Tuesday 30 November 2010

Gnosis Dance Class 2010


Some say infamous I say legendary.  The legendary Gnosis Dance class deserves the reputation that it gets.  It has attracted an ardent following of rhythm loving fans some of whom are aware that they have left and right feet but they are not claiming to be capable of putting them in the right order at the right time or to the right places.  It is a fun dance gathering for all levels of ability to enjoy moving to music.  After a Friday night partying in a huge castle involving elaborate costumes and a total disregard for the need of sleep the one thing guaranteed to rouse the weary revellers is a Gnosis Dance Class.  The first spark to light the dance class tinder is the bright eyed and bushy eared Flopsy.  His sparkly efforts are bright enough initiate the ballroom preparations and folklore states that, “If you clear the floor and crank up the sound system then they will come.”  So we built the dance class scenario in the ballroom and the dancers came.

The Saturday dance class was so successful that the attendees of the class stepped to it to put on a display in the Sunday night Gnosis Variety Show.  One spectator did say that the dance performance on Sunday was like watching dance bingo.  Flopsy called out the singles and doubles from the front and the dancers marked their dance cards behind him.  My score cards for the class and the performance were very high indeed with a great appreciation for the effort from all.  Next year, if there is a next year maybe we could have a live internet feed with a scoring system for the viewers at home.  No one should be voted off; maybe higher votes could lead to dancers stepping nearer to the front?  Please send all suggestion for the dance class to the Gnosis Committee marked for the attentions of, “The Tango loving Flopsy.”

YouTube videos edited by Flopsy
Gnosis 2010 Dance Class No.1
Gnosis 2010 Dance Class No.2

Gnosis info


©2010 PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies




Monday 29 November 2010

Andrew Macpherson Blue Room Studios Gnosis 2010


So there you are with your checklist making sure that you have everything needed for your event and in the case of Gnosis it may run a little like this, “13th Century Castle – check, room for 100 attendees – check, groceries to feed everyone – check, special dietary requirements catered for – check, entertainment prepared – check,” and then you have one very important final ingredient to ensure that the whole recipe is magically brought together, “Master of Ceremonies able to cope with all eventualities,” and this vital element to your event design can be given a, “check,” once you have secured the services of Andrew Macpherson. 

These pictures were taken in the Blue Room of Featherstone Castle on Saturday 20th November 2010.  They show Andrew in just one of his many guises that he donned to complete his duties in the castle.  It appeared that he slipped from one outfit and corresponding role into each successive appropriately attired creation as he seamlessly smoothed the events at the castle into a happening worth remembering.  There were many great moments at Gnosis this year and Andrew was one of many to provide entertainment.  He told stories on Friday and hit the decks as a DJ on Saturday.  He took the reins on Saturday to guide the unfolding evening events and on Sunday he compared the Gnosis Variety Show.  He is I am assured a man with a jacket for every occasion and a personality that can fit each jacket to ensure a performance set to meet the occasion.  Without a doubt he is an accomplished Master of Ceremonies.

These photographs were taken using two studio flash units.  One was reflected on a silver brolly and the other was reflected through a translucent white brolly.  The two light sources were set to gently overpower the ambient room lighting and to generate a crisp but warm light.  I hope that the rich tones come through and help to show Andrew Macpherson’s finery in a fitting a light?  These poses were set to the most amusing banter and I am pleased if the joy of taking these pictures comes through to you in the images presented here.


Photos on Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/photos/phhsykes/sets/72157625493370090/



Gnosis info

Andrew Macpherson further info


©2010 PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies
Andrew Macpherson Gnosis 2010 (119)

Andrew Macpherson Gnosis 2010 (112)

Friday 26 November 2010

Gnosis Caterpillar Dances 2010


Having arrived early on Saturday morning we were able to avail ourselves with relevant permissions of the Friday night caterpillar mask.  This mask seemed to our Saturday vision to inspire a dance.  This footage is taken from Flopsy’s camera and he has edited the files into the films presented on the Wyrd Web Wonders YouTube Chanel.

The ballroom was in a state of post enjoyment having been the venue for the Friday night formal opening of Gnosis.  There were signs of merry making still evident in the ballroom when we began to prepare for the dance class on Saturday morning.  The opening performance had been completed many hours before we arrived at Featherstone Castle, but we were keen to give our belated and unrelated additions to the opening of Gnosis 2010.

Gnosis info


Gnosis 2010 Caterpillar Dance No.1 Production Credits

Dancer  - PHH Sykes
Camera - Flopsy
Editor   - Flopsy


Gnosis 2010 Caterpillar Dance No.2  Production Credits

Dancer  - Flopsy
Camera - PHH Sykes
Editor   - Flopsy


PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies





Wednesday 17 November 2010

Gnosis celebrated on Film


Just last night a series of uploads were completed which resulted in 22 films being uploaded to YouTube featuring something of Featherstone Castle and of the event Gnosis.  The castle dates back to the 13th Century,  Gnosis is just a little younger by more than 800 years, or so.  Gnosis has taken well to the castle and the famous Bloody Bride has welcomed us to share the home she grew up in and now continues to occupy rent free in her after life.

These 22 flickerings of Gnosis and the castle form a picture book that can be read like the Major Arcana of the Tarot, or simply watched for pleasure.  Last night’s uploads were a group of very short peculiarities that were intended to illuminate the echoing virtual halls of YouTube with animated pictures related to Gnosis.  All of the 18 short performances were filmed in the Blue Room at last year’s Gnosis held in November 2009.  There are several strange occurrences in the films some evidentially natural such as when the wind howls outside and there are some others which make it harder to form a rational explanation for such when the recorded images show a disturbance or two. 

Having not being able to contact the event organizers I have to state that these productions come with the following modest warming.  These productions have been undertaken by those that appreciate Gnosis these are not officially sanctioned products.  All comments and postures are made, set and served cold to you by Wyrd Web Wonders and do not represent the event or the organizers opinions in any weird way or even in a shape shifting form.

Not usually one for excess I will have to hold up my hand and say that I am very happy to broadcast these 22 films and I hope that they only generate a positive reaction.

Gnosis info


©2010 PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies


Gnosis Beginning light show


Gnosis Come to Gnosis to find out which hat to wear


Gnosis Dancing like this is banned at Gnosis


Gnosis End & beginning light show


Gnosis If you want to see


Gnosis Ending 2009 beginning 2010 light show


Gnosis Handcuffs


Gnosis If you want better


Gnosis Just getting ready for 2010


Gnosis Just say NO


Gnosis Needs You


Gnosis Quiet night in


Gnosis Release


Gnosis Schedule


Gnosis the whole picture


Gnosis There's no no in Gnosis


Gnosis Thought about it


Dancing with the Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle


Frank in the woodshed


The Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle Part the First


The Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle Part the Second


Monday 15 November 2010

Lucky Buddha


This afternoon I have rushed outside to capture some autumnal sunlight.  Some months ago I froze my subject ready for a warm day to make beautiful pictures.  With recourse to two lenses I was able to get some of the shots that have been tickling my imagination for months now.  My model was frozen in a minor disaster when I forgot about beer that was being quickly chilled in the freezer.   I let a small catastrophe develop when the beer was damaged beyond enjoyment.  My thrifty nature could not bear to stand a lost beer so I decided to use the frozen bottle as a prop.  Luckily for me this beer was a Lucky Beer and the ornate bottle worked as an amazing subject for these pictures.

I first found this beer quite by accident, I was looking for traditional tipple in a standard bottle when my eyes were drawn to this sculpture containing alcohol, I was surprised that it was so good.  I had expected to find that the price I was paying had been all directed at producing the ornate bottle not the beer inside.  My only problem with this art work and beer combination is that I have not found it in a small independent retailer and so cannot claim how scarce and how difficult to obtain it is.  Having found it in ASDA I am able to hand out a stunning bottle and have to sheepishly reply to urgent questions about availability that this wonderful art piece is available from a well stocked supermarket.  I could easily get away with claiming that this design masterwork was sold in straw packed wooden cases from a specialist retailer that would only release a crate of 6 per customer per visit.  What I am saying is that this is a great product but don’t believe me try for yourself.

Lucky Beer can be found at

PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies


Lucky Buddha (102)

Lucky Buddha (103)

Lucky Buddha (108)

Sunday 14 November 2010

Aleister Crowley on The Royal Mile Edinburgh 2010


It was my great good fortune to meet up with John Burns at the Edinburgh Festival this year.  Before he took to the stage at the Carlton Hotel he was willing to pose for three sets of photographs and to share his experiences of dramatising the life of Aleister Crowley.  Over a Turkish coffee and baklava he gladly shared how the role was emotionally consuming and revealed that he had taken out some of the more extreme episodes for the Edinburgh audience.  I was able to take in the show twice and can say that the younger members of the audience were looking concerned at mum when a real person so close in the small theatre was saying certain words and performing quite intense acts.  The reaction of mother and child was I am sure a comment on our television tamed culture where we see too little live performance and do not know where and when to suspend rules and regulations when live action seemingly steps out of the television and becomes more real.  It was never going to be easy bringing the Great Beast to Life and the reaction that Crowley generates would always leave a recognizable fall out zone.  There is no great fear to be attached to Crowley and his extraordinary exploits but he did search for enlightenment from darkness and on stage John Burns stands out as a bright figure taking on the shadows that still shroud Crowley’s reputation.  This play is a revelation of the recorded acts of Crowley and it is John Burns’ own vision that we get on stage.  These pictures and the YouTube animated slideshow of them is my own addition to this venture.  I was glad to meet Mr. Burns and to stage three distinct photo shoots to record him in the guise of the Wickedest Man in the World.

John Burns has written and stars in A Passion for Evil.  This one man play explores the man, the myth and the beastly legend of Aleister Crowley.  Love him, leave him, loathe him or lionise him Crowley does have an enduring appeal.  His reappearance in Edinburgh in 2010 follows his dramatic persona being given to popular acclaim in 2003 by Periplum Tree.  John Burns offers an intense performance that reveals the ritual and the rigmarole of Crowley’s life.  If there is way to step inside the consciousness of Aleister Crowley then watching John Burns take on this role may allow the audience to become the Beast.  If you decide to take your seat in the auditorium and to take on the challenge of, “Being Aleister Crowley,” then be ready for an eventful inventive ride with the wickedest man stripped bare and ready for action.

HD films on YouTube

Pictures on Flickr

More info on the play


PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies


Aleister Crowley on The Royal Mile Edinburgh 2010 (102)

Aleister Crowley on The Royal Mile Edinburgh 2010 (110)

Aleister Crowley on The Royal Mile Edinburgh 2010 (108)



The Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle Part the First & Second


This is a preliminary attempt to capture and share this story.  There are two films in total they are labelled Part the First and Part the Second.  This tale was inspired by occurrences that have taken place at the Gnosis event at Featherstone Castle.  Gnosis has been occurring annually at the castle for five years.  The Bloody Bride has been making her appearances for more than 300 years according to some accounts.

If you have a chance to search out tales of the Bloody Bride you will see that they are usually quite brief accounts.  It was a pleasure to put flesh on the bones of this tale and to supply a few additional sections to help explain the supernatural elements of the story.  The research into the name Featherstone and into the Bloody Bride has only taken 5 years to produce this story.  We have an idea or two to increase the story and to make a better film recording of the tale.  For now this is the best version that we have to share.  In just one week Featherstone Castle will welcome Gnosis back again.  It is possible that Gnosis 2010 could be the last at Featherstone Castle.  If so at least we were able to get this story broadcast before the Gnosis goers had their last chance to see the multiple spectral apparitions of the Bloody Bride and her wedding day companions coming to Featherstone Castle to take their place at an otherworldly wedding feast.

HD films on YouTube
The Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle Part the First
The Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle Part the Second

Pictures on Fickr taken in Featherstone Castle

Gnosis info


©2010 PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies




Friday 12 November 2010

Frank in the woodshed


This is a true and accurate account of the way we won wood for the warmth of all at Gnosis in 2009.  Gnosis takes place at a Thirteenth Century Castle and it does take some heating but they manage to keep everyone hot whether they choose to wear a collar or not.  Having seen the film and pictures you now know why all of the gentleman appear hot and flustered after a bracing stroll to the woodshed.  They have all been overcome by the glories of Frank in the Woodshed.  Please note that such sights as this cannot be guaranteed but do take your seat on any sturdy stump and wait expectedly just in case there is a chance to see some heart stopping chopper action at Gnosis 2010.

Luckily for all of us Frank has given his approval for this film being loaded in the cause of Gnosis publicity.  This worthy gathering has been happening now through storm and sunshine, come what may in the midst of November there has been a Gnosis.  The continued success of Gnosis relies on the support of all those that brave the elements and enjoy the company of the temporary residents at Featherstone Castle in Northumberland. 

Pictures on Flickr

HD film on YouTube

Gnosis info


©2010 PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies


Frank in the woodshed Gnosis 2009 (103)

Frank in the woodshed Gnosis 2009 (105)

Thursday 11 November 2010

Dancing with the Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle


Just one year ago after filming several short pieces in front of a fire place with a stylized crenulated top rail it was time to pack away.  The wind had picked up and there was an eerie feel to the Blue Room as the windows rattled and the floor boards creaked in the early hours of the morning.  It was a perfect time to be in a lonely castle with a camera, lights and costumes.  For a finale it was decided to attempt some long exposures to see if we could capture a little of the spirit of the place.  This was a photographic endeavour that delivered results which inspire the mind to conjure with etheric possibilities.

This collection of intense images was created using available light photographic techniques to record the atmosphere in Featherstone Castle where the ghostly spectre of the Bloody Bride is said to return.  These long exposures allowed for our model to move and to create more than one image of themselves in a single exposure.  The lights that they carried form trails and the same lights were used to create the shapes such as the five pointed star.  In creating these long exposures the ambient light and the LED light sources mix in a combination that due to the movement of the model and the angle of the lights is never quite repeatable.  This one off technique for each picture was used in an attempt to form a link to the evocative atmosphere of the castle.

Featherstone Castle has sections dating back to the Thirteenth Century.  There are ornate stone works throughout the castle which have been added to over the centuries.  The many alterations have brought into being a fantastic collection of styles and of designs.  One after another section has been built and often the sections have been reformed leaving us with a quite intriguing result.  The passageways lead to peculiar junctions that turn at sharp angles and lead off in several implausible directions.  The widths of the halls change as you step over and through the evident seams from one era of construction into another.  The stairs to the towers all differ from each other and all seem to lead to hidden nooks and crannies that may still hold on to historic mysteries.

These pictures were designed to be atmospheric and to literally open up the camera to take in the surroundings over a long exposure.  They have been enhanced in Photoshop to make them brighter and sharper, but they have not been added to.  The effects that you see in the pictures were created spontaneously.  A short film presentation of the pictures is available on YouTube.  The film opens with the cosmic six rayed star followed by the earthly five pointed sigil and we close in reverse sequence with a five pointed star and then a six to finish.  The film notes ask you to look out for Baphomet the Templar idol, the Ram Goat of Mendes with Daigon appendages and the eye of Nuit the heart of Hadit and the hawk’s beak of Ra all in a single transfiguration of light.  This strange shape was not designed by the model when they danced in front of the open camera holding LED lights.  The image is available in the set posted on Flickr.

Sometimes in film and photography there is a magical element that completes your intended design better than you could have hoped for.  There is no claim here that the pictures are made by otherworldly forces.  Our eyes are trained to recognize shapes and to deliver certain stimulus in a way that our brains can process it.  We are all constantly looking for symbols and a structure on which to form our vision of the world.  It is always good to see how our vision can so easily be altered and how our interpretation of the world before us is dependent on the way we choose to view all phenomenon.  These images may make shapes for you that no one else sees.  Whatever we see from this side of the lens it was not what the model saw when they danced with the Bloody Bride of Featherstone Castle.

HD film on YouTube


©2010 PHH Sykes
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies



Dancing with the Bloody of Featherstone Castle (102)

Dancing with the Bloody of Featherstone Castle (115)