00:28:28 Dan 

That long? 

00:28:29 Mimi 

I'm with you. 

00:28:30 Mimi 

I'm really bad in arithmetic. I'm I'm really mouths conceptually ideally, but I'm not good in arithmetic so it was 2010, 2011. I think about the time when Magic did the the book I think. 

00:28:47 Mimi 

This and and then after that we receive and I I I read the three books with them with pins and hats and I mean I I I was featured in books. 

00:28:59 Mimi 

Street photography was the first one. Then there was photographers, the sketchbook. 

00:29:05 Mimi 

Which is now super spacious. 

00:29:05 Paul 

Yeah, yeah, I got. 

00:29:06 Paul 

That from my informals right. Brian formals in. Yeah, yeah. 

00:29:10 Mimi 

Yeah. And Stephen McLaren and then family photography. Now again with Sophia. Sophia. 

00:29:19 Mimi 

And then the sea, I think. 

00:29:24 Mimi 

But great, great chapter in my life. But that was the time where, due to the car was being also awarded the exhibited published so that there's there's been a big thing with the that piece of work which I have to still do. 

00:29:44 Mimi 

I'm holograph. 

00:29:45 Paul 

What you working on now? 

00:29:47 Mimi 

I'm working on 2/3 projects on my own and a book that I'm producing now with my new work New City. The one I found. 

00:29:58 Mimi 

From a balcony with telescope. And so we have been currently on the last adjustments of the book design and cycles and it looks really, really good. And yes, I'll and I'll chat with the Roman pads, a very good friend of mine's book designer. 

00:30:17 Mimi 

More than a book designer, I mean book designer is a Q8 or more than a graphic designer. Someone that doesn't miss empowers. So it's it's a genius guy I'm working though with Victoria Forest, with another amazing book designer with fantastic ideas. 

00:30:36 Mimi 

And the essay we had a chapter showed in Victoria's cycles, and we had a very, very good, constructive chat. You suggested a few things that I researched independently, but I found great, great confirmation by Ramon. 

00:30:54 Mimi 

And I think that the book will come out beautifully. 

00:30:57 Paul 

When is it going to come out, you see? 

00:30:58 Mimi 

I don't know yet. I don't know. You're seeing design need to. We have to steal. Decide if I will self publish or find a publisher. I would love a self publisher. Mean clean, inclined in self-publishing. But you never know. 

00:31:14 Mimi 

And then we have to find the format to the paper store, but the main difficult bit is finding a good sequencing is the biggest. 

00:31:26 Paul 

What? What? What's your process then? Is it the same as everybody else? Print them all out. 

00:31:29 Paul 

Stick them on. 

00:31:30 Mimi 

The wall move them around. Usually I do, but usually I do these where I work. 

00:31:34 Mimi 

With analog OK. 

00:31:35 Mimi 

OK. And I see work with analog. When I work with digital thing then you know photography. 

00:31:44 Mimi 

I I hate it and I hate to say it, but I I I dreamed only later on. 

00:31:53 Mimi 

I I I. 

00:31:54 Mimi 

Like to start a process in a way and finish it organically. So if I work with analog photography I will produce my own contact sheets with the contact sheets and will select the ones that that make it to the first big selection print. 

00:32:13 Mimi 

Images and then out of those printed images I start shuffling about. But if I work with digital I use bridge which is practically some sort of. 

00:32:25 Dan 

It's like a big chess client. 

00:32:25 Mimi 

Digital cable? Yeah, exactly. However, I need print east London close, which was done digitally. So the you know. 

00:32:35 Paul 

OK, I'm going to tell you about good app. Everybody is a good point to tell you there's an app called free flow and it's basically like a light table. You can just drop all of your. 

00:32:43 Paul 

Photos on and it's a massive white. 

00:32:46 Paul 

And you can just move and it's so simple. 

00:32:49 Mimi 

I like Moodle. Yeah, like a light bulb, but. 

00:32:52 Paul 

Yeah, like a white one. And you just drop them all on and then you can put them on all your screens, you know? And it's it's good, it's good, it's and it's really simple as well. You just literally put a folder of images, drop them in and then just move them freely and scale them really easy just by pinching and ah. 

00:32:54 Dan 

Oh, that's cool. 

00:33:07 Dan 

That's really cool. Is that for like, what is that? 

00:33:09 Paul 

It's for iPad, iPad, iPad or. 

00:33:12 Mimi 

Having said that, eventually I will print my stuff and we'll see how it works, how it flows, because turning the pages that. 

00:33:15 Paul 

Yeah, yeah. 

00:33:19 Dan 

It hits different, right? That physical interaction hits different. 

00:33:19 Mimi 

Experience yeah. Problem. 

00:33:21 Mimi 

Problem and because it will become a physical thing. 

00:33:25 Mimi 

Then printing becomes necessary, but at the moment I haven't I I did print in city but I haven't laid it out, only done the selection of the most successful images and I I will see maybe as soon as I have. 

00:33:47 Mimi 

Close to be a definite selection will print the the size you know the the magnitude of whatever layer the table will be reduced contained so I can physically juggle them and then they will be good. But at the moment I even to relied on the printed matter in order to. 

00:34:07 Mimi 

Do the sequencing. 

00:34:09 Dan 

I think you gave us what you came in and did a talk at LCC where I'm a student and I think you gave us a little sneak peek at that Moon City project. Yeah. What I've seen is very cool. It's not like anything I've seen before. 

00:34:23 Dan 

It's very cool. 

00:34:24 Mimi 

Yeah, these. Yeah, these. 

00:34:26 Paul 

Are like to talk about it. 

00:34:27 Paul 

A little bit and worry about. Yeah. Yeah, that's. 

00:34:29 Paul 

Cool to yourself. Published sometimes, sometimes people you know. 

00:34:30 Mimi 

I haven't signed, I haven't signed any NDA. 

00:34:35 Dan 

People like to keep their cards. 

00:34:36 Dan 

Close to their chest sometimes, but. 

00:34:39 Mimi 

No, no, no. I think it's beneficial. 

00:34:41 Mimi 

To talk about it rather. 

00:34:43 Paul 

Yeah, totally. 

00:34:44 Mimi 

Oh yes, Moon City is is a dialogue that are created between the national force embodied by the Moon and the human man-made capitalist element represented by the empty buildings of the City of London, which are. 

00:35:04 Mimi 

Opposite my balcony and my my, my take on it is some sort of. 

00:35:19 Mimi 

In a moment where we have reached an apex. 

00:35:23 Mimi 

Climax in in in these. 

00:35:28 Mimi 

Sort of clash between nature and us, where you're at, you know, the environment is going bananas and we have. 

00:35:39 Mimi 

****** ** big time. Capitalist capitalism just doesn't work, and it makes us all worse human beings. 

00:35:49 Mimi 

And I think in this moment, having a quieter, more poetic representation of these clash, you know, in the form of two main elements which are the City of London, the buildings called Buildings, almost film noir. 

00:36:10 Mimi 

And maintain the the mean which is poetic, his comforting his. 

00:36:16 Mimi 

These multiple has multiple identities somehow for whatever we see on it. 

00:36:24 Mimi 

I think it's a good. 

00:36:27 Mimi 

Reflective the moment. 

00:36:30 Dan 

You said there was a link. 

00:36:31 Dan 

To a book when you were chatting. 

00:36:32 Dan 

To us didn't. 

00:36:33 Dan 

You. That was it, a novel or was. 

00:36:35 Dan 

It a poem. I I can't remember. 

00:36:38 Mimi 

These the several the one what what you are referring about is referring to is perampanel's Charles Copeland Luna, which in English is the crowd discovers the moon, which is a story of these poor and a little bit slow. Minor, who was forced to work on the mines until late at night. 

00:36:59 Mimi 

From his ruthless master. 

00:37:03 Mimi 

And when you know this, this guy Charlie was a little bit, you know, slow and you know, really scared about the dark but not the dark of the mind to which he was used to. But he was scared of the of the coordinate less the dark of the of the heels of the outside. But when he came out. 

00:37:24 Mimi 

After that, the night shift is so the contour of the heels around of the Sicilian countryside and he was able to see this because of the full moon to which he looked up and you know in in all and he started crying with the thanking the men. 

00:37:44 Mimi 

For this gift, and that was very bright. But also there is it a local windows. The distance from the moon, which is a fantastic reference where there are some passages that I'd like to use. 

00:37:58 Mimi 

For mean City, but then the text should be written by possibly Rhiannon, Adam and Brad Farron. 

00:38:08 Mimi 

So we have enough backs that we could use and within reach my work could be found. 

00:38:18 Mimi 

I'm confident and I start feeling a good friction between my idea, my vision, and what actually is becoming, because up until I have given I I haven't been been given the work to Victoria, I was quite lost in Victoria, really offered me. 

00:38:39 Mimi 

A chance to have a look at my work from a different perspective. She's really, really good. 

00:38:44 Paul 

Victoria, who is it? Sorry. 

00:38:45 Mimi 

Victoria. Vika books. OK, vika. 

00:38:48 Mimi 

She's got a few, a few good books, one with Martin Power, one with the Bulgarian, then the latest one. The Renault is with Roland Ramanan, the Domino's. 

00:39:00 Paul 

Yeah, yeah, we had. 

00:39:01 Dan 

You you helped sequence that, didn't you? Yeah. 

00:39:03 Mimi 

Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:39:04 Mimi 

And you see, I did the the work that I could do. And then Victoria did the work that she should have done. And she did bring. 

00:39:12 Mimi 

Putting in pages and of course there it when you think about it as a linear output is a different thing than wherever you put to. You translate into book form and there I couldn't help while Victoria was, you know, perfect. In fact the book is fantastic. 

00:39:32 Dan 

I'm really excited to see. 

00:39:35 Dan 

I'm really excited to see dominoes. 

00:39:36 Mimi 

And also refreshing to have again something that is ****** by factual, fact based, and so factual yet poetic journals consider it, but really still as that that kind of law and real element to it is refreshing. 

00:39:44 Paul 

Yeah. Actually, yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:39:58 Mimi 

Now I look at Photographies staged. He's performative. He's self rented and these altruistic view on the outside, I find it really refreshing without being traditionally boring reportage in that way. Yeah. 

00:40:09 Paul 

What? What? 

00:40:14 Paul 

There, there is a lot of boring rapportage out there, as well as repeated over and over the same thing, and you're looking and you're going. You're not telling me anything. You. There's no, there's no narrative here. Then it's the same thing over and over. I was going to ask you about. 

00:40:28 Paul 

I mean, we've talked a couple of times about about. 

00:40:31 Paul 

How almost. 

00:40:34 Paul 

And I don't read your lecturers well, maybe it's quite. 

00:40:37 Paul 

Press here is how maybe St. photography within academia is slightly frowned upon, and this idea of it's a a lesser art form. Does that make sense of you? You have. You felt that before, have I? The ethical, the ethical side of it, you know, in that how? 

00:40:45 Dan 

Voice by the ethical. 

00:40:52 Paul 

How we? 

00:40:54 Paul 

You know this. It's been a big it's been a massive debate, right? It's been debated for years and and and and how how you yourself take pictures with the with the ethical considerations and how you how you operate as a photographer in in that world and what. 

00:41:08 Paul 

Your feelings are on it. 

00:41:10 Mimi 

Well, the difficult question is. 

00:41:16 Mimi 

We want to consider yes, of course, you don't want to invade too much. The privacy of others. The despite the fact that once you, once you hit the road, your private self has to be put on the side anyway because you know you you don't go. 

00:41:32 Mimi 

Masturbate on the Kingston High Road. No, because. 

00:41:35 Dan 

Speak for yourself. 

00:41:37 Mimi 

For you last night your your privacy, your privacy is obviously needed anyhow. However, you do have that element that has come since in social media and exchange of visual information that is possibly a little bit excess. 

00:41:55 Mimi 

But for me the main issue is not the ethical, but is the the fact that the people get more and more angry on the streets when you when. 

00:42:02 Mimi 

You take pictures. 

00:42:04 Mimi 

And I think this is very frustrating. I don't like confrontations. I've been in zillions of arguments and things. I'm I'm I'm also. I've also grown very subconscious. 

00:42:15 Mimi 

And I hate that when I take pictures, I I I can feel someone looking from my back and like I must be breathing on my neck and and being judgmental and and minding my own businesses when they shouldn't. 

00:42:21 Paul 

Yeah, it's a horrible feeling. 

00:42:28 Mimi 

And I hate all of these. These frustrates the creative process, so. 

00:42:35 Mimi 

You know, I see take pictures on the streets, but there are some that I lose their needs that I I don't have the guts to take to take. 

00:42:43 Mimi 

And and I. 

00:42:45 Mimi 

I don't forgive myself for these. I feel **** and it becomes all very stressful. See, I do it too, but I do. I don't do it with the same. 

00:42:55 Mimi 

You see, there used to be, but I used to have before. 

00:42:58 Paul 

You you kind of as you as you age, you kind of almost. What's the word? 

00:43:02 Dan 

Do you think that's what it is? So so is it? 

00:43:03 Mimi 

I don't know. 

00:43:04 Dan 

Like is it modern society that's getting more and more private or is it we're getting older? 

00:43:07 Paul 

Well, I was. 

00:43:10 Dan 

And more self-control. 

00:43:11 Paul 

I was thinking about Trevor Waste Cup right there for St. photographer from New York or travel. And I'll tell you why it's relevant now is that he's a young guy and we he did a video recently on on YouTube with. 

00:43:22 Dan 

40 be. 

00:43:23 Paul 

Poorly be and it was quite it was playing up to the camera. First of all, we'll say that right, we'll I'll caveat this all, but it was. 

00:43:29 Paul 

Really, he was like he was out. He's like a young Bruce Gilden. He's the only way you can describe it. You know, there's. 

00:43:34 Dan 

Cameron face but slightly kinder, less less, less abrasive. 

00:43:36 Paul 

Slight slightly kindness. 

00:43:38 Paul 

Let's embrace it. But there was there was an energy to him and I really. I really. I I remember myself like 20 years ago. And I was. I thought this it's definitely something that as a younger younger man you're less maybe fearful or maybe like because you spent 20 years understanding and researching and speaking to photographers. You understand the world in which you live in. And whereas at that point in your career you're so early on that. 

00:44:00 Paul 

You don't have any of those preconceptions of what it is you just out. 

00:44:03 Paul 

Taking pictures and there's something beautiful about that. I. 

00:44:05 Dan 

Think this is also gonna throw it out there, though I I didn't really understand this until I. 

00:44:09 Dan 

Went there but. 

00:44:10 Dan 

New York's got a very different. 

00:44:11 Dan 

Energy the energy. 

00:44:12 Dan 

Of New York, it doesn't feel like such an issue to be doing that that doesn't feel like an abrasive thing to be doing, and I'm sure you get into the occasional argument there doing it. 

00:44:23 Dan 

But if you shoot in the way that you shoot in London in New York, it's like, I don't know. 

00:44:29 Dan 

You've almost gotta. 

00:44:30 Dan 

Be a little bit more aggressive. You look at the way they drive out there and stuff, there's. 

00:44:33 Paul 

There's a bit more of a it's it's not, it's, you know, reacting to where you're going. It's you as a person who's taking the picture. So if you go to New York, you think you would change the way you take. 

00:44:44 Dan 

I felt it like I was in New York and I felt like a little bit more able to that immediacy that you. 

00:44:51 Dan 

Were talking about earlier. 

00:44:52 Dan 

Me. Like where? Where you were saying that there's there's a hesitation when you're walking around London and you feel like a bit self-conscious about it, that there's there's an energy. 

00:45:01 Mimi 

In New York that. 

00:45:03 Dan 

I don't know it. 

00:45:03 Paul 

Suppresses that a little, but I I think you can. I think it's almost like a mindset. I actually believe that you can if you. If you all walked out the street this morning, I feel like boys. 

00:45:11 Paul 

We're gonna go. 

00:45:12 Paul 

Out and take three photos. We're gonna be fully. 

00:45:13 Paul 

On it, I reckon it's free. You can. 

00:45:15 Paul 

Put yourself into a. 

00:45:16 Paul 

State of mind. Where you all. You're almost. 

00:45:21 Paul 

No, not what the word I'm I'm trying to find. Like there's an energy that you can take and you've gotta it's gotta be a right energy. You've got to be in the right mood. But if you go out, I think. 

00:45:29 Paul 

You, you. You. 

00:45:30 Paul 

Go and take pictures of how you're feeling, right? They reflect how you're feeling and I'm like, like, I just think it's almost it's you. 

00:45:37 Paul 

It's internal rather than. 

00:45:38 Dan 

I think it's half and half I I think a place does also have an energy and I know that you bring your. 

00:45:43 Dan 

Own into it. 

00:45:43 Dan 

And that is huge and not to be understated. But I think also places have an energy and I. 

00:45:48 

I think. 

00:45:50 Dan 

The people talk about like, there's been rap songs about the New York State of mind, you know, I mean, like, there's there's there's a different energy in New York than there is in, in anywhere else I've been. And I've been to a bunch of different cities, but I think it's it's a special place. 

00:46:06 Paul 

I just think it's busy, right? It's a busy city. It's a really busy, busy. Lots of people. But then again, if, like if you talk some circus, I think you you can feel like you're in. 

00:46:15 Paul 

New York. 

00:46:16 Paul 

Pretty quickly, you know, on a Christmas shopping day, I don't know. I think I think that energy, I don't know. I I I personally think the energy comes from you and whether whether. 

00:46:18 Dan 

I don't know. 

00:46:24 Dan 

Yeah, maybe. 

00:46:26 Paul 

And then, you know, downtown Manhattan or in Oxford St. in London. It it's my state of mind that's going to produce the work. 

00:46:26 

Right. 

00:46:33 Dan 

People talk to other people, though. 

00:46:35 Dan 

I've noticed that and if you in a lot of places in the states. 

00:46:38 Paul 

Rachel, those new racks are just really bad. 

00:46:40 Dan 

Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean. 

00:46:42 Dan 

It doesn't matter where you are in. 

00:46:43 Dan 

The states it. 

00:46:43 Dan 

Feels like people are a lot more into their community and they'll stop and have a chat with a random stranger. And in London everyone it feels like everyone wants. 

00:46:49 Paul 

And that's it. 

00:46:50 Paul 

That's in South Wales too. 

00:46:51 Paul 

That's in Southland, and I can go down my street. But I think again, I'd I'd argue. 

00:46:55 Paul 

The point that it's you. 

00:46:56 Dan 

Yeah, maybe, maybe, maybe you just in holiday mode and you're having the best time and insighting conversations in, I don't know. 

00:47:00 Paul 

You I think you just gotta put your voice. 

00:47:02 Paul 

I think as a photographer as well, I think it's part of your role sometimes has to put yourself into that receptive, almost open wherever, wherever the camera takes me, I'm going to go almost right and and you know, whether you're in New York or you. 

00:47:18 Paul 

Bloody bonds worth. I think it's to say I don't know. I maybe I'm wrong, or maybe I you're right. 

00:47:22 Paul 

I mean, what do you think? 

00:47:24 Mimi 

I think that you know the the, the the different context often different or revealing different characteristics of it is something that definitely a photographer. 

00:47:39 Mimi 

Response to yeah, the internal frame of mind, the the the personal photographic attitude that you employ to take picture. 

00:47:51 Mimi 

He's been a game, an element to that, you know, will drive. 

00:48:00 Mimi 

You to take whatever sort of pictures like for instance you mentioned before this give them the boost view the images which I love. 

00:48:09 Mimi 

If you if you see the work from a Haiti or maybe other work from Coney Island is very different from the ones of Manhattan with the Flash, and he's yet again different from the one that he's doing now. 

00:48:28 Mimi 

And he's not really. 

00:48:32 Mimi 

My kind of photography, I mean, I did employ a bit of it. 

00:48:39 Mimi 

In east London, up close where it was very close to the people flashing daylight and that is the closest I I I've been to the boss give them kind of attitude, but to me I prefer their observational work. When you're a little bit more decent, you look at things. 

00:48:59 Mimi 

Can you observe a scene? 

00:49:01 Mimi 

And you don't need to point at one element, but you invite the viewer to look at all the frame. 

00:49:09 Mimi 

And therefore the the there is more of our observational and laid back attitude from the photographer, but the regular in each city gives you different vibes, and each city has different characteristics and you know you you mentioned New York. 

00:49:18 

Yeah, yeah. 

00:49:29 Mimi 

You mentioned London by even Palermo. Palermo is super great to take pictures of. 

00:49:34 Mimi 

And and and he's got nothing to do with London or New York. So the energy of Palermo. 

00:49:40 Mimi 

I don't know how to compare it to London because I and I know three the the three cities. 

00:49:47 Mimi 

You know, we work not that well. I've only been once, but I no longer empowered me very well. But I couldn't define the different in energy. They have different energies. But I wouldn't be able to break it down now. 

00:50:01 Mimi 

The thing is that there is one thing who is more self-conscious or not so Parmesan. I'm not self-conscious at all, they just. 

00:50:10 Mimi 

Don't give a. 

00:50:10 Mimi 

**** pretty much like New Yorkers London people is very self-conscious, you know. It's not only you and the things that you do, but it's you. 

00:50:22 Mimi 

The things you do. 

00:50:23 Mimi 

And how you are perceived from others. I'm sorry. Excuse me. Beg your pardon. All this ******** feature slows down your your daily routine a lot, but I'm I'm kind of British because I've been in here for. 

00:50:26 Dan 

Yeah, yeah. 

00:50:38 Mimi 

27 years yes. 

00:50:40 Mimi 

I also grew self-conscious, you see. 

00:50:44 Dan 

How many times do you say I'm sorry? A day? 

00:50:46 Mimi 

I don't know. 

00:50:47 Dan 

This is the test. This is the. 

00:50:48 Dan 

Test of how British. 

00:50:49 Dan 

You are, you say we say I'm sorry so many times. 

00:50:51 Paul 

I you know, sometimes I wait for people to go these days before, if I'm taking a picture of something that's like, you know, an object honestly and wait for people to go before it. Can I just? I just like, oh, my God. What? I can't think. What? What's this weird guy taking a photo of this thing for? Like I this part of me in London has gone that way. Was before when I was younger, I was complete. I did not give a fact. Like, I really didn't care. 

00:51:11 Paul 

It was really. 

00:51:12 Paul 

There was an innocence of whatever you call it, bravado. But, but that's a that's like a now touching 50. There's definitely a different approach in terms of. 

00:51:22 Paul 

And I think that's sometimes, I think, ****, we are feel. 

00:51:24 Paul 

A bit guilty for that I. 

00:51:25 Paul 

Feel like why is that? Why society made me feel that way? Why have we? 

00:51:29 Paul 

Been trying have been condition. 

00:51:29 

But does that bring? 

00:51:30 Dan 

You a a maturity and a. 

00:51:31 Paul 

Complexity to your work, or do you think it just gets in the way? I sometimes think if you just go out and photograph what you see and how you feel, that's kind of what I I believe like I think this if you can if you can somehow. 

00:51:43 Paul 

What's the word? 

00:51:44 Paul 

Transfer how you're. 

00:51:45 Paul 

Feeling into a set of images? Then that's a marvelous thing. But. 

00:51:51 Paul 

Well when like. 

00:51:52 Paul 

I also think there's something with experience and knowledge that that enriching the work as well I. 

00:51:56 Paul 

Think that they. 

00:51:57 Paul 

They they're both sides of the same coin in. 

00:51:59 Paul 

A way right that yeah. 

00:52:00 Paul 

That you know. 

00:52:01 Dan 

I'm but I'm. 

00:52:02 Dan 

Still not sure, like I know we've had this. 

00:52:04 Dan 

Chat before, but I I don't know. 

00:52:08 Dan 

Unless you're in a very specific situation, I don't know that your. 

00:52:12 Dan 

Your feelings as a. 

00:52:13 Dan 

Photographer really are imbued in that photo. Maybe they're. 

00:52:17 Dan 

Not I I I I feel like you. 

00:52:19 Mimi 

Read a lot. 

00:52:20 Dan 

Of it as. 

00:52:21 Paul 

Well, everybody will read it. 

00:52:22 Dan 

As a viewer. 

00:52:22 Paul 

Differently, right? Right. 

00:52:23 Dan 

More than. 

00:52:24 Dan 

More than a photographer? 

00:52:26 Dan 

Like you've got a picture. Who's? 

00:52:28 Dan 

Just behind you there. 

00:52:29 

Right. 

00:52:30 Dan 

Jim Mottram. So this Jim Mordred. We don't know what Jim was thinking at this exact time. We can we can see what he was saying. 

00:52:36 Paul 

That, you know, that's a that's you just hit on an amazing plant, but we don't know that about any photograph that exists on planet. 

00:52:42 Dan 

Earth. That that was, that's what. 

00:52:43 Paul 

Right. There's no, we don't know how we can we can try and judge how we feel. We can quite kind of try and put our own biases and our own. We'll views onto those photographs and then yeah, you know. 

00:52:43 Dan 

I was saying like, I don't know, that's I don't think there's any. 

00:52:55 Mimi 

Yeah, but how relevant it is all of these. 

00:52:59 Paul 

Yeah. How? How important is it? 

00:52:59 Mimi 

In that, yeah, in that if you produce the same fever I. 

00:53:04 Mimi 

I don't really focus on what the photographer was feeling there, what he was. His friend of mine or her friend of mine or whatever. I look at the photographs and and I see what they suggest to me. Then if I want to write about the photography, if I want to research about the photographer and then the focus is. 

00:53:24 Mimi 

Not as much the photograph, but he is the photographer. As an artist, as an author. But the photograph to me, I I I. 

00:53:33 Mimi 

Really, you know. 

00:53:36 Mimi 

I focus on the photograph. 

00:53:38 Mimi 

Then whatever the state of mind, whatever was thinking, whatever was blah blah. 

00:53:45 Mimi 

Comes on a second, uh. 

00:53:49 Dan 

That's the curse of the being the photographer, right? That's exactly where somebody else needs to review your Reddit, because there's too. 

00:53:55 Dan 

Much of you? 

00:53:56 Dan 

In there like. 

00:53:57 Dan 

You have. You have a sentimental attachment, like so this. 

00:54:00 Dan 

Is one of Paul's. 

00:54:01 Dan 

SOS now. 

00:54:04 Dan 

The way I read this is probably very different to the way Paul reads it, because I don't know what frame of mind. 

00:54:09 Paul 

Paul was in, I don't know what frame of mind I was in. That's the interesting part. Yeah. I don't know how I. 

00:54:12 Dan 

You've forgotten. 

00:54:13 Paul 

Was feeling in the moment I took that photo right this. 

00:54:15 Mimi 

In fact. 

00:54:16 Mimi 

Proves though it's not that important. 

00:54:18 Paul 

Yeah, isn't it? It doesn't it right, I mean. 

00:54:20 Paul 

That's gonna make. Wow. That's like a real. 

00:54:22 Mimi 

Reservation to me that. 

00:54:22 Dan 

We've been, we've been having this chat for like. 

00:54:25 Paul 

That's like the biggest revelation. 

00:54:26 Mimi 

Ever. Will you be my dad? 

00:54:33 Paul 

It is. That's so that's so true, right? 

00:54:35 Paul 

It is like you don't. 

00:54:36 Paul 

You can you remember how you were. 

00:54:38 Dan 

Feeling. No, I know. I I I don't, I. 

00:54:40 Dan 

Can't remember why for breakfast this morning like. 

00:54:42 Paul 

I and and it's afterwards it's in the edit that you're putting that feeling together. 

00:54:46 Dan 

Right. It's when you see maybe yes, a sequence can make me feel something. So a book if I flick through somebody else's sequence and I'm. 

00:54:53 Dan 

I'm getting that. 

00:54:55 Dan 

I don't want to call it a narrative because it sounds kind of cliche, but I I'm I'm I'm feeling the vibe that they put on the paper right that to me can give me a feeling, but one specific frame I don't know what was going through their head. 

00:55:09 Paul 

Can you can? 

00:55:09 Paul 

You put this loads of single images that are mind blowing, right? And. 

00:55:12 Dan 

Then Ohh apps are ******* lowly. There's. 

00:55:14 Dan 

There's stuff that I. 

00:55:15 Dan 

Look at as a. 

00:55:16 Dan 

Viewer and it makes me feel something, but that's a different conversation to what was the photographer feeling? Yeah, you know what I'm saying? I know what I feel when I see something. 

00:55:22 Paul 

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:55:26 Dan 

And that's to me. What? 

00:55:27 Dan 

Not a good photo. 

00:55:28 Dan 

Is I. I very rarely see that in. 

00:55:31 Dan 

My own work but. 

00:55:31 Paul 

The good photo is is something that resonates to a lot of people. 

00:55:33 Dan 

Makes me. 

00:55:34 Dan 

No, I don't give a. 

00:55:35 Dan 

****. What a lot of people think. 

00:55:37 Dan 

It's what does it mean to me? 

00:55:39 Dan 

Right. I I see. I don't know. You walk around the Tate Modern, right? If we just take general art. What's Michelle duchamp's? Is it Michael douche? 

00:55:50 Dan 

I don't know the the urinal, right? 

00:55:52 Paul 

Yeah, OK. It's definitely not Michael. As Michelle, it's Michelle. It's Michelle. 

00:55:55 Mimi 

It's not mine, OK. We call it Michael for. 

00:55:57 Dan 

I I don't know. So I'm just my. 

00:55:59 Dan 

Dyslexia is this is Michael. 

00:56:01 Mimi 

For us boy Michael. 

00:56:03 Dan 

That makes people feel a certain way, right? And that's. 

00:56:07 Dan 

That's why it's good. You don't have to agree that you would have it in your house or. 

00:56:11 Dan 

That you would. 

00:56:12 Dan 

Buy it for your own private collection. 

00:56:13 Paul 

If you want to look. 

00:56:15 Mimi 

We earn you one. 

00:56:16 Dan 

But do you know what I'm saying? 

00:56:17 Dan 

Like I I think if you can elicit a response from someone, whether that's positive, negative. 

00:56:25 Dan 

Feelings of nostalgia. 

00:56:25 Paul 

That's all you're trying to. 

00:56:26 Paul 

Do maybe as an artist though, right? 

00:56:29 Dan 

That, that's, but that's what. 

00:56:30 Dan 

The good photo. 

00:56:30 Dan 

Does it makes you as if you feel something and what you feel and what the next person feels might be completely different, and that's OK. But that's what makes it good and. 

00:56:40 Paul 

This this is this. 

00:56:41 Paul 

This idea of good that we talk about those right and I know we've we've gone round in circles about good and also good photo. 

00:56:47 Paul 

And I I just think it's such a difficult thing you've you've must have read loads of books on what's a good photo, but it it it's. 

00:56:54 Dan 

It's, I think anyone agrees. 

00:56:57 Paul 

I think I could. 

00:56:58 Dan 

But weirdly, we can all look through stuff and we can all pick things out. And I think maybe 8090% of the. 

00:57:04 Dan 

Probably all agree on what good is, and yet we can't decide what. 

00:57:08 Dan 

You know, I mean that's that's also very strange when you if you lay out a lot of photos in front of people a. 

00:57:13 Dan 

Lot of people will pick the same stuff. 

00:57:16 Paul 

Do you think do you? 

00:57:17 Paul 

Think I don't know. Do you think, for instance, an experience listening me, me to a student, right? I don't know that they would pick the same stuff. 

00:57:23 Dan 

At that point, would they? OK, like if you're. 

00:57:26 Dan 

Talking people that maybe don't. 

00:57:28 Dan 

Have much experience then like what I would pick versus what? Maybe I'd I'd just go with your pick. 

00:57:36 

The big do do you know? 

00:57:37 Dan 

What I mean like? 

00:57:38 Dan 

I I think the the the lack of experience there probably does change things and maybe your eye isn't quite in whatever that means, but I I think if you take. 

00:57:47 Dan 

People that have shot a lot. 

00:57:49 Dan 

I I think a lot of the time they pick the same. 

00:57:53 Dan 

A lot of the time. 

00:57:55 Dan 

I don't know. There's is some taste there and. 

00:57:56 Dan 

I'm not saying. 

00:57:57 Dan 

It's 100%, but there's. 

00:57:57 Paul 

I don't know. I don't know that I don't. 

00:57:59 Paul 

Know that they would. 

00:58:01 Mimi 

Are these inclinations as well? What is it there that is your interest? Are we talking about which kind of photography? What? 

00:58:08 Mimi 

Don't know. 

00:58:08 Paul 

What's the purpose? What's what's the purpose of the? 

00:58:08 Dan 

If it's this week. 

00:58:10 Paul 

End of it, but if we. 

00:58:11 Dan 

All look through like an Alex Webb. 

00:58:14 Dan 

Photo book right now I guarantee at every turn of the page, all three of us will be like, yeah, that's ******* incredible. Was a good photo. I don't think there'll be many where one of us is like, I'm not so sure about this one. 

00:58:26 Dan 

Yeah. So there is something to it, like there is an agreement. It's the same as music, right? There's lots of music where you might not like. 

00:58:35 Dan 

Folk, or you might not like country or jazz or something, but you will hear it and you'll go well. I know it's good. I can't enjoy it, but I understand. I I I hear what's appealing to. 

00:58:45 Paul 

Yeah. OK. OK. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

00:58:47 Dan 

Yeah, you don't have to enjoy it, but I think most. 

00:58:50 Dan 

Can see something or there's something that. 

00:58:52 Dan 

Like this Jim Mottram behind you. It's it's an incredible frame. 

00:58:58 Dan 

Well, that's done. Wood, right? Done. 

00:59:00 Paul 

Wood very early downward, actually. 

00:59:00 Dan 

But yeah, that that's really brilliant. And then Trent Trent Trent, the ******* man. 

00:59:09 Paul 

I just think that. 

00:59:11 Paul 

Yeah, it's amazing, isn't it? Photographs. I just. I just like looking at them just it's it's it's, it's almost like you just puts me into a world hypnotic state where you're daydreaming and you're you're in this kind of place, you know, where it just forces you to think. 

00:59:18 Dan 

To somehow satisfying isn't it? 

00:59:29 Paul 

What what I mean I I quite I kind of always like asking questions of them. What they're trying to tell me. What do they? 

00:59:34 Paul 

Mean do they mean anything at all? 

00:59:38 Paul 

That's the beauty I think, right? That's why you. 

00:59:40 Dan 

Do it. Yeah, absolutely. 

00:59:43 Paul 

And in fact, let's talk. 

00:59:45 Dan 

About the beauty and things and why we do them many what is 1 tiny thing that brings you joy? 

00:59:48 Mimi 

OK. 

00:59:52 Mimi 

Only Tony. 

00:59:53 Paul 

Do you want an example you can give you? 

00:59:54 Paul 

An example going down. 

00:59:55 Dan 

Oh my God you're about. 

00:59:56 Dan 

To Ohh hang on, I should have lined that up. 

01:00:00 Paul 

I like the smell of freshly cut grass. 

01:00:04 Mimi 

I see. I see. I see a wood. There is plenty of things. There is also a Italian guy called the Francesco Piccolo. Yeah. Who wrote a book about small pleasures in life, you know? So I'm. 

01:00:17 Paul 

OK, OK. 

01:00:19 Mimi 

We tuned in by this thing. 

01:00:21 Dan 

Has it been translated to English? 

01:00:23 Mimi 

No, no, no, no. 

01:00:23 Mimi 

No, he's he's a great screenwriter. 

01:00:24 Dan 

Oh my God. 

01:00:26 Dan 

I need. I need to learn Italian just so. 

01:00:28 Mimi 

Ohh, is this this book is from passes and easy lies you know like I like to win arguments with my wife. 

01:00:28 Dan 

I can read. 

01:00:37 Mimi 

This gives me massive pleasure. OK, I like when I come into bed and my sheets are cold and I can feel fresh and nice and cozy up. 

01:00:52 Mimi 

I like when I pee after I have hold it for a line and through the windings. I like the the the first part of the cigarette. I like when the sun and when's my face. 

01:00:58 

That's such a good one. Such a good one. 

01:01:10 Mimi 

I like the smell of my daughter. They're zillions of tiny and enormous things that give me daily pleasures. So it's it's. 

01:01:20 Mimi 

Uh, a big, big, I mean, we could say here ours and rewrite the books. The book that I I I mentioned just before. 

01:01:32 Mimi 

But yeah, I mean, there are a lot of things. One thing that I like is, you know. 

01:01:39 Mimi 

Or what maybe. 

01:01:41 Mimi 

You know the sound of the acid blood when I shoot. 

01:01:44 Dan 

Ohh yeah, that's that's true. 

01:01:45 Mimi 

Like and sits as well. 

01:01:47 Paul 

Why? You said I'm gonna bring up on something you said earlier. This, this, this dislike of digital. What's, what's and and and. OK, this is. This has been like this is another question that's come up a lot on this show. Is this difference between digital and film and the emotional difference that you will get maybe from a film photograph. 

01:02:07 Paul 

To a digital photograph. And do you think there's a? 

01:02:09 Paul 

Difference do you think? 

01:02:10 Mimi 

Not much. I mean, I I don't dislike digital at all. I think it's really. 

01:02:11 Paul 

Not much. 

01:02:16 Mimi 

And it works perfectly fine. I mean we could ever argued with digital versus analog back in 2005. Yeah, when digital now digital is great. So I don't have anymore an issue on the quality and feel and this and that. And I don't even believe that. 

01:02:35 Mimi 

Analog slows you down because if you were to be slowed down by a little tool, a little machine. 

01:02:42 Mimi 

You would be having these problems, you know, so I didn't get to slow down by analog. 

01:02:43 Paul 

It's so true, but it's true, right? 

01:02:45 Paul 

It's true. It's not gonna be. 

01:02:49 Dan 

I think my bank balance slows me down when I shoot that. 

01:02:51 Mimi 

You should. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. But maybe is the the tool that you work with, I mean, our suburb is definitely slowing you down because of the typology of the two. But the 35 meal doesn't slow you down. 

01:03:05 Mimi 

Then, and even then, this thing is not really relevant. I like to work with film because of other number of factors which are personal which are maybe full time, but to me they still make sense and for instance I love working with film because of the. 

01:03:25 Mimi 

And the metal reality V2, because of being able to print in the dark. 

01:03:30 Mimi 

Come because of their ability to work with contact sheets. Because of how you archive your stuff and the potentially these things having also market value in the future. But then again this is you know you can have the value that you. 

01:03:51 Mimi 

Decide to emphasize upon. 

01:03:53 Mimi 

Is not really to me a matter of yes, digital, not digital. Yes, analog. Not. Yeah, I don't have an answer. And I quite frankly don't care. 

01:04:03 Paul 

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 

01:04:06 Mimi 

You know, it's also a matter of money. Do I have the money to invest in a new digital asset? But no. Do I have the money to spend for my roles? Yes. Will I spend more in Wales than when would? I will spend if I would have invested all the lump sum of money into a new digital? I said. But. 

01:04:25 

Is your time right? 

01:04:26 Mimi 

I would have spent and I did spend a lot more. 

01:04:29 Mimi 

But do I have those sort of money in one go pool to buy a thing? No. So for me it it it it really comes down onto practical things. Then when you are in front of photographs and you look at an amazing photograph, enlargement print. 

01:04:49 Mimi 

That results from a negative and you find the beauty in that welcome is beautiful. I love it. I appreciate it. I value I I know how to recognize it. But to me it's not fundamental to me these these things are a bit like that, you know. 

01:05:07 Mimi 

I wish I could say, like you listen to an old vine, you and you have. 

01:05:14 Mimi 

A different feel than a digital MP3. Clean, possibly solderless output. 

01:05:22 Paul 

But you could. 

01:05:23 Mimi 

But then again, yeah, but then again, isn't it the song that ultimately is the song that you like to listen to or not? 

01:05:23 Dan 

Measure the difference between those. 

01:05:31 Mimi 

I mean, you can listen to Etta James or Billie Holiday, you know, all the scratchy vinyl, and you can find all the nostalgia and romanticism in it. And if this is value for you, then welcome. That's fantastic. I do. TuneIn to these perfectly, but it's not. 

01:05:52 Mimi 

The memento. 

01:05:54 Dan 

Yeah, it's not the most. 

01:05:55 Mimi 

Important thing, so equally and even less actually with photography will you will have that kind of thing. There are photographers that were, you know the tradition of expressionism in photography with Martin bargain, Lorenzo, Castore, Olivier. 

01:06:15 Mimi 

And Antoine bagata? 

01:06:18 Mimi 

And Michael Ackerman and the kind of logo vinyl kind of analog, feel too dirty softwood output now and it makes sense in that kind of work totally but and and and and you will be surprised and how they produce. 

01:06:38 Mimi 

Those outputs, you would think that there is all analog and is not. There are other means going on other processes that allow that output to have that kind of feeling and it's not always involving analog versus digital. 

01:06:55 Mimi 

So I've gotta go, Madam North. 

01:06:57 Dan 

It's just tools, right? You don't see, you don't see carpenters arguing over. 

01:06:58 Mimi 

Yeah, absolutely. 

01:07:01 

Whether or not. 

01:07:02 Mimi 

And the tools are important as long as they serve you. So obviously I would not want to screw a. 

01:07:02 Dan 

They're using. 

01:07:04 Dan 

Of course. 

01:07:11 Mimi 

Screw with a hammer. 

01:07:13 Mimi 

Yeah, I see. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

01:07:14 Mimi 

Then how relevant is to the whatever thing as long as the frame doesn't fall off, then I've done my job. 

01:07:23 Mimi 

But I will use a hammer for a name and I will use a screwdriver for. 

01:07:27 Dan 

A screw the right tool for. 

01:07:28 Dan 

The job get me. 

01:07:33 Dan 

Don't leave some shouts. Yeah, OK. OK. So. 

01:07:36 Dan 

Whenever we get somebody on, maybe we like to. 

01:07:39 Dan 

Have a little chat about some work. 

01:07:41 Dan 

We've been enjoying recent years and have to be photography. It could be music, it could be painting. 

01:07:45 Dan 

It could be writing. It could be any. 

01:07:47 Dan 

At all. Just something it doesn't have to be deep or profound to say. 

01:07:50 Paul 

You've been enjoying the creative actor way of being by the the Maestro, the Spirit, Rubin, and he's all over the social media, Rick Rubin these days. 

01:07:58 Paul 

Isn't he? Yeah. 

01:07:59 Dan 

He's been doing the. 

01:07:59 Dan 

Rounds. He's been on all the podcasts. 

01:08:02 Dan 

Right. He went on. Joe Rogan a few times. 

01:08:04 Paul 

And it's really. 

01:08:07 Paul 

Yeah. Yeah and. 

01:08:07 Mimi 

All right, you're. 

01:08:08 Paul 

It's really, really it's like short, short paragraphs and just it's just really good. It's just I'm only about halfway through and I'm just really, really enjoying it. It's like simple. It's not written in a complicated manner. 

01:08:23 Paul 

It's it's it. 

01:08:24 Paul 

Makes sense when you're reading like oh wow, that. 

01:08:26 Paul 

That makes sense, yeah. 

01:08:28 Dan 

Have you had a few epiphanies? Read it. 

01:08:29 Paul 

Yeah. And I just let me see if I can give you, shall I see it. See if I can pull something. It's not unusual for science to catch up to art eventually. Nor is it unusual for art to catch up to the spiritual. 

01:08:41 Paul 

Yeah. OK, I'll, I'll leave it. 

01:08:44 Paul 

At that. But it's good. It's really good, really. 

01:08:46 Dan 

Enjoy it. I'm gonna borrow that. I'm. I'm interested. 

01:08:49 Paul 

You like it? 

01:08:50 Dan 

Yeah, I do like Rick Rubin. You know more. 

01:08:52 Paul 

About Rick Rubin than I do. 

01:08:53 Paul 

To be honest with you. 

01:08:53 Dan 

He made his discography is ridiculously good. Yeah, yeah. 

01:08:57 Dan 

The the amount. 

01:08:58 Dan 

Of records that you have would probably put. 

01:09:00 Dan 

In your top 10. 

01:09:02 Dan 

That have him as a producer. 

01:09:02 Paul 

Interestingly, that I was watching a documentary this week on BBC and he was with. 

01:09:09 Paul 

What's British rapper woman poet. Poet. Kai. What's her? 

01:09:15 Paul 

Name. Damn it. Damn. 

01:09:17 Mimi 

Baby gay. No baby cause Italian. 

01:09:19 Paul 

She's thinking British. No, no, she's white. And she's, like, growing a bit long. 

01:09:26 Mimi 

Tempest. Tempest. Lay. Tempest. 

01:09:27 Paul 

Yeah, OK, 10% saw a documentary with where Rick Rubin was with Kate Tempest, and they were basically she went out to California or wherever. He has a studio and they basically they were in a room for. 

01:09:41 Paul 

Over 96 hours and he was he would really kept coming and saying no, that's not it. That's not it. That's not it. That's not it and. 

01:09:47 Paul 

Then eventually like they. 

01:09:48 Paul 

Have a moment where it all comes together and he walks and he goes. 

01:09:52 Paul 

That's it. That's it. And it's sort. 

01:09:54 Paul 

Of like it's just mind. 

01:09:55 Paul 

Blowing. You gotta watch it. It's. 

01:09:56 Paul 

Really good. It's he, he. 

01:09:58 Dan 

Produces like a director, so he's eliciting. 

01:10:00 Dan 

An emotion from the artist. 

01:10:02 Paul 

Yeah, it's amazing to watch that. It's like such a. 

01:10:05 Paul 

Real skill like it's. 

01:10:06 Dan 

It's he's so talent. 

01:10:09 Paul 

And he's like, you can tell that he's feel. 

01:10:11 Paul 

Like he's feeling it right. He's. 

01:10:12 Paul 

Feeling it it's it's. It's emotional for him. I just it's it's it's really good. 

01:10:17 Dan 

He's tapped all the way in, yeah. 

01:10:20 Paul 

So that's the other thing I'll do a second shout out, Kate, turn this documentary with uh with Ruben on BBC. It's good, OK. 

01:10:27 Dan 

OK, watch out as well. 

01:10:29 Dan 

There's an exhibition literally in my town. 

01:10:31 Dan 

At the moment. 

01:10:33 Dan 

Two photographers that have been working in the Medway area. 

01:10:36 Paul 

I've seen this work already. You know what it's about? It's documentary street, right? It's like portraits on the street. 

01:10:40 Dan 

Yeah, yeah. 

01:10:42 Dan 

Of Rochesters, Joshua Atkins and Daniel love day. It's ******* incredible. Like, it's so good. 

01:10:49 Dan 

It makes me wonder what the hell I'm actually doing, like working in Medway, seeing as. 

01:10:52 Dan 

These two are working. 

01:10:53 Dan 

On it like. 

01:10:54 Dan 

It's that good. It's seriously, seriously good. So if you get a chance to go to Rochester in the in the tourist Information Centre, there's this little glass room that's been kind of, I don't know. 

01:11:07 Dan 

Pulled off and there's just this little pop up exhibition in there. I say little. There's actually quite a lot of photos, but it's I spent a little while in there. I think I was in there for about. 

01:11:16 Dan 

Half an hour, 45. 

01:11:17 Paul 

This is another, this is another. There's like, there's actually a bit. 

01:11:17 Dan 

Minutes. It's really good. 

01:11:20 Paul 

Of a rich. 

01:11:20 Paul 

Vein of form coming out of Medway at. 

01:11:22 Paul 

The moment isn't it? There's there's cool. 

01:11:22 Dan 

In fact, I better tell you what the exhibition is called upon the. 

01:11:25 Paul 

High Street. OK, there's David and Mary's down. 

01:11:27 Paul 

Your way, there's the these two guys. There's you. There's. 

01:11:27 Dan 

Yeah, David O markdowns. 

01:11:30 Paul 

Little Dino, what's his name? 

01:11:31 Dan 

Yeah, Richard. Zara. There's Zara Carpenter. 

01:11:34 Mimi 

Yeah, I'm ready. 

01:11:35 Dan 

You're ready? Yeah, he's ready. Yeah, come on. OK. 

01:11:39 Mimi 

First of all, a piece of music coffee. Cold by go gout. Like Dermot. 

01:11:44 Paul 

OK, OK. 

01:11:45 Mimi 

The defiance one. 

01:11:47 Mimi 

The Defiant Ones documentary on Jimmy Iovine, Dr. Jan Eminem. 

01:11:54 Mimi 

Which is beautiful talking, talking of of producers and talking about film direction. These are great documentary. 

01:11:55 Dan 

I haven't seen this yet. 

01:12:04 Mimi 

Then there is the exhibition of the Sugimoto, the Hollywood Gallery. Amazing. Then there is. 

01:12:13 Mimi 

A book of a great photographer, artist, drug usage of of which I forgot the title. Yeah, is of of my overall. 

01:12:28 Mimi 

Something like that. It's a beautiful book on a personal experiences. Then Trent Park book, Massive Monument there. Then they leave the. 

01:12:38 Dan 

Yeah, that's a. 

01:12:39 Dan 

Great book. I missed that. 

01:12:42 Mimi 

Then there are a book that shorten yesterday. Roman well, Roman pads book. 

01:12:48 Mimi 

Is a great genius and and the book they just the the latest book, The Island with Andres Parkinson is beautiful. 

01:12:56 

Yes, Sir. 

01:12:58 Mimi 

In terms of whatever, let's space out a bit out of photography. 

01:13:04 Mimi 

Possibly, I guess, no. My favorite book you've seen. 

01:13:07 Paul 

This year as well, you know, like a photo book, that's. 

01:13:08 Paul 

Come across this year. There you go. 

01:13:15 Mimi 

Well, well. 

01:13:18 Mimi 

Martin Baldwin. I'm in love with, I mean. 

01:13:22 Mimi 

Is is. 

01:13:24 Mimi 

It's got some books that are mind blowing, but. 

01:13:27 Mimi 

I like there's. 

01:13:28 Mimi 

Too many to mention, too many to mention, too many that I bought, you know. 

01:13:29 Paul 

Too many, too many. 

01:13:35 Mimi 

I mean, if it's, it's incredible. Highlight the Shields. Been the workshop that I've run in in Panama with Martin Power. It was fantastic. 

01:13:43 Paul 

Yeah. Talk, talk a little, talk a little bit about your workshops and how that that cause you you do them out in Palmeira right in Sicily, right. 

01:13:49 Mimi 

Hello, my name? Palmeiro. 

01:13:51 Paul 

My Taliban. 

01:13:55 Mimi 

Yeah, I well in Palermo and in in my countryside. I want two different kind of workshop. One is in the countryside is called the CC photo master class and it's me joined by two special guest suitors which are rather on a company photographer, editor or designer. Publisher so that. 

01:14:13 Mimi 

Really, over the years this becomes truly like a. 

01:14:17 Mimi 

Master class OK. 

01:14:18 Mimi 

You joined once and you already have and and almost benefits because you have three different perspectives on your work and also you get to build your own small. 

01:14:27 Mimi 

Use and, but it's really when you join for several years, then you get the maximum of this experience because it's really. 

01:14:39 Mimi 

It's you can you. You can participate every year and have a totally different experience from the from the previous year. You know, as I said last year, we had the well last edition we had Edwin Clarke and Martina, basically Lupo, editor of Cinema. 

01:14:59 Mimi 

Then now we're gonna have the big company, Maria Marta, before we have the photographer and Lucy of LeMond. So there is a variety of people that come. And then the Palermo one is usually me. 

01:15:20 Mimi 

And the yes, another special guest studio always to offer something more to the participants. But there I have more of a hand in that when they stay with me practically, you know. 

01:15:35 Mimi 

The workshop calls for six the bigger boss, around six days a week. Yeah. 

01:15:36 Dan 

How long is the workshop? 

01:15:40 Dan 

OK, that's really cool. 

01:15:41 Paul 

Are you knackered? Afterwards you come away exhausted like. 

01:15:43 Mimi 

Totally and totally drained. In fact, commercially speaking would make sense to 1/2 back-to-back, but I know I couldn't do it because I have to recharge. Otherwise I, you know, I die. And also because I want to offer the best I I have and. And you cannot offer. 

01:16:03 Mimi 

Anything when you're joined so, but they're both very different and very beautiful, but less less full. Running Palermo with Martin Potter has just been magical. Yeah. 

01:16:14 Mimi 

A group of photographers that were mind blowing the engagement was beyond imagination. 

01:16:22 Mimi 

Martin Par is being the genius and great person that he is. He's been his usual super generous, super insightful, and just for the light to be with. 

01:16:35 Mimi 

So they've been really, really beautiful. And for me, yes, that has been one of the highlights which you actually you know. 

01:16:42 Paul 

OK. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 

01:16:43 Dan 

Mine was one of your mentors, wasn't he? So Martin was one of your mentors, wasn't? 

01:16:47 Mimi 

Yeah. Yeah, the series somehow. You know, it's very it's very powerful. 

01:16:52 Mimi 

Don't expect to have any any salt city coming from him. 

01:16:59 Dan 

But it's from a place of love, right? It's it's actually he wants you to be. 

01:17:03 Dan 

The best version of you. 

01:17:06 Mimi 

And and that is. 

01:17:08 Mimi 

What a mentor should be doing. Yeah. You know, I believe the, you know, for me the, the, the people that, me, me, the most in photography for me person that the beauty one is Helen Diller. She's a a sheer genius and a great friend of mine and her work. 

01:17:28 Mimi 

My blowing Martin Parr. 

01:17:32 Mimi 

Building company Kate Edwards from the garden. Ken magazine. Yeah, she's a such a wonderful person and loving character. These these are amazing. But then also so many other influential people that are both young. 

01:17:52 Mimi 

Upcoming editors or photographers and super established personalities that. 

01:18:00 Mimi 

You know, making my life way better than than what it would be without them, you know? So I think all of them would be, you know, honest friends, guides and mentors. It's it's been Martin David. 

01:18:20 Mimi 

The guide they they have meant a lot. What's really Saint Claire is a great friend of mine that has been really a fantastic guide for me. 

01:18:31 Paul 

Do you still do your photo meeting now is? 

01:18:32 Mimi 

It. Yeah, we will again this this spring. Yeah, but it's been really complicated after COVID because all the locations that were were. 

01:18:35 Paul 

This spring you can you. 

01:18:44 Mimi 

Well, first, the one that we add, right, that was gone. They you know everything became more expensive. Landlords put up the prices of the rent. Institutions need to break down big rooms and rent them as artists, studios, some others. 

01:19:02 Mimi 

I'm work coworking places with bankers going from a basket to another one with the laptop on one hand and a coffee on the other one. How many coffees do they ******* drink, you know? 

01:19:18 Mimi 

I don't know. Bring concerned. If you. I didn't know what the **** is? How can they do that? And in the meantime, I can hire a a cheap place for the for the meat and for me. For the meat is all about articulating my socialist. 

01:19:33 Mimi 

View on offering the best. 

01:19:37 Mimi 

For the least amount of money possible. So I want the photographers to access the best reviewers and the best artists for talks and events. 

01:19:51 Mimi 

The very reasonable price I want to pay the most I can the reviews that come and the artists that come and talk for the meat. 

01:20:02 Mimi 

And this is not possible when the overheads become unmanageable. 

01:20:08 Mimi 

Yeah, yeah. I mean little on myself. I I never really earned money with for the meat myself. Very, very, very ridiculous little crazy amount of revenue for me. 

01:20:23 Mimi 

But that's not the point of photonic the point of photonic is to create a community. So I I might have identified a really good value, which might still be reasonable. We are partnering with with another institution, and this is something I cannot. 

01:20:27 Dan 

Yeah, yeah. 

01:20:43 Mimi 

Say at the moment. 

01:20:45 Mimi 

But we are working with this wonderful institution and we might bring back certainly this spring, so watch this space. 

01:20:53 Dan 

Say then where can people follow along and find out when this news hits the? 

01:20:59 Mimi 

Offering for the meat is the Instagram handle, but you know minimally it's the. 

01:21:09 Paul 

Hotbed of activity? 

01:21:10 Mimi 

Yeah, I mean you you can you can, you know the newsletter well, which we don't sell because we don't want to bother people. But you can sign up and then whenever the big news comes and we we of course you from people. 

01:21:24 Mimi 

But yeah, social media I think is the best, most media means to get the this kind of news. 

01:21:36 Mimi 

A lot of work, but you know. 

01:21:38 Dan 

It's worth it though, right? 

01:21:40 Mimi 

Well, I don't know if it's worth. It's about your. 

01:21:42 Paul 

I think it's a beautiful. 

01:21:43 Dan 

Thing bringing people together. Talk about this thing that they. 

01:21:44 Mimi 

This is for share this for share of. 

01:21:46 Dan 

Love. I think it's it's. 

01:21:47 Mimi 

This is really satisfying and you know the things that came up from photo from photo meet. They are incredibly beautiful, really beautiful people that got together, books being done exhibition. 

01:21:59 Mimi 

Even then, photographers being commissioned and found, you know, glorious careers in both editorial and commercial photography. So it's been really beneficial for the community as a whole. And you know, from several different perspectives, it's really satisfying. 

01:22:20 Mimi 

But I work too much, yeah. 

01:22:23 

Right here. 

01:22:24 Dan 

I know you're. 

01:22:24 Mimi 

Yeah, yeah, you know. 

01:22:25 Dan 

A busy man. You look like you're a. 

01:22:26 Paul 

Busy man, yes. 

01:22:27 Mimi 

Yeah. And you know. 

01:22:31 Mimi 

But I I like this book, this next book. 

01:22:31 Paul 

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. 

01:22:35 Mimi 

This is really beautiful. 

01:22:37 Mimi 

It's a book by Paul Banks and it's a series of profile pictures close up while doctors up but close in. 

01:22:47 Mimi 

Profile looking on the towards the left towards the gut of the book and they all shared this very cinematographic kind of reddish warm light. They must be in the bath or something. 

01:23:00 

I think. 

01:23:02 Mimi 

The cars are the red traffic light, so they could be the drivers and he could have been the passenger. You should call this taxi. Beautiful, beautiful little book by Paul highlight of the year. 

01:23:18 Dan 

Thank you. 

01:23:19 Dan 

Thank you so much. 

01:23:20 Mimi 

They are really. 

01:23:20 Dan 

Ma'am, you should really appreciate you coming on. You can keep up to date with me on social media. We'll link that in the show notes. You can keep up to date with what we're doing on social media at Idle Hanson. 

01:23:21 Paul 

Pretty to come in man, I know. 

01:23:31 Dan 

80 sign up to the newsletter for the latest on. 

01:23:35 Dan 

We're doing a. 

01:23:36 Dan 

A meet up like a little critique. It won't. 

01:23:39 Dan 

Just be photographers cause. 

01:23:40 Dan 

We're all about all art. 

01:23:42 Dan 

All the idle hands society. So we've got loads of painters. 

01:23:45 Dan 

That we've had on, we've got. 

01:23:47 Paul 

The musician for collection. Selecting designers. Yeah. Yeah. Crazy directors. Yeah, I think that that's one of the things that's been really interesting about doing this right. 

01:23:47 Dan 

Artists, musicians, directors. 

01:23:56 Paul 

The the talking to other artists who have different art perspectives is that it we will kind of push in towards the. 

01:24:06 Paul 

Same place fundamentally. 

01:24:06 Dan 

Yeah, we've all got a lot. 

01:24:07 Dan 

To learn from each other. 

01:24:08 Paul 

Yeah, there's something amazing about that cross pollination I like. 

01:24:11 Dan 

It it's cool. 

01:24:13 Dan 

Yeah, it's been amazing. We're gearing up for the end of the year now. 

01:24:17 Paul 

Yeah, Christmas socks on. 

01:24:19 Dan 

Christmas socks on. I should have my Christmas jumper. Today I'm gonna wear it tomorrow. Tomorrow to universal. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Tanya's been making her Christmas playlist, and that's what's been pumping around the house. So I'm truly interested clear now. 

01:24:23 Paul 

Witnessing anyway, Mariah Carey. Mariah Carey. Well. 

01:24:28 Mimi 

Is the time. 

01:24:33 Paul 

I hate Christmas. I thought. Chris, I. 

01:24:35 Paul 

Hate Christmas music. 

01:24:36 Dan 

I went to the Christmas market yesterday. 

01:24:40 Mimi 

Well, a second I used to stop you there. 

01:24:44 Mimi 

Come on, come on. 

01:24:45 Mimi 

Not be just sitting there and. 

01:24:47 Paul 

What was Christmas? 

01:24:48 Mimi 

From there, Christmas and that is not a sheet. 

01:24:53 Mimi 

Song is beautiful. 

01:24:54 Paul 

Fairy tale of New York Poe, what's? 

01:24:55 Paul 

His name? Shame garage, just. 

01:24:56 Paul 

Died, right? Yeah. 

01:24:56 Mimi 

See a song snowman, that one. 

01:25:00 Mimi 

They are too big. 

01:25:03 Dan 

What do you mean which one? 

01:25:07 Paul 

Ohh, there's a great there's a great. 

01:25:09 Paul 

Italian song about. 

01:25:10 Paul 

The donkey. You know the donkey. One more place to create. It's called Dominic the donkey. You. 

01:25:15 Mimi 

Don't know that. No. Oh. 

01:25:16 Paul 

My God. Yeah, yeah, I'll play it for you. 

01:25:16 Dan 

And that's christmassy. 

01:25:19 Mimi 

Before you leave and you back as Italian as Domino's Pizza? Excuse me. 

01:25:22 Paul 

No, no, no, no. 

01:25:25 Dan 

It might be, it might be. It's definitely. 

01:25:28 Paul 

Italian guy singing the donkey like that goes. 

01:25:29 Mimi 

OK, I believe you. 

01:25:34 Paul 

Well enough. 

01:25:35 Dan 

OK, right. Well, let's end it. 

01:25:36 Dan 

On that note, yeah that. 

01:25:37 Dan 

Sounds like the perfect place to wrap. 

01:25:39 Dan 

Thank you very much. We'll catch you. 

01:25:41 Dan 

In a couple of weeks. Cheers. 

 

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050: 2023 in review

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048: Sìle Walsh