Rhubarb and Custard photo gallery

Eton's Boutique Photo Gallery

Exhibitions

Current exhibition
Our Annual Student Exhibition - 2013

Future exhibitions
Apply to have your work exhibited in June 2013
Apply to have your work exhibited in July 2013
Apply to have your work exhibited in August 2013
"A Clarion Call" Arwyn Bailey September 2013
KIram Oram October 2013
Apply to have your work exhibited in November 2013
Apply to have your work exhibited in December 2013

Past exhibitions
Halid Izzet
Halid Izzet - "Row Row Row Your Boat"
James Wilson - "Solitude" Australian Landscapes
Tom Bradley - "A Walk In London"
Halid Izzet - Lakota Spirit
David Wesley - "Africa's Wildest"
Eton College Annual Competition Winners
Roger Longdin - "The Magic of Light"
Jonny Back - "Lost In Space"
Jamie Johnson - "Portraits of Cambodia"
Peter Hogan - "British Seascapes"
Chiara Coccorese - "Its a plasticine world"
Muted Tones - Polaroid Transfers by Micki Aston
Henley Royal Regatta Limited Edition Series by Halid K Izzet
Jill Swainson - "Splendours of Nature"
Chermiah Hart 60's Architecture
Matt Johnston - "West Texas"
Gill Aspel - Simplexity -
Mark Seymour
Swan Song by Mike pascoe
Nigel Heaney, Nepal for UNICEF
Robert Munro "Tranquility"
As Far As I Could Go by Nikolai Yudin
Landmarking Gerhard Bissell
Travel by Sue Roche ARPS, CPAGB
Arizona In Black & White by Halid K Izzet
Guy Sargent "What Lies Beneath The Surface"
"Inspired Moments" by Gabriela Mohr - October 2010
Sue Baker "Feline Friends"
Lisa Mardell - "Spirit of the Horse"
R&C Student Photography Exhibition 2011
Mountain Gorillas of Rwanda by Gaye McKeogh
Celebration in Red & Blue by Camelia Burn
"Man of the forest" by Marilyn Taylor June 2011
"Chernobyl's zone of alienation" by Darren Nisbett
"Kenya: Dawn to Dusk" by Abigail Brabyn
"Istanbul - Our new capital of Europe?" by Nikolai Yudin September 2011
"Walkabout" by Halid Izzet October 2011
"Scandinavian Influences" by Mats Levander
Rhubarb & Custard Student Photography Exhibition 2012
A Portrait of Eton College - By Eton Portrait Photographer, Halid K Izzet
"Ephemeral" by Maggie Jablonska
Svalbard - The Land of the Polar Bear by Henry White-Smith

Mountain Gorillas of Rwanda by Gaye McKeogh

1st to 30th April 2011

Gaye’s interest in photography started at an early age, spending many happy hours watching her grandfather take photographs with his Kodak Box camera. Until recently Gaye used a Canon film SLR and regularly developed her black and white photographs. When she joined the Windsor Photographic Society 2009 she embraced the digital age with a new Canon DSLR, however she still occasionally uses her film camera.

A few years ago Gaye travelled to Central Africa and seized the opportunity to fulfil a lifelong dream to visit the mountain gorillas in Rwanda. Mountain gorillas live in the Virunga volcanic mountains which straddle the borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda. They are one of the world’s most endangered species, with approximately 700 remaining and nearly half this population live in the dense mountain jungle of Parc National des Volcans in the North Western corner of Rwanda.

Rwanda, also known as the land of a thousand hills, is a spectacularly beautiful country. The sight of the Parc National des Volcans in the early morning shrouded in mist is absolutely breathtaking. The trek to locate this group of gorillas took several hours through dense vegetation; there are no paths and the guides occasionally had to use their machetes to cut through the undergrowth.

To finally stand within a few meters of these magnificent creatures in their natural habitat creates an extraordinary feeling of joy and is indeed a privilege.

They are peaceful creatures; living in stable family groups which are led by dominant silverbacks. This collection of photographs was taken of Group 13, simply named after the original size of the group when it was first discovered, however it has now grown to 22 individuals.

An adult male can weigh up to 195kg, a female up to 100kg. The mountain gorillas are almost exclusively vegetarian and are quite destructive eaters, which makes them unpopular with the farmers lower down the mountain slopes, as they can ruin a whole field just to eat one plant. For this reason, and also because of poaching, the gorillas are very carefully protected.

Featuring 1 artist
Gaye McKeogh

If you are interested in this exhibition, please let us know and we'll contact you with more details.

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A Quiet Moment

Misty Dawn

Breakfast

A Quiet Moment

Have you found it yet

Bright Eyes

Listen Son

Can you go any faster

I know I've dropped them here somewhere

What do you mean this isn't Crufts

Come on Dad I want to play

Time for a rest