
Robert Mullan is one of those lucky people who earns their living doing exactly what they like best and has been doing just that as a photographer for the past 25 years.
His professional experience is drawn from a wide variety of work, spanning advertising and annual reports for major Irish and multi-national companies to numerous and varied assignments. These have included product shots, editorial, travel and architectural photography. As a photojournalist he has been published in virtually all the major European and American newspapers as well as a host of in-flight magazines, travel and financial publications. He spends three to four months each year travelling abroad supplying travel, lifestyle and business images to picture agencies.
Locally he brings his reportage experience to wedding photography – offering today’s bride an album that tells a story - shot in a relaxed and fun atmosphere. A perfect alternative to the obligatory collection of ‘stuffy’ pictures where everyone is posed to within an inch of their lives! Nonetheless, he’s also very good at getting the traditional poses to keep the mothers happy. Be sure to check out his wedding galleries on this site.
Robert loves photographing buildings and his ‘Buildings’ gallery on this site has many examples of his unique ‘eye’. Capturing the dramatic, often dreamlike quality of the built environment and offering unique interpretations of some of the world’s most recognizable cityscapes. These range from the iconic architectural style of New York to his pictures of Potsdamer Platz, a small copse of gleaming skyscrapers which rose from the wasteland of post-cold war Berlin, to mention just two.
Robert welcomes assignments in the following areas: Wedding, Environmental Portraiture, Corporate, Industrial, Product, P.R., Portraiture, Pack-shots, Annual Reports, Editorial and Architectural.
As well as using cutting-edge digital cameras he is equipped with the latest digital imaging suite, based on the state-of–the art G5 Apple Macintosh computers. Of course, he also shoots traditional film in the following formats: 35mm, 21/4" square and 4X5".
Robert was one of the first photographers to become involved in digital imaging, a new art; definitely limited only by the imagination!