Photo Commission

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This is a bit of a minefield. Firstly - you can take any photograph of any building or person if you are on public land. That means a road, highway, bridle path, footpath, track. You do not need permission though you may want to ask out of courtesy. I am a photographer for English Heritage and that is the rule that we never break.

One of my photo heroes is the late Fay Godwin. She produced a wonderful book called "Our Forbidden Land" in which she wrote about and illustrated the problems of access to areas of the countryside. She had a real go at landowners, Ministry of Defence etc. When introduced to the then chief executive of the National Trust, without ceremony, she pinned him to the wall and berated him over their policy of making photographers pay to take pictures of Stonehenge!

Personally, I believe it to be morally wrong to go on to private land to snap a private house, but I also believe it to be morally wrong to be prevented from freely photographing our ancient sites. I do not consider that Avebury and Stonehenge or any land under the stewardship of Nat Trust or EH is private land. It belongs to the nation and that means us. However in law I have no redress so I use a long lens from the highway.. A test case might be interesting if Nat Trust ever sought to control or benefit financially from a photo of Stonehenge taken from the road through the obscene razor wire. ;0)

EH make you sign a waver or pay a fee when taking photos inside Stonehenge.
There was a long discussion on BrtArch a while back about how EH would go about trying to charge people who break the waver.
The Negotiating Avebury Project made me the official Chronicler for the Avebury digs over the last 6 years.
For commercial filming inside Avebury for film or TV broadcast you must have the pemission of the NT and the local council. Needless to say there is a fee.
May people have filmed inside Avebury without permission but the trust has never taken anyone to court about it. There are no signs saying No Photography so I doubt any case would stand a chance in court.
As you say, on private land always ask permission. Just good manners innit?

>I do not consider that Avebury and Stonehenge or any land under the stewardship of Nat Trust or EH is private land. It belongs to the nation and that means us.<

Abso-blinking-lutely mate! But hang on a mo... what about all the other stuff? The churches and the cathedrals built by the Nation's hands? Every single item in the British Museum (and other national museums)? Every single painting in every single national art gallery? In fact, <i>anything</i> owned by the Nation. It all belongs to 'us'... or does it?