winsor gallery

258 East 1st Avenue
Vancouver, BC
V5T 1A6
604 681 4870

Fiona AckermanShelley AdlerBill AndersonElizabeth BarnesPaul BéliveauBrian BoultonDana ClaxtonSteve DriscollChad DurnfordAnn GoldbergAngela GrossmannGabryel HarrisonBradley HarmsRichard HenriquezLawrence HislopThaddeus HolowniaBrian HowellPatrick HughesPatricia JohnstonMark LangOlivier LongpréAttila Richard LukacsVitaly MedvedovskyMark MizgalaPaul MorstadJohn NoesthedenGary PearsonCharles ReaDavid RobinsonTrig SingerAllan SwitzerEtienne ViardDavid WilsonPaul WongAlan WoodThomas WoodRimi YangEmily YoungEmily Carr University Award Winners 2008 - 2011Concordia University Award Winner 2011

Lawrence Hislop

Wood Pier

2006
archival lightjet print

Running Deer, Lapland, Norway Seawall Detail, Shishmaref, Alaska Coastal Sunset, Lapland, Norway Granite Outcrop, Republic of Seychelles Beach Boat, Shishmaref, Alaska Wood Pier Lonsdale Quay, Sunset Under Porteau Cove Pier [donated to Unite With Art fundraiser] Boat Mold Ferry Dock Profile, Squamish Posts at Sunset Watch Tower Weeds


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Lawrence Hislop is a young Canadian photographer, who has travelled the world extensively while working for the United Nations. He has a BA in Political Science from Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec, and an MA in International Policy from the Monterey Institute of International Studies based in California. He studied digital video production at the Art Institute of Vancouver; and apprenticed for three years in Carmel, CA with the acclaimed U.S. landscape / architecture photographer, Morley Baer (1916 -1995).

Working as a large format photographer, Hislop embraces the timeless disciplines of Ansel Adams and of his mentor, Baer. Working within the exacting standards of the zone system of black and white photography - where every shade of grey is meticulously articulated - Hislop pursues his own contemporary landscapes.

He is most captivated by innocuous, 'transition' areas - factory districts, river junctions and coastlines. Watch Towers, boat moulds, industrial pipelines, weathered piers, mining sites and several other 'ordinary' subjects are made distinct by Hislop. His commanding compositions and impeccable execution play a part in this achievement. But there is something more too. Hislop's 'emotional grasp of light' imparts an ineffable quality to these places. Perhaps it is this extrasensory quality that makes these common views extraordinary.

Hislop has developed three extensive bodies of work based in Vancouver, California and Norway; and is continuing his photographic explorations of 'transition zones' around the Greater Vancouver Area.