Edinburgh: An Architectural Portrait
Featuring the photography of Edinburgh-based visual artist James Reid, Edinburgh: An Architectural Portrait presents a beautiful photographic mapping of the city’s most architecturally significant areas. With exclusive imagery created over the past ten years it will appeal to anyone interested in the architecture and history of this inspiring city.
Edinburgh: An Architectural Portrait features an inspiring portfolio of imagery created over a ten-year period by the photographer and visual artist James Reid. Documenting the City of Edinburgh using digital, analogue and polaroid formats, the book captures the city’s main conservation areas, with an emphasis on key architects, listed buildings and distinct aspects of the cityscape.
Presented as a beautiful collection of black-and-white images, along with a handful of colour works, the book’s digital images are a mixture of full-frame capture and large-scale composite pieces, along with a selection of 35mm analogue single-frame photography. These include panoramic views as well as more intimate perspectives, made possible by Reid’s unique access to the city’s various buildings and structures of note.
The book also features essays by five established Edinburgh-based artists – Alastair Gordon (painter), Bruce Hare (artist and architect), Marianne Magnin (artist and curator), Merlin Ramos (painter) and Henry Stevens (artist and architect) – each of whom offers a personally informed response to the city and how its architecture, art and history inform, influence and impact on them.
The resulting publication is a unique visual mapping of the city’s most architecturally significant areas that will appeal to not only architects, artists and academics, but also residents of and visitors to one of the world’s most architecturally rich capitals of culture.