Landscape photographer Andrew Burns doesn’t have to venture far off the beaten track from his home in Dornoch to capture Scotland’s beauty.
When I left school I did an arts foundation course at The Central School of Art and Design in London. After my foundation course I did a year long photography course, also at Central. I then did a three year Graphic Design Degree Course at St. Martins School of Art and Design. In 1989 my first job was at a new digital design studio in London called De-Code Design. After a short time there I worked as a designer at the Observer newspaper where I was responsible for the first photo montage on the front of a UK newspaper after the 1995 Oklahoma bombing in America. This was quite a controversial move by the editor Andrew Jaspan. Today of course the authenticity of images is front and centre of the debate about AI and fake news. I use photoshop to bring the best out in my images but I will never alter a scene by adding sky, removing or adding objects. I always crop in camera with a zoom lens and compose the image through the view finder.
In 1999 I took the opportunity to go to Sydney to redesign the Sydney Morning Herald for the 2000 Summer Olympics. From there I moved into magazines and became Creative Director at Australian Consolidated Press, ACP, in Sydney. There I redesigned House & Garden Magazine, the Qantas In flight Magazine and Australian Geographic amongst others. Over my time working as a designer I worked with some incredible photographers and learned so much from them. The beautiful photography in something like the Australian Geographic is my bench mark. Another invaluable skill I learned from my time in publishing was in the area of post production. Making sure a photographers work is faithfully reproduced in print is vital.
In 2016 I returned to the UK to help my mum and dad. Caring for elderly parents can be quite difficult and by way of a tonic I picked up a camera again and also started painting. The light in Scotland can be wonderful and the landscapes awe inspiring. Taking photographs gives you the opportunity to explore and find the best locations. I’m not a hill walker and most of my images are taken no more than a couple of miles from where I park my car. Sometimes the best views are from the side of the road. You don’t have to travel very far from the beaten track to feel quite remote in the highlands, and one of my greatest joys is just standing on one place and waiting for the light to do its magic.
As well as the landscape photography I paint and make ceramics. I also make things from shells, stones and feathers that I then photograph. I have a little gallery at Kilncroft, Grange Road, Dornoch where I show my work. I enjoy seeing how people react to my work when they visit the gallery. There are abstract images from my foraging creations, porcelain bowls, and paintings as well as my landscape photography.
Kilncroft Gallery: Grange Road. Dornoch. Open 10.00am – 7.00pm
Gallery Web site: kilncroftgallery.co.uk
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