
British Telecom Tower
The Post Office Tower in London is a little unusual, built in the late 60's and for 15 years was the tallest building in London, it was used to house all sorts of transmission and radio satellites and relays, although I'm not sure how much of that is used today.
The top couple of floors are actually a rotating restaurant, which, so the story goes, afforded excellent and constantly changing views over London as it slowly rotated. The restaurant shut down in 1980 but is still used occasionally for special functions.
Shooting this joiner took quite a bit of scouting to get an angle where I could actually see a fair bit of the tower and not just the top of it poking out over the top of the buildings which have grown up around it.
In fact I almost got run over by a motorcycle courier who was very put out that I was stood in the middle of a road camera in hand..still, every great artist has suffered for their art in one way or another.
Music Track: Take That - The Flood
Number of photos used: 37
The Unseen collaborator
Every Joiner begins in silence, then finds its structure through its unseen collaborator—music. The tempo sets the pace of assembly; melodies suggest movement and balance. Music shapes the emotional architecture of each piece, guiding where energy builds and where calm returns. To truly experience a Joiner, it should be viewed while listening to the music that shaped it. Only then does the visual rhythm align with the heartbeat, the beat, it was born from.
Each Joiner is created but not yet printed.
This is intentional. Printing every piece in advance would compromise the freedom each collector deserves. By commissioning a Joiner at the moment of purchase, you decide its scale and presence—tailored precisely to your space and vision. Every print is then produced to museum-grade archival standards, ensuring permanence, precision, and exclusivity.
150dpi - 212 cm x 303 cm (83″ x 119″)
300 dpi - 106 cm x 151 cm (42″ x 60″)
Medium
Acrylic (gloss or matt)
Canvas
