Of the Field
Of the Field
Mike Tinney
May 30, 2016
You are a still-life and documentary photographer. How come you are interested in two so disparate areas of photography? And don't you need to have two completely contrary approaches to your work?
I don’t feel they’re so far removed from one another. Obviously the working processes are very different, but for me in what I do, they’re both fundamentally about capturing small detail and championing the understated.
What is the Of the Field series that you shot for the S Magazine all about? What is the idea behind it?
When it comes to throwing things away - especially living things - it hurts a little. There is a sadness for what once was, a passing twinge of pain. These pictures are a reaction to that – a small way of preserving, of giving the gift (or is it one?) of immortality for these pre-cut half-dead flowers, rescued from a London market stool.
Do you do the post-production of your photos yourself or do you hand them over to a third party? What significance does post-production have for your work?
Generally I like to do my own post. I set up my first darkroom when I was 14. Now it’s all digital, but I’ve always felt that the post process is just as important as any other stage of a shoot – it’s the fix, a stage to meditate on what’s been created, to get closer to the work. That said, with some jobs it’s good to step away, to take a breath – so I’ll outsource. There are some very talented retouchers out there.
Which photographers have impressed you most and in what manner do they influence your work?
I recently caught a great Daido Moriyama show in Marrakesh. I really like his work. There’s a raw, often unsettling, immediacy in life he captures – and that’s around us all the time.
See the portfolio in LFI 4/2016, and the Digital Feature on s-magazine.photography.
Mike Tinney+-
Born in Suffolk in 1980; first dark room when he was 14; later assistant to world-renowned photographers such as Rankin. Today he concentrates on still-life and documentary photography. Clients include: Casio, Gucci and Children In Crisis; published among others in: Conde Nast Traveller, How To Spend It, The Hunger. More