BEN SMITH

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034 - Chris Floyd

© Chris Floyd

Chris Floyd is a British photographer and film maker.  His work has appeared in some of the world’s most highly respected publications, including The New Yorker, Harpers Bazaar, GQ, Esquire and The New York Times Magazine.  He has shot advertising campaigns for British Airways, Apple, Sony and Philips and has been selected several times for the National Portrait Gallery’s Taylor Wessing Portrait Prize and  the annual publication, American Photography.

The beginning of Chris’s career coincided with the so-called Britpop movement during the early and mid nineties when he found himself with the opportunity to cut his teeth photographing the biggest British bands of the day, starting with a bunch of unknown Mancunians who called themselves Oasis.

In 2011 Chris published a project entitled One Hundred And Forty Characters. Over a period of a year he made contact with 140 people that he followed on Twitter and photographed each of them in his London studio. The idea for this came at a moment when he realised he had not spoken to any of his closest real life friends in over a month, yet he was communicating several times a week with people on Twitter that he had never met at all. The project received worldwide recognition and acclaim, with features about it on the BBC, Newsweek, The Guardian, Sunday Times, Elle, Esquire and many other publications and websites.

Chris lives in England with his wife, Alice, and their two daughters.

In episode 034, Chris discusses, among other things:

  • The fetish for film

  • What he was like as a kid

  • Being "photo guy"

  • Paul McCartney / Damon Albarn

  • Falling in love with the alchemy of the darkroom

  • Being too much in his head

  • 140 Characters

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