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People come to photography in different ways. I'm always
intrigued at the variety of reasons for which my friends became
photographers, none of them incidentally through the predictable
route of a photographic education. For myself, I took an MA in Geography
at Oxford, which I imagine had a latent effect on the amount I travelled
later, but I then went into advertising. After a few years the agency,
with extraordinary generosity, gave me a three-month sabbatical to
travel up the Amazon, which I did with a second-hand camera, and after
the trip I knew what I wanted to do. My encouragement came from Time-Life,
who used the pictures for the cover of a new book on the Amazon and for
several spreads inside. They became my first client and I changed my career.
Travel and reportage have been central to my work, and over the years
this has leaned towards Asia, particularly
Southeast Asia, India and more recently, Japan. Within these, and even apart,
certain special interests grew, including art. design, architecture, science
and technology, and anthropology (the Oxford degree included a Diploma course
in this). You can see these various specialities among the magazine stories
featured here, and in the book titles. I do a lot of books.
They are a publishing format I understand well, they allow me to explore a
subject in depth, and when this is something about which I know sufficient,
I write also.
All of this — and after nearly thirty years it adds up — has been
supported by a range of clients. These were contracted assignments,
but most were more than just work. They were opportunities to photograph
in special, often privileged circumstances. Over the last twenty years
the most supportive of all my clients has been the Smithsonian
magazine. I began working for the magazine shortly after
it was launched, and since then have shot more than forty stories
for it. The editors and picture editors indulged me in some marathon
logistics in executing some unlikely-sounding stories, from the Birth
and Death of the Universe to Birds'
Nest Soup to Psychoneuroimmunology
(yes, that's what I thought when the script arrived).
On Photography
And then there are the books and courses on photography. If you are
visiting the site to research pictures, this will probably not interest
you very much, but I have been involved in teaching photography for
a long time, with more than 40 books written and more than a million an a half
copies sold. One book received the Prix Louis Philippe Clerc from
the French Ministry of Culture, and I also designed and wrote the
United Kingdom's Open College of the Arts photography courses, which now
go to degree level (BA).
The Studio
That's what I do. you can see the results under Images or Search, and we're adding
constantly to the selection, all of it available for licensing. There's a huge
backlog of transparencies being digitized. We're working on that. And there is a
string of new projects this year. I'm working on those, too.
To see more of my personal and documentary shooting, please have a look at my other
gallery site, by clicking here.
The slideshows change regularly. You can return directly to this stock sales site from there.
We're in London, England, and are happy to answer any queries. Between us, we can usually handle
calls in English, French, Spanish and Japanese (it depends on who's in the office at the time).
If from the lists, books and stories there's a picture that you think we might have but can't find it here on the website,
please ask us — it will be a long time before we digitize everything.
4 Callcott Street London W8 7SU United Kingdom t: +44 20 7229 3977 f: +44 20 7229 3788
e: michaelhfreeman@btinternet.com
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