Sarah Franklin
Slack Water
The ocean is an ever changing, ever evolving body, and is in perpetual motion. Slack water occurs at the point of high tide or low tide, it is the still moment in time where tide has no push, nor pull, over the direction of movement of this great body of water. The slack water phenomenon only occurs for a few minutes at each turning of the tide, and is the closest to still that this vast and uncharted volume of water will ever appear to be.
Clare Bentham • Kate Edwards • Sarah Franklin • Sally Jubb • Nina Marvin • Louise Menmuir (Blamire) • Hayley Murden • Amy-Fern Nuttall • Claudine Quinn • Criss Roden • Sarah Philippa Wood •
Blackpool and the Fylde College
BA (Hons) Photography
University of Brighton
BA (Hons) Photography
Mid Cheshire College
Foundation Degree Contemporary Photography
University of Chester
BA (Hons) Photography
Cleveland College of Art and Design
BA (Hons) Photography
University of Cumbria
BA (Hons) Photography
De Montfort University
BA (Hons) Photography and Video
University of Derby
BA (Hons) Photography
Edinburgh College of Art
BA (Hons) Photography
University College Falmouth
BA (Hons) Photography
University for the Creative Arts Farnham
BA (Hons) Photography
Glasgow School of Art
BA (Hons) Fine Art Photography
Griffith College Dublin
BA Photographic Media
Griffith College Dublin
BA Photographic Media (Part Time)
Hereford College of Arts
BA (Hons) Photography
Hereford College of Arts
FDA Photography
The National College of Art & Design
Certificate in Photography and Digital Imaging
University of Wales, Newport
BA (Hons) Photographic Art
University of Plymouth
BA (Hons) Photography
Portsmouth University
BA (Hons) Photography
Staffordshire University
FDA Creative & Cultural Industries, Digital Media
Swansea Metropolitan University
BA (Hons) Photography in the Arts