Tuesday, 17 December 2013
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
Scottish Pride
In ‘79 we
were told that not enough people had voted even though the majority voted for
independence. After this, some Scots were disillusioned and left Scotland. I
left Scotland myself in 1980
for America
and returned here in 1989. Turmoil can
create great art though and after ’79 in the eighties there was a revival of
Scottish art, music and writing. Since then there has also been a revival in
Scottish pride and culture. Back in the 70s there were fewer ceilidhs and kilts
were rarely seen at events or on the high streets and there was less pride in
our Scottish heritage.
Here are a few of my kilt images of recent years!
Saturday, 12 October 2013
Black and White Portraits
Frank Sinatra |
Louis Armstrong |
Professor Longhair |
John Martyn |
Friday, 30 August 2013
Thursday, 22 August 2013
Laurie Penny Edinburgh International Book Festival 2013
Laurie Penny, British columnist,
blogger and author discussed her book Discordia on the Greek crisis at
Edinburgh International Book Festival 2013.
Credit Pauline Keightley. Copyright:pkimage09@gmail.com.
Laurie
Penny, 26, journalist, author, feminist, troublemaker, utopian. Contributing
Editor at The New Statesman, writer for The Guardian, Vice Magazine, The
Independent, The Nation, Salon and many others. Author of Meat Market (Zer0
Books, April 2011), Penny Red (Pluto Press, October 2011) and Discordia (Random
House, 2012, with Molly Crabapple).
If any media or artist wishes to use my photos commercially online, please get in touch with me. Thanks.
Wednesday, 21 August 2013
Beautiful Sahar Delijan Edinburgh Book Festival 2013 .
The
beautiful Iraqi writer Sahar Delijan discussed her novel about those executed
during the Iran-Iraq war Children of the Jacaranda Tree at Edinburgh
International Book Festival 2013. .
Tuesday, 30 July 2013
Friday, 19 July 2013
Sicily
Sicily is a green, beautiful and very large island covered in
vineyards. Pink and orange houses were dotted amid the lush green olive groves
and a translucent sea evaporated into the turquoise glow of the Mediterranean
sky in warm whispers.
We stayed
in the hills just behind the old town of Cefulo,
in an artistic villa with a wide sheltered veranda with panoramic views of the
very blue sea. The house is full of many coloured quirky nic nacs – dangling
colour beads and shells, fancy large plastic bowl.
I hoped I’d
find peace here, or new treasures perhaps. Travel and holidays for me are a
chance for free creative thought and writing.
The last
evening the waves took up, leaving a brilliant turquoise wash and soft luminous
light as we walked the long shorelines. I read too (recommend Beautiful
Ruins)
Monday, 15 July 2013
Trip to Rome
Our first
night in Rome
was at the front of the impressive converted old farm dwelling which was
tastefully decorated on two levels and the best hotel room I have ever stayed
in. I wish we'd stayed there rather than stay the next 2 nights in Rome itself, as the hotel
there was basic and cost the same price! We walked over the impressive
centuries old steps of the Coliseum and past the Roman forum, where there are
so many very old stories.
We visited
the Papal Vatican museum, the holy city and the vastly decorated walls of St Peters. We viewed the
craftsmanship of the paintings by Raphael and Michelangelo’s Sistine chapel
that stared down over us on man’s heavenly aspirations. It felt both strange
and familiar to walk on those revered and well worn marble and mosaic floors.
We entered the dimmed and hushed Sistine chapel adorned with Michelangelo’s
majestic glories to God and as the crowds follow behind us, they seem to mirror
the soaring images painted on the walls in an all too real way, and that is the
memory I take away with me – the shared hopes of people for a better way.
Later we
loitered at the packed fairy lit Trevi fountain and after ate at the Peroni
restaurant where there was that fun spirit and energy we encountered once
before in Paris.
(all roads
lead to Rome, when in Rome)
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