Thank you Luke Saxon and Stefan Byrom for featuring ‘ Someone’s Rubbish’ Brighton and Hove, 2015- 2019 on your brilliant page!
Trip Magazine
A feature from 2016, I love the work Trip shows and was so excited to feature the rubbish. I was just getting into the flow of making the images, walking and exploring. It was so good to see them up as a whole feature. Thank you Dean Davies.
Someone’s Rubbish
Photographer and creative consultant, Chloe Juno documents discarded litter on the streets, parks and alleyways of Brighton, exploring the life experience of strangers in the detritus they leave behind http://tripmag.co.uk/someones-rubbish/
Curated by Dean Davies
Fable & Folk interview
This was my first interview in 2018, talking about me and ‘Someone’s Rubbish’ and the work I do. It was really good to reflect and see all the images sit alongside my words. Thank you Charlotte.
IN CONVERSATION WITH CHLOE JUNO | DECEMBER 2018 Our next Fable & Folk interview is with Brighton based documentary photographer Chloe Juno. Her most iconic photographic work is “Someone’s Rubbish” – a long-term project documenting life in the UK through the objects people discard, specifically focusing on Brighton and Hove. As the images build, it paints a picture of a city, what people use to live, to work, for health, for food, for love, for money and then, throw away. Chloe is also known for her curation skills for both the “Documenting Britain” Instagram and the “Fishing Quarter Gallery” based in Brighton.
We wanted to interview Chloe as we think she is a fantastic example of one of the many strong female voices in the documentary photography industry and has many invaluable skills and indispensable experience to pass on to our audience.
Fable and Folk Curated by Charlotte Cooper
Acurator Feature: Wild Flowers, Cornwall, Britain.
I spend so much time working with documentary photography, my flowers and plants are a visual escape for me. soaking up all the colours of nature. Thank you Julie for giving the flowers a platform on www.acurator.com
Wild Flowers, Cornwall, Britain featured on acurator.com Over the past few years I have spent holiday time in a remote location in Cornwall. Staying in an old chalet with rough paths down to secluded wild beaches. On my walks up and down I started to photograph the flowers and plants with just my black scarf, a few hair clips and a swiss army knife. I spend so much time working with documentary photography and living in a city that completely zoning in to the flowers is total escapism, noticing every bit of detail. Taking photographs, surrounded by just nature. The sun, the wind, the sound of the crickets and birds and waves crashing down below.
aCurator magazine is edited and published by images industry veteran Julie Grahame, and is designed to show off great photography in a clean, elegant environment. The aCurator audience includes editors, curators, art directors, and photographers. Launched in 2009, the magazine continues to fill a need for diverse, curated, quality content.