Wednesday 21 December 2011

Portrait

For my portrait project I researched various artists, including Martin Schoeller, Richard Avedon, Anton Corbijin, Steve Pyke and Terry O'neill. I got books out from the library on all of them and had a look at their work and made my opinion of them before I researched them on the internet to find out what other people had said or thought about them.

1.- Martin Schoeller
2.- Richard Avedon
3.- Anton Corbijin
4.- Steve Pyke
5.- Terry O'neill


From all these photographers I got several inspirations but my favourite ones, and the ones I got most of my inspiration rom where Martin Schoeller and Richard Avedon. I loved the idea of having a perfect white background. I wanted to use the barman at the SU bar as my model but on a night out I got introduced to a friend of a friend's, a third year CG Arts students by the name of Godwin. I found him very interesting and straight away had my idea of how to shoot him. Because at first glance he looks like a tough person as he has quite a large build, not fat, just large. He looks kinda like a hardman but in reality he is not he is casual person who enjoys having a laugh with his friends and is fun to be around. I wanted him to be portrayed with a softer look

Tuesday 29 November 2011

Deconstructing Environmental Photographers -

For this task i have been asked to study 3 photographers. Russ Blees-Luxemburg, Richard Wentworth and Vera Lutter. They are all photographers who photograph the urban environment in the city.

- Rut Blees Luxemburg is a german artist who explores cities at night through photography. Her series of the Piccadilly is displayed in the Airport Heathrow terminal 4. The influence of romanticism painters like Caspar David Friedrich and other impressionism painters is remarkable. She photographs the urban space at night using available light and long exposures. In her images there is and absence of humans and the usage of high contrast adds texture. The subjects she chooses to shoot are random occurrences or findings during her night time walks. She wants to expose the overlooked or that which seems non important. Her images are often taken in an undefined space that can be seen everywhere and experienced by anyone.

- Richard Wentworth plays and explores the stories that can be told through random object findings and positions that they are found in. Wentworth uses objects and materials which appears domestic, industrial or discarded. He explores the accidental in the urban space. All of his images are in colour. He is another artist that doesn’t use human characters or shapes in his images but references the human actions through the obj

- Vera Lutter is an artist inspired by the city's presence, light and architecture. Vera Lutter is a photographer who has a tendency to present her imagery inverted, black and white. This particular technique transforms her photographs into something unique and unfamiliar. Because of the very small aperture to keep the entire image in focus the artist uses a very long exposure. Because of the unfamiliarity of this type of image, we find ourselves looking at the vertical and horizontal lines that make up the image rather than the objects themselves. There is also a hint of ghosting above the buildings, maybe merging of two negatives of slight movement of the camera. "Instability, uncertainty, suspense and monumentality are entities that I consider and think about; they generate work." Vera Lutter.ects and their positions. The camera position doesn’t identify the exact location of where the photograph was taken. The meaning the images try to portray are about the life in an urban environment.


- The three artists are exploring the urban space to reveal a human condition without the use of human presence but with different photographic approaches. Rut Blees Luxemburg analyzes the texture and the composition in the non-space, giving us a new and sometimes uncomfortable view of a public space, thanks to her night view of these non-spaces. Richard Wentworth focuses his work on the everyday objects and materials found around the cities to investigate about our society, and transform these objects into something emotionally meaningful representing the human presence in the urban space. Vera Lutter plays with the sense of perception that we have about reality, showing us the skeleton of an unfamiliar cityscape.

Tuesday 22 November 2011

The City - Deconstructing Environmental Photographers

We were given the task of deconstructing a series of images of a building, The Flatiron building in New York, from different authors and explain the differences and similarities of the different images. The images were the following:

a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)

a): Edward Steichen, The Flatiron, NY, 1905. Edward J. Steichen was an American photographer, painter, museum and art curator. In his picture we see the building called the Flatiron or better known as the Fuller Building, in the background of the shot. The image was taken at street level and so the building is not the most important thing in the image like the pictures d, e, and f but just another element of the image. The building is in the centre of the shot. The artist uses the trees as a way to detract importance and to blend it in. In this Platinum print, he experimented with different chemicals that would best show this building in a twilight surrounding. The concept that Steichen was trying to deliver could have been one that spells the importance of preserving landscapes without large buildings obscuring everybody's view, but all in all, this picturesque scene is most likely depicted negatively through the use of this building.

b): Alfred Stieglitz, The Flatiron, 1903. Alfred Stieglitz was also an American Photographer who constructed his own view of the same place. Similar to photographs a) and c) this image is taken from a street view position and take from a certain distance, looking straight forwards and not upwards, the Fuller is not the main subject of the image, the tree on the foreground has the strongest presence.. Images d), e) and f) are really different because the Fuller is represented in all his vastness and it is the only, or main, subject in the frame. It builds its own narrative that shows the building as the opposite to that of the nature in the foreground. The Flatiron makes itself known through its greyscale structure, amongst the snowy white edges of the trees that stand between it and the tree in the foreground. The trees in the foreground give the building a sense of scale amongst everything else to emphasis just how big it may be. There is a much larger tonal range in this photograph too which adds to its aesthetic contrast.

c): Alvin Langdon Coburn, The Flatiron Building, 1911. Alvin Langdon Coburn shows “The Flatiron Building” which was taking in 1911 almost a decade after Stieglitz's one, and it has a much busier feel to it. This photograph as well is really similar to images a) and b) because of the composition (presence of trees, street view), and the lightning (at evening), but it also defers from the first two because the Flatiron building takes a more imposing and important role in the picture as a structure that sticks out of the skyline made of the trees and buildings at each side. The structure of the first 3 images always seems to give off the same characteristics within each photograph, even if it's not intentional. That real sense of an overwhelming structure amongst all else is a common one. Creating mood and a sense of light through softly focused images were primary concerns. Photographers at that time manipulated the images through printing techniques.

d): Walter Gropius, The Flatiron Building, NY, 1928. Walter Gropius has a different take on it. “The Flatiron Building, New York” as it is so aptly named, shows off the Flatiron building itself in a much more rewarding light. The composition and the framing of this photograph are the key point to make such a highly photographed subject look original and modern.
This image is not shot from a frontal street view, but a view of the right side of the building looking upwards, making it different from the first 3 images we have seen but also accentuating the greatness and the curves of this building. The Fuller is the main and only subject in this photograph, and this original diagonal crop reveals its hugeness. This particular framing makes the Flatiron looks like something surreal and modern. Although there is fairly even light coming from an empty sky, the overall lighting is high-key. The free space in the photograph makes the building the main focus, without any trees or lights in the way to distract from it and giving it a sense of grandeur.

e): Walker Evans, Flatiron Building seen from below, NYC, 1928.
Evans produced highly detailed and straightforward depictions of American life. The artist relied on photography's ability to precisely capture the stark and literate description of the facts in sharp focus. He aimed to transform the ordinary into something extraordinary, thanks to his accurate observation, cultivating a documentary style and a deep sensibility of the American life. The Fuller building is represented with a completely different perspective and scale. The Flatiron building is shot up close, catching more detail, framed by the buildings and the lamppost making the building the centre of attention but also blending it in with the rest of the city and not as a huge and iconic building, like the previous images. Evans shows us a high comprehension about the tones and density of the B&W. In his photograph we can see different tones of black, gray and white.

f): Bernice Abbott, The Flatiron Building, 1938.
Abbott was a documentary photographer and believed that photography was the best media to represent the "real" and "now". Abbott's photograph of the Flatiron is really straightforward and documentary (as images d and e). It's a truly representation of the American architecture. There is much definition and contrast within this photograph. Through all of the photos shown though, there is a clear line between those in favour of overbearing structures, and those who do not appreciate them. I think that much can be said in favour of having them rather than not.



Photographs a, b and c are similar, they represent an icon through an artistic way. All three images are taken from the street, with the camera looking pretty straight. All three use the surroundings to disguise the building, to keep it as a background of the city, trying to introduce a back-story and make it more artistical, as they wanted photography to be accepted as an art.

Photographs d, e and f are three similar images, all taken in a documentary and straight forward style, with an accuracy for the tones and composition, with the camera looking up, to emphasize the vastness of the icon of modernization but also portraying the details of the building as they are closer to it.

Friday 4 November 2011

Environment Project

For the first part of our Environment project we are required to produce a pastiche that represents one of three images given to us and then a set of images (minimum of 3) based on a personal conceptual approach to representing the landscape.

Pastiche
The three images that we had to choose from were;
Robert Adams- "On Signal Hill"
Roger Fenton- "The Terrace and Park at Harewood House"
Jem Southam- "Seaford Head"

I chose Robert Adams image as I thought it would be easier to find, as I am new in this country and have never used the train systems here I thought I would get lost and I also don't have a car or any other mode of transport. I went out on a few location hunting trips with Aaron and Kym and found this location just over Rochester bridge. Took a few test shots with my digital camera and liked the way they came out, so last week went back with a Wista 5x4 camera and took a shot.

1. Test Shot


2. Negative Scan


- Personal Project
For my personal project I knew early on what I wanted to do, as I have always been interested in night time photography and how landscapes appear completely different at night then throughout the day. I especially like reflections on water and how things can become beautiful when they are ugly normally. For this I thought of shooting the river around Rochester. I took a shot with my digital camera to see how it would turn out and was pleased with the results. I then used a 5x4 camera to shoot several images. I used the 5x4 because it is what I prefer as I find it easier to use. I took several shots but was only happy with 3 of them, my final 3.
With this project I aim to depict on how things or landscapes cannot be judged at face value and that everything changes, nothing is eternal.

-1. Test shots




-2. Final Negatives


Wednesday 12 October 2011

Deconstructing Environmental Photographers

Today we had our 3rd seminar with Steffi on Landscape Photography. Today's subject was contemporary photography and at the end of it we were told to choose one of the photographers and elaborate on 3 of their images.

The photographer I have chosen is Mitch Epstein. A North-American photographer that has travelled around the world doing all kinds of photography and several different series that have been published and shown in various galleries. The series I am going to focus on is called "American Power". It is a series of photos from around USA which he started after he visited Cheshire in Ohio and saw the neighbourhoods being torn down to construct a nuclear power plant. The power company payed the residents to leave but there was an old lady who refused, named Beulah "Boots" Hern, who Epstein photographed. She lived with two security cameras on the window and a gun in her hand intending on protecting her property.

Epstein wanted to explore the cultural relationship with the subject of energy in the USA. In Epstein's own words of this series: "I am trying to find and convey truth about how we Americans live, what we want, and what it costs to get it" (Mitch Epstein - WORK pg 221). The series is neither a critique or an acceptance of these power plants or the affect they have, it is just an exploration of how people live with them. He has since won the Picket Prize 2011 for this body of work.

The 3 images I have chosen from this body of work are:
1.- Oildale, California 2006


2.- Amos Coal Power Plant, Poca, West Virginia 2004


3.- Gavin Coal Power Plant, Cheshire, Ohio 2003


All 3 images are different. In a sense that the first one is a landscape of a direct view of an oil field, where the landscape and the various industrial and oil machines and transportation tubes are mixed together.
The second one is also a landscape but more of an indirect way where he mixes the high contrast colours of the football team with the industrial and non-environmental friendly backdrop of the nuclear plant's cooling towers, mixing two very different photographic genres: photo-conceptualism and documentary photographers. The main focus of this image is the football team but the nuclear plant in the background gives it a feeling of the overwhelming presence of the industry.
The third one is a totally different picture then the two before that, when first looking at it I saw two clouds but then you notice where they are coming from, two smoke towers and realise that it is in fact contaminating the environment. It strikes me afterwards that something that is initially beautiful might be a man-made monstrosity. I believe that Epstein is trying to portray this feeling of not knowing if it is a good thing or a bad thing what these power plants produce. But also the clouds and the lighting behind it make it highly artistic.

Wednesday 5 October 2011

Object Brief

The first brief I received for this first semester is the Object. In the brief it states that we have to shoot a constructed image of a still life were the theme is something thought by ourselves but that relates to a bigger and current social issue. I had several initial ideas:

- Growing Up, this idea came from my initial experiences at university were I felt it as more than a place of learning but more of another chapter in my life where I progress into adulthood and become independent. As this is my first experience away from home and I believe that most people in their first year are experiencing the same. But then Jonathan mentioned that it had to be a wider social issue so I went off the idea.

- My next idea was drink driving, I had no personal reason to take this one up but I believed that this was a big issue as most car fatal car accidents are caused by the effects of alcohol. I had an image of a toy car crashing into a wine glass with red wine spilling out of it, the red wine being a representation of blood, but I figured that it was kinda a standard image by many people and wasn't particularly passionate about this project as it didn't relate to me.

- My next idea, and the one I have decided to go with, was about the differences between the Spanish culture where I am from and the English culture that I am now living it and how it made me feel. I also feel that the world is becoming much more multicultural in a sense that more people are coexisting together, especially in England and Mallorca. England has received immigrants from around the world since the Great British Empire and Camden is a great example of this. Mallorca is also a place where people from around Europe and Africa have moved looking for a better lifestyle. I am thinking of making this work a bit more personal and focusing on what I felt moving to England and what is the most important thing I miss. I still don't know how to go about this but I am constantly thinking of it.

EDIT.

I have now shot and printed my object shoot. I scoured all over Rochester and Chatham to find the objects I had in mind for my shoot over a week long period but to no avail as it seemed nobody had what I was looking for. The day before the shoot I panicked and decided to go back to my previous idea of drink driving. I bought a wine glass, a toy car and a piece of A2 paper up to uni but once there got told that my idea of smashing the wine glass a bit and spilling the red wine over the car and the paper too make it look like blood could not be done for Health and Safety reasons, so even on the day of the shoot had to rethink my idea. I found a plastic wine glass and was allowed to smash that. So in the end I filled the wine glass with wine, smashed the plastic wine glass and the front of the toy car, ripping one of the wheels of, simulating a car crash. I also borrowed some fake blood of Ashleigh, a girl from my study group, and spilt it over the car and the smashed wine glass with a bit going on the wine glass. Here is the neg and the final shot with a test shot and a close up of the car.

- Test shots



- Negative and Positive of the Negative