29.5.11

ENB from landside

ENB ONE from robin jenkins on Vimeo.

Shooting East Nash Buoy























Before taking a ride with Atlantic College Lifeboat I had a shot at shooting from the shore. I didn't get much but here's the rig which, I like more then the images themselves.

More Moments



A fraction of a second
















I have recently finished the sculpture that I have been working on for the past year. It will be included in a joint exhibition at Chelsea Future Space, opening on the 19th of July (there will be a sneaky preview show just before, details posted soon). This image shows a tiny moment of the entire piece, also called A Second On The Severn Sea. I won't be showing any picture of the work in its entirety until my new website is up and running. So this is just a taster, a few more will follow.

22.5.11

East Nash Buoy


East Nash Buoy.
This image of a cardinal buoy is taken roughly a mile off shore from Nash Point. It marks 'Dangerous Water'. This east marked cardinal buoy warns mariners of a sand bank called Nash Sands. This sand bank is around 50m wide and 9 miles long and has claimed many ships and boats, most famously; Frolic in 1831, a passanger steamer enroute from Haverfordwest to Bristol, 55 souls were lost without any survivors.
East Nash Buoy is rigged with a lamp which flashes in code to indicate it's identity at night and a bell that operates with the movement of the buoy itself. This bell can be heard from far and wide, depending on the direction of the wind, it can some times be heard up to 3 miles inland and about 20 miles off shore. See film below to hear it.
Images of this buoy will be included in the show: A Second on the Severn Sea.

21.5.11

A Second On The Severn Sea PT1

Untitled from robin jenkins on Vimeo.


Filmed at Nash Point, Sout Wales. Sounds created by Toby Lynas

East Nash Buoy

Untitled from robin jenkins on Vimeo.