Tuesday, 2 February 2016

Graham Clarke: The Photograph

Graham Clarke's book 'The Photograph' came included with the course materials. I found it a difficult read, due to the dense manner of describing things, but I managed to glean some information to a greater or lesser extent from each chapter which I have briefly documented below. Most of the text is quoted or paraphrased from the book, comments in brackets are usually my own. This was an interesting but as mentioned difficult read, mostly I expect due to my limited knowledge and experience of 'art' in general, and sometimes the language is difficult to decode. Further exposure to these kinds of materials, will make a future re-read of the book easier, I expect.

Chapter 1 - What is a Photograph?

This chapter gives a history of early photographic procedures. William Henry Fox Talbot produced the first negative/positive process to be able to produce multiple copies.

The camera lucida was used an as aid to drawing.

Functionally, the photograph is dependent on its context; differences between colour and black and white, circular and square images, small and large. Also, in a newspaper or magazine, in a frame, on a document, in a gallery etc.

Initially there were technical limitations; the long exposure time limited choice of subject.

Art photography describes the medium's capacity to express something beyond the surface appearance of things.

When we enlarge photographs contrary to the mass produced size we underscore their differences and value. (This pertains to selecting particular images to be blown up and displayed).


Chapter 2 - How do we Read a Photograph?


We read a photograph, not as an image, but as text (I interprate this as the image telling a story/narrative).

Studium - A passive response to a photograph's appeal (on a surface level).

Punctum - A detail within the photograph that disturbs the surface unity and stability and opens up the space to critical analysis.

I found the concept of Studium/Punctum intriguing, and is helpful to begin to understand how to 'read' an art photograph.


Chapter 3 - Photography and the Nineteenth Century.


Combination photographs - A series of negative combined to contruct the image gives a false appearance. (Manipulating images began from the inception of the photograph, and is dealt with further in chapter 10).

In a period of limited travel and communication, photography offered wonderous images of otherwise only imagined cultures. (I surmise that this idea of showing people places they wouldn't ordinarily see is related to a similar idea mentioned in chapter 5).


Chapter 4 - Landscape in Photography.


Landscape photography remains encoded within the language of academic painting and traditions of 18th and 19th century landscape art.

Roger Fenton was a photographer who showed the idealized and touristic; there is no sign of work, poverty or hardship, and the people are posed; this offers a highly edited version of rural england. This contrasts with documentary photography of rural life. There is nothing in the frame to disturb the pleasure of the eye.


Chapter 5 - The City in Photography.


The camera negotiates between two poles, the vertical and the horizontal, which suggests part of a larger dialect on how the city has been seen: the public and private, the detail and general, the exterior and interior, the historial and modern, the permanent and the temporary. (Photography in the city provides infinite scope).

Photographers responded early on to the variety of the streets and their ambience.

Images for an assumed middle-class audience allowed them to see what they would otherwise not see. (Related to 19th century travel photography).


Chapter 6 - The Portrait in Photography


In the 19th Century photography increased demand for portraiture. Daguerreotype was the most popular form; it produced a unique image as it had no positive/negative process. (This gives added value to the image, as it a one-off, like an original painting).

Victorian photographer Julia Margaret Cameron, like others, had different depictions of men and women. Her image of a man, showing the head only, implying intelligence and individualism, and looking into the camera. This reinforces the myth of male dominance. Her image of the woman shows the subject being looked at sideways-on. This implies she is being looked at, rather than looking herself; this underlines the passive nature of the image. (In contrast to the image of the man). There is also an exaggerated depiction of the woman's neck and hair; the sense of the woman as an individual is deferred to a larger, passive female ideal based on assumed sexual difference and social significance. It is not a portrait advertising a self as much as a general idea to be consumed (by men). (I found this different way of posing males and females by photographers of the time to be very intriguing, and shows how the camera can record social phenomenon).

The image of the heir to the throne and the prime minister. This is a whole body shot giving weight to their status. Each is given equal space within the frame, suggestive of a sharing of power and influence. The camera however has established differences between the two: contrasting faces; bullish vs hesitant, different tie, collar, waistcoat. Left hand clenched, relaxed. (To me, this image was reminiscent of Diane Arbus' image of the twins, where closer inspection reveals differences between the two figures).


Chapter 7 - The Body in Photography


Since its inception the photograph has delighted in the depiction of nude bodies within a private space - implying a sense of the hidden, illicit and secret. It makes the private space of the body open to the public eye; this eye being traditionally male.

In comparison to nude painting, photography gives the promise of the actual.

Soft-focus and passive poses - female stereotypes are depicted in relation to male fantasy and expectation. The subjects rarely look at the camera, designating them as 'objects' to be looked at.

In Alfred Stieglitz's image of Georgia O Keeffe, there is the absence of her face, hands and feet (all of which are arbiters of her individual self). This allows her to remain absent from the image.

The image of the body-part mobile - This allows the viewer to create an individual hierachy of significance. (I found this concept intriguing, and it highlighted how each individual viewer would 'read' the image differently, depending on their own preferences).


Chapter 8 - Documentary Photography


In many ways this genre dominated the photographic history of the 20th century.

It is a truthful and objective account (or representation) of what has happened.

Photography is able to record an objective image in a way painting and drawing can't.

Makes available images of an otherwise unknown world. (Again, see chapters 3 and 5)

There is a debate whether certain images are real or fake. (Which perhaps undermines the genre).


Chapter 9 - The Photograph as Fine Art


Photography is distinguished from painting as a unique medium in its own right with its own unique possibilities.

Changing the ordinary to the extraordinary is basic to the aesthetics of art photography. (And which I get the feeling this whole book is about).

Textures of walls, stones, doors and fences - Paul Strand makes what would otherwise be part of the detrius of the urban scene yield something signficant and unique - takes the most marginal of subject-matter and turn it into a hierophany of potential meaning.

Debate between black and white, and colour. The Photographic world still retains an elitist view of B&W; still the dominant medium, as in documentary. B&W lays stress on the photograph as a medium in its own right, rather than to reproduce the world 'as is'. Colour insists on a 'thereness' of the world.

Art photography is not intended for the casual glance.

The banal is boosted to a new frame of meaning.

The irony of the art photograph: everything can be a photograph, and, in Egglestons terms, can be art. (This photographer's job as far as I can tell is to develop a 'way of looking' that allows you to see the art in everything.


Chapter 10 - The Photograph Manipulated


Beginning in the 1900's we see a series of photographers who begin to both question photographic practice and relate their concerns to the modernist aesthetic beginning to make itself felt in painting and literature. The need for a new visual vocabulary that many photographers sought to take account of in relation to developments in other media at the time. (At this time there was a big shakeup in Western art music; it seems that practitioners of all media were looking to leave behind the old way of doing things and do something new).

How was the camera to equate itself with new ways of seeing, such as the terms of reference found in cubism; a series of multiple views and perspectives.One response was the Vortograph - projecting the lens into a series of mirrors, resulting in something akin to cubist portraiture. 'Vortograph, the first completely abstract kind of photograph, it is composed of kaleidoscopic repetitions of forms achieved by photographing objects through a triangular arrangement of three mirrors.' (A very interesting concept that I will learn more about and try myself!).

Photographic collage and montage in the 19th century - Photographs were manipulated since their inception.

'Defamiliarization or ostranenie (остранение) is the artistic technique of presenting to audiences common things in an unfamiliar or strange way in order to enhance perception of the familiar.'

Soon Man Ray was making photographs of objects not unlike Marcel Duchamp's "readymades," ordinary objects elevated to the status of art because so designated by the artist, and "assisted readymades," objects that the artist "assisted," or altered, by combining them with others. 

 Manipulate the image and the photographic space: constructing, deconstructing, cutting-up and fragmenting the primary terms of the photographic space in order to suggest other levels of meaning and significance. (I think this is a good explanation of why people would want to manipulate photographs; especially those of a banal nature).

Merely placing two objects or images together (as with any two words) creates the potential for meaning and a new relationship between reader and image. Everything in an individual state can be recognised, and yet in the pattern in which they are presented they demand a new form of recognition and a new kind of attention. (This is especially pertinent to Assignment Five. Two images can mean one thing when viewed individually, but open up a whole new narrative when viewed side-by-side).

Chapter 11 - The Cabinet of Infinite Curiosities

This appears to sum up the book in its entirety. I really like the phrase 'The Cabinet of Infinite Curiosities', as I think that is what the photographer opens up when they turn on their camera. It is up to each individual photographer which curiosities to display in any given situation.



 

Friday, 29 January 2016

Rain

I was actually out in the early hours shooting images for my initial idea for assignment five, when I saw an opportunity to make an image depicting rain. It is in keeping with one of the ideas that I brainstormed, that of lights shining onto a pavement made glossy and reflective by the rain. I have used the darkness and rain featured in the image as a metaphor for a 'rainy day' in a financial sense. In the exercises brief one of the points it makes is 'don't settle for an ordinary middle-distance shot of a street in the rain'. At first glance it appears I have done exactly that, however the rain itself is not depicted, and I have used the available light to reflect off the wet pavement which then conjures the image of rain in the viewer's mind. What I did do was make a deliberate attempt to avoid the much-used 'rain drops on glass' theme that is prevailant when depicting rain.

55mm, f/11, 2s, ISO 100


Thursday, 28 January 2016

Rain: Brainstorm

The brief calls for a single, strong, attractive photograph that leaves no doubt that the subject is Rain. The image is to be used for the cover of a fictional magazine. My first thought is that I need to be careful that I don't include objects in the frame that could confuse the viewer into thinking that they are in fact the subject, not the rain.

Brainstorming the Effects of Rain

Splashing.
Droplets on glass, cars etc.
Puddles.
Reflections.
Wet weather clothing.
Umbrellas.
Streets turned to rivers.
Water flowing into street drain.
Soaking wet hair.
Black clouds.
Dripping.
Colourful city reflection on wet pavement/road.
Person with umbrella reflected in wet surface of car.
A soaking wet umbrella leaning up a wall.
Dog shaking water off his coat.

I've also had a browse on images tagged with 'rain' on Flickr. The most common technique by far for depicting rain is shooting water droplets on windows. This certainly serves the purpose, but is certainly cliche and not imaginative enough for this exercise. Some ideas that caught my eye though were:

Street scenes in torrential rain (lots of people with umbrellas).
A closeup of a dripping wet piece of street furniture (close enough that it is clear the rain is the subject).
A glistening street scene with the city lights reflected on the wet path.
Closeup of rain droplets hitting puddles.

Evidently then, there are lots of options when it comes to depicting rain in an image. My initial reaction is to pick a scene that I can create at will, in other words one which doesn't need a rainy day. I like the idea of a park bench or similar, which I can drench with a bottle of water, then take a closeup of the droplets that form. This is something I can do without waiting for a rainy day. The other idea I like, which I can also manufacture, is a closeup images of water droplets hitting a puddle.

Saturday, 2 January 2016

Assignment Five Further Brainstorming

My previous idea of a 'city coming to life' turned out to be a better idea on paper than in practice, so now I'm back to the drawing board to brainstorm further ideas. I am just writing down everything that comes to mind:

Collectibles
Making a coffee
World in miniature
A walk on cannock chase
Old/obscelete
Inside a building in daylight and at night
Geometry
Old school/factory
Overgrown
A town/city
An event - Could do a similar project to the Frankfurt market.
January
Nature/City
Only torchlight
Cannock chase going dark
Cooking a meal
War cemetery
City light
Letters/writing
Antiques
Tourists

After all this, I have had a further idea centering my assignment around buskers and street performers. This would be a thematic project rather than a timeline, something my tutor alluded to as a possibility. This seems like it could be a really workable idea, so I have brainstormed this theme in more detail:

Instruments.
Cash.
Closeups of people's faces watching the busker.
Into the end of the trumpet with shallow depth of field.
Instrument closeups.
Cheap/expensive gear.
Wider shot with landmarks.
Slower shutter speed for movement.
Other types of buskers as well as musicians.
Unusual angles / low high.
Blurred people walking past with busker in sharp focus.
Wider scenes incorporating the audience.

General thoughts: Out in all weathers? Need a license? Doing it for how long? Variety of instruments, styles. This topic resonates with me as a musician and street photographer.

Assignment Five Plan

After my previous brainstorming sessions, I have settled on a theme: The City Coming to Life. This theme ties together a few separate ideas I had, namely:

- A city.
- Light changing over the course of the day.
- A location changing over the course of the day.

I then addressed the various issues flagged up by tutors in other people's submissions:

- What kind of magazine.
- One location (a city).
- It's a subtheme (a city changing over the course of night into morning) of a major theme (Birmingham).
- I can have a variety of images, both thematically (desolate locations becoming lively) and aesthetically (the way the light changes the appearance of the location).
- I'll have the opportunity to photograph locations empty, and also teeming with people.
- There's a strong narrative or 'story' to tell.
- The images will be able to form a strong set.
- Opportunities to see people out of the 'ordinary' - people awake and working when most people are asleep.
- I am emotionally engaged with the subject of empty spaces - I have previously undertaken personal projects in abandoned buildings, and have a keen interest in seeing places how they aren't normally seen.

I have also compared my idea to the requirements of the brief:

To illustrate a story for a magazine  - I envision my project could appear in any kind of 'Birmingham-centric' publication as an interest story, or perhaps as an article on media such as 'LoveBrum'.

A clear rationale underlying your narrative. - I have a clear story that I'm trying to tell - showing the viewer familiar locations that appear in an unfamiliar way.

Visually and/or intellectually stimulating images.
- I envision visually stimulating images will be created due to the changing light on the urban landscape, with the intellectual stimulation coming from the juxtaposition of normally hectic/bustling locations lying empty, and/or vice-versa.

Image Ideas.

Broad Street - Busy at 4am.
New Street - Empty.
Have an hourly timeline, each page representing an hour.
New street station.
Light on selfridges.
Looking down at St Martins.
Centenary square.
Frankfurt market.
Workmen.
Police/Ambulance


UPDATE: After trying out this idea, I have now abandoned it. More brainstorming to follow!

Tuesday, 1 December 2015

Assignment Five Preparation

Something I like to do before beginning an assignment is to visit the various student blogs I have bookmarked, to see their efforts and their tutor's responses. You can avoid a surprising amount of pitfalls this way, and it can also give a sense of direction and inspiration.

Some general tips I've picked up from tutor feedback on others submissions:

  • Be specific about the context you are aiming to have your images reproduced in - what magazine? what kind of readers?
  • Stick to one 'venue' for the shoot, rather than spreading your ideas over several locations.
  • Consider sub themes of a major theme - for example instead of Christmas, you could do 'over-indulgence', 'christianity' or 'materialism'.
  • Avoid repetitive images, and even repetitive colour.
  • If an event, feature the crowd as well.
  • Focus on conveying a sense of the narrative of the event, rather than the 'performance' itself.
  • Make sure the images hang together as a set, aesthetically as well as thematically.
  • Try to find situations contrary to the normal emotions of the event - laughing in a serious environment, sad in a happy environment etc.
  • Choose something you are emotionally engaged with.


Brief Requirements

Illustrate a story for a magazine.

A clear rationale underlying your narrative.

Visually and/or intellectually stimulating images.



Brainstorming Ideas.


  • Two ends of the Christmas spectrum. / Homelessness at Christmas.

Turkey slaughter - turkey farm, turkeys for sale
Food Bank
Debt - credit cards, reposession
Materialism - Hoards of shoppers, stacks of presents, encouragement to spend more
Homelessness
Higher suicide rate
Loneliness

  
Image Ideas

Juxtapose a homeless person with a person carrying lots of goods (two images or single image).
A homeless person in front of a bank, or food establishment.
A debt advice sign next to someone handing over cash or card.
Packaging strewn on the floor, next to neatly packaged or presented goods.
A single person sitting on a bench (perhaps from behind in silhouette) juxtaposed with an image of a happy family.
A shut-down church.
A sequence of images.
Alcohol (offers to buy in bulk in supermarkets etc).

  • Street Performers (Buskers).
  • Light in Birmingham.
  • Birmingham changing over the course of a day (even early hours).
  • A city coming to life.

Thursday, 26 November 2015

A Narrative Picture Essay

As specified in my groundplan, I ultimately settled on the Birmingham Frankfurt Christmas market, an annual event of which I am very familiar. This fact, coupled with the fact there would be a wide variety of subjects, attractive lighting, a great atmosphere, and plenty of time meant that this was destined to be a pleasant and approachable project. The market can get very busy, so I decided on maximum portability by leaving my tripod at home, and instead using my very small and lightweight 50mm prime lens. This lens was a particularly suitable choice as it's fast, able to open to f1.8. This was very much a low-light shoot, and this lens allowed me to work with limited light without a tripod and still at relatively low ISO's. These benefits also presented a challenge in that I was without the ability to zoom, and also having a very shallow depth of field.

The types of photos I'd planned to take were covered in my groundplan, but with the shoot done the next stage was deciding how to organise and present the images. Broadly, I thought the following main 'groups' would be appropriate:

  • Couples / Families
  • Food / Drink
  • Rides / Activities
  • Items for sale

Ultimately I created a seven-page photo spread, with a total of 14 photographs. The first two and last two pages have whole-page images, with the middle three pages having multiple images per page, arranged around a particular theme.
 

Page One

This shows a full-page image of some beautifully-presented chocolate goods for sale. I chose this image for the first page as I think it sets the tone of the event, in that it is a market selling expensive, creative and unsual goods.


Page Two

I used a slow shutter speed here to evoke the sense of speed from the carousel. This image represents the other 'side' to the market, that of rides and activities.


Page Three

A selection of images to do with Birmingham's Big Wheel, which only makes an appearance at this time of year. The images here each have an individual viewpoint and closeness to the subject, from the top right image which contains the entire wheel juxtaposed with the Hall of Memory, down to a close crop of my daughter's face; looking carefully you can see the wheel reflected in her eyes.


Page Four

This page highlights the popular Bratwurst sausages - in an anticlockwise direction you can see a queue in front of the stall, the sausages being grilled, and finally someone about to enjoy the finished product.

 

Page Five

I wanted this page to show wider views of the market, emphasising the bustling crowds, and the warmly lit cabins.


Page Six

A single image of some of the crafts on sale.



Page Seven

The outdoor ice-skating rink. Like the wheel this only arrives in Birmingham at this time of year. I think this final image sums up the 'family' aspect of the entire event.

I am especially pleased with the end result of this exercise. I think it's possible to follow the 'narrative' and understand what the event is all about, from the photographs alone. I enjoyed experimenting with the organisation of the images, and also their sizing and presentation.