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Jaqueline Butler - Programme Leader
I work mainly in digital film, video and alternative photographic/ image making processes and artist books.
The subject of my work has consistently been the representation of the female body and domestic histories.
Recent work involves reflections on narrative structure and sequencing in relation to book publication and film. Exploring a deconstruction of conventional narrative structures and considering the effect of the ‘edit’. Concentrating on a study of the ‘edges’ of space, the separation of inside and out, private and public.
0161 247 1923
j.a.butler @ mmu.ac.uk
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Alan Jones- Lecturer
Alan Jones is currently working as a lecturer on BA(Hons) Photography at MMU; his current research is based around the social structure of the domestic space and the confluence between contemporary anthropology and contemporary art. These areas within cultural meaning are made and debated; both have specific sites of investigation, cultural reproduction, gender and memory in common. All my enquiries run in conjunction with my interest in non-silver contact processes.
a.r.jones @ mmu.ac.uk
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Gavin Parry - Senior Lecture
Gavin Parry is a Photographer who is also Senior Lecturer on BA(Hons) Photography Course. Constantly seeking the perfect balance between being an educator and a practitioner. The starting point of all his practice is rooted within a Photo Documentary tradition and the photograph's relationship with the real. Perhaps a photograph is no longer seen as a clear 'window on the world', nevertheless, as a visual form, photography still has a unique relationship with its subject. Parry's work both celebrates and exploits this, with the outcomes becoming a very liberal interpretation of Documentary Photography.
0161 247 1293
g.parry @ mmu.ac.uk
www.gavinparry.com
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Sylvia Waltering- Lecturer
Sylvia Waltering is currently working as an Associate Lecturer on the BA (Hons) Photography at MMU; her research interests are in: Investigating and establishing internal relationships between a place or landscape and existing traditions and culture. The suggestion of embodied cultural allegories and symbolisms, at the same time as questioning dichotomies and acknowledging historical references and details contained within everyday, mundane, literal places.
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