In Cam Issue 1

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InCam ISSUE NO˚1 CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL

description

First issue of the magazine created by Photography students at Cambridge School of Art, Anglia Ruskin University.

Transcript of In Cam Issue 1

InCam

ISSUE NO˚1CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL

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InCam is the first magazine published by the Photography Department at

the Cambridge School of Art,Anglia Ruskin University,UK.

Fifty one photography students and one graphic design student worked for

five days to create this online magazine to tight deadlines. Everything you

see in this magazine is shot, edited and laid out by the students themselves.

The magazine enhanced the community spirit in the department and

brought together first, second and third year students. They learnt about

each other’s practice and came up with ideas that explored the diversity of

approach to photography nurtured within the department.

Students learned transferable skills, organisation, team building and

working to deadlines. All of them are now better equipped to face new

challenges during their studies and beyond.

The project week was fun, creative and highlighted the international flair of

Cambridge School of Art, as well as the city surrounding it.

We wish this magazine success,

Course LeaderKerstin Hacker

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CONTENTS

FAÇADES

HEADSPACE

CLOSURE

MUSICIANS OF CAMBRID GE

ALTERNATIVE LIVING

THE ORCHARD

THE ORCHARD

THE WORLD IN PASSING

RESOLD

CHARIT Y SHOP FASHION

TR ADITIONAL DRESS

UBUNTU

page 4-9

page 10-13

page 14-19

page 20-27

page 28-37

page 38-45

page 46-49

page 50-53

page 54-57

page 58-63

page 64-67

page 68-71

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FAÇADESAlex DickensIsobel McTearJosh MurfittWill Bailey

Alex DickensIsobel McTearJosh MurfittWill Bailey

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Alison Bonner, Trevor Hails, Vicky Learmouth & Bronwen PosnerHEADSPACE

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CLOSUREThe UK as a whole has been suffering from the economic downturn; a major area that has suffered from this recession is the restaurant and food sector.

Edward AshwoodSiobhan HallRoisin InnsSteve McCann

“Restaurants were being driven under by a combination of customers spending less and increasing overheads such as labour”

John Hart, The Guardian.

“for the first time ever, we see the rate of closures exceeding the rate of opening”

Edward AshwoodSiobhan HallRoisin InnsSteve McCann

The Telegraph

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MUSICIANS OF CAMBRIDGECarina Elizabeth HassellCJLLaura NundyKelsey EvansDanielle GoodmanRoman Bichsel

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“Inspiration waits for no one”

soundcloud.com/theghostinthemachine

Name: Alex LundbergAge: 20Instrument: Acoustic Guitar/ Vocals

Alex Lundberg

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Alex Lundberg

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Name: Chris LamontagneAge: 20Role: Rapper

Name: Chris SmithAge: 20Role: Saxophone Player

Name: Jack WasherAge: 19Role: Producer

‘Don’t Tell Me’ is Alex Lundbung’sup and coming single featuring Chris Lamontagne, Chris Smith, Dauda Ladejobi and Jack Washer.

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ALTERNATIVE LIVING

An early morning in Buckden Marina, w ith a talkative salesman introducing us to l i fe on the water.

Ben GriggsCharlotte NormanElliot FordAnta Mainule

Hartford Marina

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Ben GriggsCharlotte NormanElliot FordAnta Mainule

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A mother and son who enjoy barbecues on their houseboat roof ter race in the summer.

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A fr iendly welcome f rom cat lovers Pat and Bur t Tann, a couple who has l ived on a houseboat in Har t ford Marina

for s ix years .

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Having taken inspiration from the work of John Clang, we used a similar technique of ripping photographs to show how culturally diverse and interconnected Cambridge is. It is interesting to see how despite cultural differences we all convene in the same places.

UNTITLED SOUP

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Sweet Potato, Chilli, & Choizo SoupGareth Iain Christopher

Leek & Potato SoupElizabeth Sheppard

Pumpkin SoupWil Symons

Spicy Lentil SoupJaimie Warren

Brocolli & StiltonMatthew Rumble

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THE ORCHARD‘ T h e O r c h a r d - a c o r n e r o f E n g l a n d w h e r e t i m e s t a n d s s t i l l a s t h e o u t s i d e w o r l d r u s h e s b y .’Located in the charming, quintessentially British village of Grantchester, The Orchard is a popular retreat for Cambridge University students, professors and tourists, as well as locals. Since opening in 1897 many famous names (Stephen Hawking, Sylvia Plath, Prince Charles and E. M. Forster) are among its great list of visitors. The Orchard originally opened when a group of students from the University began visiting the house for tea on the morning of their May Ball. They later requested the landlady, Mrs. Stevenson, whether they could take their usual tea into the orchard rather than onto the front lawn, where they would usually congregate. This soon became the regular custom for tea.

Adam CatlingRosie FieldRichard TooleyCarla Hendriks

‘Stands the church clock at ten to three? And is there honey still for tea?’

The Old Vicarage, Grantchester - Rupert Brooke

To increase their income, the Stevensons took in lodgers. In 1909 Rupert Brooke, graduate of King’s College, took residence at The Orchard. He attracted a lot of visitors and interest in The Orchard.

THE WORLD IN PASSINGCodie ButcherLouise AddisonSteff GrosPeter Smith

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RESOLDWith a history of such wealth and education, is Cambridge as charitable as it could be?

In a place where street vendors meet one’s eye on every opportunity, a place where people come from all over the country in the hope that Cambridge has enough change in its pockets to get them through the day, are we giving enough money to those who are in need?

For all fashion-driven people, charity stores are the way to do your part. Marching around shops from Cancer Research UK to Oxfam, we created a series of images to show that second-hand and ‘cheaper-than-retail’ is nothing to be sniffed at.

Your mission is to find the exotic, the quirky, the beautiful and the original.

Charlotte Anne McCooeyHarriet StoreyLibby FletcherVicky Young

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CHARITY SHOP FASHIONHolly Pines, Heather Zlayji, Reece Porter, Saffron Smith & May Simpson

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TRADITIONAL DRESSSuzanne FarleyBianca PetrilaCharlotte KearleyFaith Cooper

Clothing: Shalawar Kameez

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Clothing: Jubba – Omani StyleClothing: Anarkali

UBUNTUStephen Allwright, Danielle Shepherd, Gracie Gilbert, Diana Kuderina & Georgia Farmer

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Africa Albania Asia Australia Bangladesh Bulgaria Barbados Benin Canada China Czech Republic Denmark Dubai England Finland France Gambia Germany Greece Holland Hungary India Iran Ireland Italy Jamaica Japan Kazakhstan Lebanon Liberia

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Mexico Morocco New Zealand Nigeria North Korea Oman Pakistan Philippines Poland Portugal Russia Saudi Arabia Scotland Siberia Singapore South Africa South Korea Spain Switzerland Thailand Vietnam Wales Zimbabwe

Thank You to Jonathan Harris, whose layout skills saved the dayThank you to Loren McCarthy