Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White
Nicholas JR White

Nicholas JR White is a photographer based in the UK His work examines our relationship with landscape and the ways in which we interact with our natural spaces. He has been featured in numerous publications internationally as well as being included in notable photographic competitions such as the Magenta Foundation Flash Forward, Royal Photographic Society IPE, Landscape Photographer of the Year and the World Photography Organisation ZEISS Photo Awards. He currently divides his time between a studio with no windows and the landscapes of the British Isles

‘Black Dots’ is an exploration of mountain bothies and bothy culture throughout the United Kingdom. Far from civilisation and mostly accessible only by foot, bothies are secluded mountain shelters scattered across the British Isles and tirelessly maintained by volunteers from the Mountain Bothies Association. Unlocked and free to use, they provide a refuge from the vast terrain that surrounds them and have become an iconic feature of the British landscape over the past fifty years. Bothies are synonymous with the outdoor experience in the UK and from day trippers to mountaineers, the growing community of bothy-users is hugely diverse. ‘Black Dots’ is the result of almost three years spent traversing our most remote landscapes in an attempt to better understand what these buildings are, where they’re located and the culture that surrounds them. Drawn not only by the primitive beauty of the bothies and the landscapes they sit within, the work also investigates the human element to the bothy story, capturing the faces of those who trek for hours to temporarily inhabit these spaces, many miles from the nearest settlements. As the network of bothies passes it’s 50th year, my hope is that the work will generate a wider dialogue celebrating the relationship between man and the wilderness in the 21st century.