WHISPERING SMITH: The long and the short and the tall
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This week I was invited to a preview of an exhibition at the East Beach Café of studies by local photographer Laura Mott.
Nowadays we all take photographs of varying quality with our iPhones and proudly post them on Facebook, it is a grounding experience to see that there is an admirably different level of work achieved by a professional eye and a quality high-spec camera.
And this exhibition proved that.
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Hide AdLaura’s photographs, unlike my snapshots, are delicately constructed and well observed, many of them showing Littlehampton in a sharply focused light.
If you have time drop along, have a coffee and enjoy, take the long view of our seaside town.
Folk may well be looking at them in 50 years’ time when the green is covered in flats, ‘ah’ I hear them saying, wistfully: ‘remember how it looked back in 2017...’
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THE SHORT: Passing through Mewsbrook Park last Thursday afternoon I discovered a headless, armless and legless – hence very short – black mannequin floating front side down. Now I wonder where that came from?
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Hide AdTHE TALL: Dropped in to catch A Midsummers Night’s Dream, knock about Shakespeare presented by the Rainbow Theatre at the lovely outdoor Highdown theatre.
As usual it was entertaining, rollicking and the weather held fair, picnic didn’t poison and the wine stayed chilled.
One complaint – there is always one – very difficult to see what is going on at the lower stage level.
All you can view, unless you are 8ft tall or climb a tree, is the action from about the waist up.
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Hide AdIt surely would be a simple enough issue to raise the stage a couple of feet so that we of limited stature can also see what is going on at ground level.
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