Amateur Photographer

Scooter shoooter

Photograph­er Miles Pilling says shooting from a mobility scooter gives him a unique perspectiv­e. He explains all to Amy Davies

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It was while working in television as a camera assistant that Miles Pilling rst began to suffer with what he assumed was just a bad back. With the symptoms not going away, it took two long years to nally get a diagnosis of Primary Lateral Sclerosis (PLS), a form of Motor Neurone Disease (MND).

Displaying a dark sense of humour, Miles often jokes that he has ‘won the Motor Neurone Disease lottery’. He explains, ‘People with PLS can live 10, 20 or more years after diagnosis, whereas the average life expectancy of somebody with the most common type of MND (amyotrophi­c sclerosis) is typically just a year.

‘Because I’ve got the slow developing type, I’ve got an opportunit­y to publicise the fact that there’s this hideous disease. I had to stop work, but I’m the sort of person who needs to do something creative.’

As a result, Miles, who was using a mobility scooter by this point, started to get out and take street photograph­s. ‘It gave me literally and metaphoric­ally quite a unique perspectiv­e in that I was low down. With a mobility scooter, it’s a bit like an invisibili­ty cloak – I could still weave in and out, but people tended not to see me because I was at a lower level.

‘I found that I can get these interestin­g pictures compared to the sort I used to get. The other thing is an attitude thing – people seem to be more accepting of somebody taking photograph­s if they’re sitting in a mobility scooter.’

After a while, Miles decided to start a blog of his work. ‘A friend of mine came up with the name, “Scooter Shooter”, as a joke, so I decided to call it that. I’m not sure whether to carry on with that or not, because I’d quite like my pictures to be recognised as being good, not just because they’ve been taken on a mobility scooter.’

Most of Miles’s photograph­s have been taken in Worcester where he lives. In 2015, he approached a local arts centre who were keen to put on an exhibition of the work. ‘I was slightly concerned that people would come in and recognise themselves, and they might be upset. Some people did recognise themselves, but all of the spotters were positive,’ he says.

One particular experience was very interestin­g. ‘I’d taken a photograph one day of a lady coming down the high street on a mobility scooter, with a family walking next to her. I was in this particular spot because the light was re ecting off a shop window making anybody walking past look like they’d been shot with ll ash. The picture was in the exhibition, and the local newspaper did a small piece using that picture. A couple of days after the exhibition started, I got an email from a lady saying that she’d seen her mum in the newspaper, but unfortunat­ely she’d died two days ago. I thought I’d upset her – but she was overjoyed to see a moment in her mum’s life she hadn’t known about. She was really, happy I’d taken that picture.

‘I gave them that picture and they had it in front of her cof n at the funeral – which was held in the church just over the road from the exhibition. In fact she’d died the same night that the exhibition opened. It just shows the magic of photograph­y.’

Lighter load

Although originally shooting with a Canon EOS 6D full-frame camera, Miles switched to using Olympus mirrorless cameras as they are much lighter. ‘I tend to use zoom lenses because it compensate­s for the fact that I can’t get into place as quickly as I used to. If I’m feeling okay, I might go out with two camera bodies instead, one with a 35mm equivalent lens, one with a 90mm equivalent.’

Miles has used his photograph­y to bene t two charities very close to him. The rst is Movement for Hope, a charity set up by some PhD neurology students from UCL, and the second is the Motor Neurone Disease Associatio­n. Through both of these charities, he has been exhibited several times. Last year marked the 40th anniversar­y of the MND Associatio­n, during which time Miles was asked to include an image in an exhibition at the OXO Tower on the Southbank. As part of that, an auction was held and one of Miles’s images sold for £2,000.

It doesn’t stop there. Amazingly, Miles estimates that he’s raised more than £10,000 for the MND Associatio­n, a fantastic achievemen­t which really shows the power of photograph­y to make a difference on an individual level and further beyond.

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