Paul Marcus

west country landscape photography

Fine art land & seascape photography

People who take photographs often have a favourite subject: pets, people, food, steam trains, abstract images or landscapes. Mine is the last of these, and as with many attracted to taking their camera out of doors this stems from a longstanding love of nature and the countryside, especially the hills.

My spirits rise in these surroundings, and if there is a seashore as well then so much the better. This photographic discipline is far from easy to pursue however. It involves travel and often very early starts or staying late at a location so as to get the best light.

Our weather is more predictable than before but even now there is much uncertainty, and a promising start to an expedition very often ends in disappointment when the sky clouds over or, just as bad, when there are no clouds at all but just an unremittingly blue sky with strong sunlight.

The quality and direction of the light are absolutely fundamental to a satisfactory land- or sea-scape image. “Good light” can literally transform a scene, and it is sometimes necessary to return to a location many times to capture the image you want.

Capture” is the right word to use here, as it often feels like hunting an elusive quarry. What is the light doing? It is surely changing the mood of a scene. The same rocky cove in Cornwall with a sandy beach bathed in sunlight is a pleasant holiday spot for picnics and bathing. With lowering clouds and strongly directional lighting from a low angle at dusk it is a forbidding secret place; threatening even, especially if a strong wind is blowing the spume off large breakers crashing on the shore.

Much of what I try to do with my imaging is emphasising the mood I feel when I visit these places.

Paul Marcus

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East Okement River in Dartmoor – prehistoric hillfort

East Okement River in Dartmoor – prehistoric hillfort

East Okement River in Dartmoor - prehistoric hillfort In woodland on the banks of the East Okement River in Dartmoor there is a prehistoric hillfort. Walking around this I found a very old wall covered in moss, which followed the contours...

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The Thorn Tree – Iconic Natural Feature of Dartmoor

The Thorn Tree – Iconic Natural Feature of Dartmoor

The Thorn Tree - Iconic Natural Feature of Dartmoor What are the two most iconic natural features of Dartmoor? Arguably they are stunted hawthorn trees and granite tors. Walking on the moor recently I captured this image. The wind blasted...

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Snow is the photographer’s friend

Snow is the photographer’s friend

Snow is the photographer’s friend A late heavy snowfall in Devon took me out early morning with my camera before a thaw set in. The sky still had that leaden look, but the sun was above the clouds and some low mist, so the light was good....

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All was silent without…

“… and, illuming the landscape with silver,
Fair rose the dewy moon and the myriad stars
Near to the bank of the river, o’ershadowed by oaks, from whose branches
Garlands of Spanish moss and of mystic mistletoe flaunted
Such as the Druids cut down with golden hatchets at Yule-tide,
Stood, secluded and still, the house of the herdsman.”
– Henry Wadsworth Longfellow