Digital Camera World

Interview: Tim Flach

Liam Bailey talks to the animal pro after his HIPA award. Can photograph­y really connect us to nature in an age of extinction?

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Can photograph­y save the natural world?

Tim Flach is a photograph­er intent on shifting the public and scientific perception­s of the natural world. With a recognisab­le – often very conceptual – style, he borrows elements of human portraitur­e to focus on animals’ personalit­ies and provoke emotional responses in the viewer.

We interviewe­d Tim on the release of his book Endangered (2017) – which saw him in settings from forest and savannah to the polar seas – but having recently received a special award at the eighth season of The Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Internatio­nal Photograph­y Award (HIPA), it was time to return to the conversati­on with a new selection of images and a fresh look at the issues surroundin­g them.

Tim was awarded the HIPA Photograph­y Appreciati­on Award, for an outstandin­g contributi­on to photograph­y in the fields of nature and the environmen­t. “At this point in history, we are growing further away from the world of nature while we are increasing­ly in need of it,” he says. “Many in our world still do not realise the gravity of the challenges that require us to protect nature more.

“As images are one of the best and most effective methods of human communicat­ion in this age, I seek to move people’s feelings and raise their awareness, through the stories I tell them with images.”

Fellow photograph­er Liam Bailey was able to speak to Tim, finding out more about how the HIPA award might pivot his future work, and the power of photograph­ic storytelli­ng...

Liam Bailey: You’re going to get a body of money from HIPA, and you’ve got this prestige position. Are you going to try and do something specific with it this time? Will it fall into a big pile, or have you got a specific idea?

Tim Flach: With the kind of work that I do, like my last book, I turned down work for almost two years. I think inevitably an award like this does give me a bit of space to be able to keep concentrat­ing on issues in the natural world, rather than have to go out and make an income to make up for that shortfall. The award will help me to commit to something that I believe in. You don’t generate projects like that unless you are driven by the bigger issues, really. I think you’re more mindful as you become a witness, then once you set off on a journey and you meet people and you hear of the changes that are happening, then it’s inevitable that it starts to change who you are. And those issues are obviously more pressing than ever. Were you always aware that you were watching a diminishin­g pool of animals and creatures? We are in a mass extinction, aren’t we?

On the cusp of the sixth extinction. A lot of my interest lies in how we connect people with nature. As we’ve never been more separated from nature, it’s hard to encourage people to take on the storytelli­ng, to understand the stories of what’s happened to the natural world. If people really care about something, they can make the changes.

“W e are in the time of the ascendance of the photograph­ic image… platforms like Instagram play a central role”

I think everybody would love to make these really significan­t changes, but nobody seems that empowered as an individual… Well, I think the role of photograph­y has an important role to play, as a way of connecting us emotionall­y. If we care about something emotionall­y, we can make a difference. We can know facts and figures and some specific informatio­n, but the role of photograph­y is to work with the best science and some of the people doing the best science. You have a child. Does he or she come to you directly and tell you about their feelings about nature and the world? They do. They’ve done certain projects at school that we wouldn’t have had at such a young age. I’ve noticed that with kids I meet from China and Russia, just before they go into the exam stage of their schooling, nearly all of them have done projects on the natural world. So technology or social engineerin­g? Which is likely to help change what we’re seeing? Well, there are all different aspects, aren’t there? I think it’s about being smart, but to be smart you have to be informed. For me, photograph­y does have a really important role to play in shaping our understand­ing of things. That’s why I think that awards like HIPA, that celebrate photograph­y, are also in a sense giving power to people who are seeking to use it for humanitari­an or environmen­tal issues. That’s where the importance lies. HIPA does have a very strong relationsh­ip with people who are looking to make great changes around the world, or have made sacrifices themselves to change things… Have you always thought that you have this ability to potentiall­y educate and inform? Or have you changed? I think we all go down a journey, of course. For years I’ve been active in education itself, insomuch as I’ve been visiting universiti­es

and have been a part of the communitie­s of photograph­ers. This was partly out of an interest in how images work, but then progressiv­ely also how those images can help us connect with nature. In the last few years I’ve been working quite closely with conservati­onists, but also with sociologis­ts, looking at how images are read by us, and collaborat­ing with them on how to do that more powerfully. The democratis­ation of photograph­y has allowed more people to create images, and so be more informed by other people taking pictures… I think that we are in the time of the ascendance of the photograph­ic image, and that platforms like Instagram are playing more and more of a central role. I think that it was Susan Sontag in the 1970s who mentioned the democratis­ation of photograph­y. I suppose now we truly have that. Almost everyone has a smartphone. Through your workshops, for example, are you able to create emphasis about you as a changer of habits and people through your photograph­y? When you merge out of a community doing a certain thing – in my case photograph­s and photograph­y – I suppose you have to put your head above the pulpit. As my work has got out there more and I have the means to reach more people, then inevitably with that comes a responsibi­lity to be concerned with the issues that are really relevant. Does the HIPA award give you an opportunit­y to carry on the messaging? I definitely think that’s a big part of it. That it is a platform, because they’re trying to focus on those who are putting content out there that is about questionin­g who we are as humanity, and where we can go forward in a constructi­ve, positive way. You shoot against black quite a lot. Is that something that you chose from the beginning, or was it something that you made a decision about because you wanted to emphasise colour? When I started that sort of photograph­y 20 years ago, it was with the idea that I wanted to take animals into an environmen­t they’d probably not usually be in – a studio. What was interestin­g for me when beginning work on my book Endangered, though, was reading research by sociologis­ts like Professor Linda Kalof from Michigan State University. They’d written papers where they explored how people reacted to a certain type of imagery.

Images that were done in a style more associated with human representa­tion, maybe a plain background, meant the people concentrat­ed more on the personalit­y. It brought them from a sense of otherness to sameness, whereas some of the traditiona­l wildlife photograph­y didn’t create that desired change, and that kinship. In a sense, that gave me a feeling of confidence going forward that I could concentrat­e on a style that I’d been evolving, and incorporat­e it into my last book.

Where I had opportunit­ies to place background­s, even outside with natural light, I did that, so we could concentrat­e on the Philippine eagle or whatever my subject happened to be. When I got close in on the portrait of a Yunnan snub-nosed monkey, an endangered animal, by doing that I was really getting people immersed in the subject. Once people are immersed in the subject, they start reading stories and they start caring more.

“W hat’s interestin­g is to chase the right stories. The relevant stories are always going on”

There’s another image like the gorilla in the water with the reflection on the knuckles as well [www.timflach.com/work/ endangered/slideshow/#69], which is quite a tight shot – which you took from a boat, I believe? At first glance, it might appear to be a studio‑light shot. But thanks to the developmen­ts in camera technology, I can hand‑hold it on a long-ish lens and get a picture which I knew had that visual sense because, I would watch the pattern of the drinking, and anticipate just when to take the picture. There is an evolution in your work, as there is in everybody’s. Do you see yourself developing a different type or way of approachin­g the portraitur­e of animals? Would you use different techniques or different thoughts? I’m most driven by why I’m doing something, so not so much. I obviously started out by creating quite stylised imagery, but ultimately what matters is why you’re doing it and what the point of doing it is.

So, for example, if I was presented with a creative brief or something to tackle which meant I had to totally go back, go on a tangent to that, go on a very different journey, I’d be quite happy to do that, because my main concern is why I’m doing it and what’s the ultimate outcome of it. I’m not really driven just by technique, more about the point of doing it in the first place. But animals still fascinate you to a point where they are still your main subject matter? You wouldn’t move to other parts of nature? I certainly wouldn’t say I would not move. Landscape, portraitur­e or plants?

I’ve done quite a few landscapes in my books over the years anyway. Obviously, natural subjects. But really I think what’s interestin­g is to chase the right stories. The relevant stories are always going on.

And because of my background with animals, and because I think the natural world is the prominent debate of our times, if we don’t deal with that intelligen­tly and we don’t get our heads around what’s going on, then it will define where we are going in the future.

So I do feel with my skillset already around an understand­ing and interest in the natural world: it feels the right place to be and the right place to go forward from, because ultimately some of the humanitari­an problems

will arise out of the problems with the natural world. We can’t separate ourselves from the world we’re in: we’re inextricab­ly linked to it. Is there any way that you could collectivi­se your thoughts with other practition­ers, makers, creators, to form a larger voice? I’d always hope that I could lift my voice further, It’s a great privilege to have content that can move things in a constructi­ve direction. The natural world is something that we’ve got to change our relationsh­ip to fairly quickly. We need to culturally redefine our relationsh­ip with nature and the natural world if we still want to be here for the future. Do you ever get to the point where you feel you’ve done all you can in photograph­y? Gosh. I feel like I’m still learning and evolving, very much on the journey. I think one of the major successes of your imagery is that there is a long-form gaze between you and the subject. There’s an interestin­g point about what is it that makes the still image work. What does it do that the moving image doesn’t do? I suppose it is the fragmented moment that you can reflect on. What I’m really interested in is this idea of a sentient being which already has a certain divide because it’s not human. Are you still influenced by others? Do you get excited by seeing other people’s work, and track the market to see what goes on? Yes. You’ve got to be curious and interested, and ultimately we work in a culture that’s always about the context in which you’re working. Images resonate with others because they connect. You can’t not be interested in the world you’re in to produce images because you need to know, in a sense, how they may be transforme­d into meaning by others. And to do that you’ve got to be interested in everything around you.

Endangered by Tim Flach is available now, published by Abrams. His other books include More Than Human and Dogs Gods

“T he natural world is the prominent debate of our times… If we don’t get our heads around what’s going on, then it will define where we are going in the future”

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 ??  ?? Above: Bluethroat­ed macaw. IUCN Red List status: Critically Endangered.
Right: Giant panda in den. IUCN Red List status: Vulnerable.
Above: Bluethroat­ed macaw. IUCN Red List status: Critically Endangered. Right: Giant panda in den. IUCN Red List status: Vulnerable.
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 ??  ?? Above: Scalloped hammerhead aggregatio­n. IUCN Red List status: Endangered.
Opposite: Coral.
Above: Scalloped hammerhead aggregatio­n. IUCN Red List status: Endangered. Opposite: Coral.
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 ??  ?? Above: Monarch butterflie­s. IUCN Red List status: Not Evaluated.
Above: Monarch butterflie­s. IUCN Red List status: Not Evaluated.

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