• Droopy Time
    • At Sea
    • Local Haunts
    • Silver Tea Suite
    • Silver Tea
    • Rises and Falls
    • Dove Tail Joint
    • Persona
    • Närbilder
    • Andra arvet
    • Tamburmajoren
    • Cast Movements
    • Abulon (Avalon)
    • More works
  • Writing
    • CV
    • Attempts at Artist Statements
    • The Tally Ho
  • Temporary Secretary
Menu

Florence Wild

  • Exhibitions
    • Droopy Time
    • At Sea
    • Local Haunts
    • Silver Tea Suite
    • Silver Tea
    • Rises and Falls
    • Dove Tail Joint
  • Works
    • Persona
    • Närbilder
    • Andra arvet
    • Tamburmajoren
    • Cast Movements
    • Abulon (Avalon)
    • More works
  • Writing
  • About
    • CV
    • Attempts at Artist Statements
    • The Tally Ho
  • Temporary Secretary

The Tally Ho - 2015-
Ongoing Goings On

A continuous scroll of accumulated images from everyday life built on the methodologies of browsing, collecting and arranging - part archive, part research material. Updated in fits and bursts, as an alternative that is somehow simultaneously more permanent and more ephemeral than Instagram.

Trawl the endless column here:

https://thetally-ho.tumblr.com/

The Tally Ho - 2009 -2015

An archive of thoughts, words, and images that record my early twenties, moving to Sweden, and a scattered, eclectic assemblage of interests and associations that continue to be important to how I think and relate to making. Instead of letting this blog languish in the outer regions of the internet I thought I would revisit it and reabsorb it into the folds of my practice.

http://the-tallyho.blogspot.com/

2 x 3 arches, plus a cat & 3 succulents - triptych

March 23, 2014



The cat of the Château de Vincennes stands guard by it's cat door in the middle of three arches, light streams through three of the Vincennes' chapel stained glass windows, three hanging succulents in the flower market.

Triptych from the photo collection 'In Paris'.
Tags In Paris, paris, photography, repetition, series, travel
← Book displays of ParisStraight lines in Tuileries →