Loughborough Echo

Matthew focuses on work of his ancestor

Photograph­er will be in area recreating images from the 1860s

- STAFF REPORTER loughborou­ghecho@reachplc.com

A YOUNG photograph­er, whose third great-grandfathe­r captured some of the first landscape photograph­y in Charnwood from the 1860s onwards, will be recreating some of his ancestor’s images.

As well as capturing the landscape and the people of contempora­ry Charnwood, Matthew Broadhead will be out walking and taking pictures at up to two dozen sites throughout Charnwood until September 11, including Beacon Hill, Bradgate Park, and The Outwoods.

It is part a short residency he has with the recently launched Charnwood Forest Landscape Partnershi­p Scheme.

Matthew will be hoping to talk with and take some informal images of locals out and about enjoying the landscape so walkers are invited to say hello (at an appropriat­e social distance) if they meet him.

His third great-grandfathe­r, Frederick William Broadhead, was an artist and photograph­er based in Leicester during the mid to late 19th century.

FW visited the ancient Charnwood

Forest on many occasions, initially to capture the romantic landscape of Bradgate Park, and then views of Ulverscrof­t Priory ruin and the slate quarry in Swithland Wood, both of which are visible in the landscape today.

Matthew will be using a large format camera as part of a hybrid process that has been developed to use his forebear’s Dallmeyer 2B (Patent) portrait lens with modern sheet film.

His Sleeping Photograph­er project will recreate some of those 19th century images today, in the current landscape, as well as “awakening” how we see Charnwood Forest now, by portraying the landscape and people of contempora­ry Charnwood.

His role as artist in residence is funded by Arts Council England through Birmingham’s arts organisati­on Grain, as one of their Rural Commission­s. The residency is being facilitate­d by the Charnwood Forest Landscape Partnershi­p Scheme with support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund.

Matthew said: “This commission is a dream come true for me. It will give me a chance to explore technical elements of 19th century photograph­y that are relevant to my third greatgrand­father’s

Little Matlock, Bradgate Park, by Matthew Broadhead, 2018 and, right, by FW Broadhead, in 1869

own photograph­ic practice in Leicesters­hire.

“Working with Grain Projects and the National Forest Company has facilitate­d a visit to Charnwood Forest to record rural landscapes of particular personal importance, along with opportunit­ies to work with locals who are immersed in this place of historical, geological and biological significan­ce.

“It is a wonderful opportunit­y to bring all this together to offer a new perspectiv­e of Charnwood.”

Julie Attard, programme manager for the Landscape Partnershi­p Scheme, said: “Matthew’s project offers an exciting opportunit­y to both share the story and work of one of Leicesters­hire’s earliest photograph­ers but also to see and value the contempora­ry landscape of Charnwood Forest in new ways.”

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