5.06.2008
Masters of Photography
I thought this video would be a good way to end the semester. It is an accumulation of photographs from the greatest photographers in the past 100 years. Enjoy!!!
Artist Bio & Statement.
We were asked to write an Artist bio. as well as an artist statement for the "Hello Holga" show. This is mine, I combined the two together.
"I have been exploring photography for the past four years, but within the last two I have found myself exploring the darkroom rather than my predominantly digital past. My recent photographic endeavors utilize a 35-mm SLR as well as a Holga 120, both with black and white film. I try to choose subject matter that is recognizable but present it in a way which requests another look from the viewer. Interesting angles, dramatic lighting, and purposeful cropping drive my photography.
For 'Hello Holga,' I hoped to reflect and highlight the naturally eerie quality of Holga photographs with subject matter which was equally as eerie and ambiguous. I chose to represent outdoor scenes in which the timeframe would be at question, the before and after explanation of the scene up for grabs, and the actual setting unanswered. A lone van, a scrawling, untrimmed bush, and a dilapidated shed leave the viewer to wonder what exactly happened here. I can't tell you, so you'll just have to guess."
I thoroughly enjoyed this class, and having a show at the end makes it all seem even more worthwhile!
"I have been exploring photography for the past four years, but within the last two I have found myself exploring the darkroom rather than my predominantly digital past. My recent photographic endeavors utilize a 35-mm SLR as well as a Holga 120, both with black and white film. I try to choose subject matter that is recognizable but present it in a way which requests another look from the viewer. Interesting angles, dramatic lighting, and purposeful cropping drive my photography.
For 'Hello Holga,' I hoped to reflect and highlight the naturally eerie quality of Holga photographs with subject matter which was equally as eerie and ambiguous. I chose to represent outdoor scenes in which the timeframe would be at question, the before and after explanation of the scene up for grabs, and the actual setting unanswered. A lone van, a scrawling, untrimmed bush, and a dilapidated shed leave the viewer to wonder what exactly happened here. I can't tell you, so you'll just have to guess."
I thoroughly enjoyed this class, and having a show at the end makes it all seem even more worthwhile!
Hello Holga!
My Creative Photography class has decided to have a show featuring our best works from the Holga cameras. We named the show "Hello Holga" and it will be in the Liberal Arts building on the second floor. I'm very excited to have my work up in this show. Today we hung everything up and it looked fantastic. All of the photography was window-matted and framed. We all had artist statements to go alongside our work which just seemed to complete it all. I'm very pleased with the outcome. Although it was a challenge nailing everything into the wall and making sure things were level!
Marsden Hartley
We were recently assign to visit our local art museum, BAM, and look at an exhibition about Marsden Hartley, titled American Modern. Marsden Hartley is one of the most important artists from the American early modern period. He was part of the influential group surrounding Alfred Stieglitz in the early decades of this century.
Edward Weston
Edward Weston began his career of photography at the young age of 16, his style being predominantly pictorial in nature. However, later in life after establishing himself a firm photography career, he renounced pictorialism in favor of straight photography, he would later become known as the "pioneer of precise and sharp presentation" with images of natural forms such as the human figure, seashells, plants, vegetables, and landscapes. His straight photography is very famous and I find it very beautiful. Perhaps I am more attracted to his later works than his earlier works.
Sally Mann
We recently watched a video of Sally Mann in class, and some of the works featured in the video were part of her bone collection. She is infatuated with death and decomposition, the way life recycles itself. Death is comforting to her. She is attracted to ambiguity and tries to capture this in her photography. She firmly believes that you shouldn't take a photograph without having ambiguity, otherwise the photograph is meaningless. Sally Mann is known for taking pictures of her family and children--especially the nude portraits of her children that have often been said to be suggestive in nature. She also believes in a very large format camera.
Edward Steichen
Edward Steichen, once a fine art painter, soon found himself taking on photography with a pictorialist approach, which he soon mastered. In 1905, Steichen helped create the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession with Alfred Stieglitz. After World War I, during which he commanded the photographic division of the American Expeditionary Forces, he reverted to straight photography, gradually moving into fashion photography. Steichen's 1928 photo of actress Greta Garbo is recognized as one of the definitive portraits of Garbo.
I think it is important for me to look at Steichen's work especially with our recent Holga endeavors. In many ways, the results of Holga photography are "pictorialist," much like Steichen's photography. He was a master at what he did, and it is always good to look back at the masters and learn from their ways.
Alfred Stieglitz
4.07.2008
Holga Experience
Recently, we were all given Holga 120s in my photography class. They are these "fantastic plastic" cameras--literally. The cameras are entirely plastic, including the lens and almost all of their guts. I was happy for this assignment because I think it was helpful in forcing me to "let loose" a little bit from the strict rules of photography. So much is out of my control when I use the Holga--even the viewfinder is essentially pointless! You cannot focus them. You cannot adjust for aperture settings. It is just point-and-click-and-hope. I have learned a lot about the Holga and am now enjoying it very much. I recently went out to photograph horses and barns and older houses along Victory Road. I believe I was successful and can't wait to get in the darkroom to see how they turned out. My Holga doesn't seem to have much vignetting, but there is an apparent blur on the edges of the film.
Pictorialism & Holga
Pictorialism was a movement in photography around 1885 which attempted to emulate the look or appearance of paintings and etchings through the photograph. Pictures are often black and white or sepia in color with very heavy manipulation. Soft focus, coating the lenses, special filters, and unique printing processes were all part of creating a photograph which was "pictorial." The goal of pictorialistic photographs was to fit into the art community by still having personal artistic expression which was the broadly accepted aesthetic of the time--due to paintings and etchings.
The images above are all taken with Holga cameras, and after our experience with Holga's firsthand, I can explain the qualities of a Holga image. Typically, the images will have a very soft radial blur, stronger on the edges, because of the camera's plastic lens. Also, because of the cheap nature of the Holga, images will often have a vignetting around the edges which is created from light leakage. This vignetting and softness is typical of a Holga image. It is very hard to get a crisp image with a Holga camera--though I don't know why you would want one.
When looking at Holga images and the photographs from the era of Pictorialism, many similarities can be discovered. The most apparent is the soft, blurry look the images have. It makes them seem much more surreal, and less like a photograph in nature. The vignetting seems to be more typical with the Holga images, however, there were not hard edges in Pictorialism. I also think the desired effect of both styles is very similar. They both desire to give off an essence that is not like photography. Although Pictorialism was attempting to mimic painting, and the Holga is not; the final images are very similar in their appearance. In a way, with Holgas, we can easily achieve a look similar to something the artists of the Pictorialism movement tried so hard to achieve.
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Paul Strand
Loretta Lux
When looking at Loretta Lux's work, I find it has a much different feeling that say the work of Meatyard or Gaskell. While their work feels to be much more on the creepy, eerie side, Lux's photographs--for me--feel surreal and painterly. They feel more like odd paintings than eerie, surreal photographs. I think this may be a result of the setting which the children are placed into. However, I do enjoy the photo manipulation which she utilizes in her works. It's very interesting, you have to do a double-take to make sure they aren't actually paintings.
Anna Gaskell
While looking for photographs of Anna Gaskell, I stumbled across this youtube video full of her photographs. The information to the side of the video informed me that Gaskell began her photographic journey with self-portraits, but eventually moved on to photograph children in scenes that were reminiscent of Alice in Wonderland. Her photography is very eerie, and definitely gets this quality from her choice of subject matter and the way in which she photographs--including lighting and such. It's all very dreary and dull. Take the time to watch the video. It's just crammed with photographs.
Arthur Tress
Arthur Tress's work is very, very aesthetically interesting to me. I find the photographs to have a weird, dark feel to them, requiring imagination and evoking emotions.
Ralph Eugene Meatyard
My first reaction to Ralph Eugene Meatyard's work was a creepy feeling. The masks which he has the children wear in some photographs seem to meld into their skin, almost making them appear non-human. It is said that "Meatyard's work challenged most of the cultural and aesthetic conventions of his time and did not fit in with the dominant notions of the kind of art photography could and should be. His work sprang from the beauty of ideas rather than ideas of the beautiful."
Keith Carter
Stephen Shore
Peter Hugo
Walker Evans
I enjoyed looking at the work of Walker Evans because his photography occurred during the time of the Depression. Most of his shots are frontal views and not very candid, however, I don't mind because of the context. Somehow, there is something important and powerful about his pictures. You can read into the emotions of the landscape and/or people.
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