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A collaboration between photographers Al Brydon and J. M. Golding, Tales from a Non-Existent Land, is being featured on the Ilford Photo online magazine.      
The project is fascinating; each expose a roll of film in a plastic Holga
 camera, send it to the other, and re-expose it -  not knowing what is 
already present in the latent image. A perfect example of what John Cage described as "Chance Operation" in music.       
photo by  
Golding
 describes the process as, "The random magic of two unconscious 
processes and two Holgas." The results are quite astounding.       
       
    The
 pair started to make this work roughly ten years ago, after a chance 
encounter on a photo sharing platform. This led to a mutual appreciation
 of each other's work and they found that both saw the potential of the 
landscape to resonate with inner experience and make it visible.      
Both photographers were using a camera called a Holga; an incredibly simple plastic medium format camera known for its low quality lens which produces a very dreamy aesthetic, frequently including lens flares and vignetting. These image characteristics, and the simplicity of this lo-fi process of making images, attracted each of them to using it in the first place.
Both photographers were using a camera called a Holga; an incredibly simple plastic medium format camera known for its low quality lens which produces a very dreamy aesthetic, frequently including lens flares and vignetting. These image characteristics, and the simplicity of this lo-fi process of making images, attracted each of them to using it in the first place.
Each
 start with one roll of film and expose the roll as normal. Then the 
film is rewound and the exposed roll is sent to the other. Each then 
re-exposes the film through their own cameras, creating a double 
exposure. Golding is based in the San Francisco Bay Area in California while Brydon is based in the North of the UK; he is also a co-founder of the Inside the Outside collective (link below).     
They
 never plan the photographs, relying on serendipity and knowing each 
other’s work. This is likely to influence the exposures they make, 
whether or not with conscious intent. Over the years they’ve become 
better at predicting what the other might do. Yet there's still a 
glorious element of surprise once the films have been 
developed.           






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