Research for Assignment 5.

Research

In thinking about this assignment I considered who I am? Plus what would I like to show the world. I have traveled all over the planet and dived since 1980 so both would be important for me to show in a picture.

My first thoughts took me to a painting of Poseidon sat on his throne. I thought of wearing my dry suit sat with a globe and snorkel. This would have been tongue in cheek trying to hide the fact that I love photography but hate to be photographed.

Thinking about this painting I remembered an afternoon when I was in London in the Navy. I had no interest in art. I went to the National Gallery because it was free. Hans Holbein’s(1) The Ambassadors grabbed me by my eyeballs and held me for two hours. I couldn’t leave it, the more I looked the more I saw. This would be my inspiration,

Who are the gentlemen in the painting? Why was it painted? When was it painted? What is it trying to tell us? How can can it influence my work?

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The men in the painting are Jean de Dinteville at age 29. He was French Ambassador to the royal court. To his right stands George de Selves the Bishop of Lavaur aged 25. He has been occasional ambassador to Venice and now is in London. We know there ages as Holbein tells us on the dagger and the book.

The painting shows the tools of the trades of both men. Being secular and religious so showing science questioning the status quo in religious thinking. Several clues are on plain sight such as the broken string on the lute. Showing a common symbol of discord. It is placed next to Martin Luther’s translation of the testaments a provocative book in its day.

In the center of the fore of the painting is what at first glance is a streak of grey. If you change your angle to the right and below it becomes a perfect skull. This is an anamorphic skull. Anamorphic being the perspective it is painted in. Academics can’t agree why, but it seems to work if you enter a room from the right and would have been a shock on entry. Others have argued it could have been hung on a staircase which put the viewer in the right position to see the skull. Some have hypothesised that it could just be a play on the artists surname “Holbein”, which means hollow bone.

The crucifix in the top left and the eye of the skull line up forming a triangle possibly hinting at death and rebirth. It says to me that death is waiting for all of us no matter how important we become.

We still see Anamorphic perspective today on football pitches. Adverts painted on the pitch show normally on our tv screens. On the pitch there perspective is not as it appears on the screen.

The painting was produced in 1533 the year that Henry the Eighths marriage to Catherine of Aragon is annulled. He marries Anne Boleyn in January this year. Anne has a great interest in Luther’s work. Could they have been hedging their bets whilst portraying their power?

These were turbulent times in England, power games were dangerous this painting asks questions in a way that can be interpreted differently. You could retract your message if it became challenged. It shows many of the things that made these gentleman who they are.

For my work I can show the things that have led to me doing what I do and who I have become. There are tools instruments and books that have taken me on a great journey. I can include them to mirror the textures and feel of this painting.

John Berger(2) said of this painting

“Although its painted images are two-dimensional, its potential of illusion is far greater than that of sculpture, for it can suggest objects possessing colour, texture and temperature…” John Berger 1972 Ways of seeing.

This is exactly what held my attention, the men were almost second placed to all the wonderfully painted instruments. These were in the painting to support the men and show how intelligent and powerful they were. I found them overshadowed by all this stuff.

I can’t ignore the Anamorphic skull so researched how it was painted. Concentrating on its proportions and perspective. I learnt it wasn’t just stretched but leads the eye from the correct angle to see the skull in its correct form. The skull is a vanitas, reminding that life is short, fleeting and soon over.  Not wanting to use a skull I thought about who had influenced my life. Jacques Cousteau was my earliest influence. So I experimented with a headshot to see if I could replicate Holbein’s work.

So using Adobe Photomix I cut out the head, then removed the background. Then transferred this image to an app called SKRWT. This allowed me align the head along an x and y peramater. Then I added a slight curve to make the head look like a smear from the front. Finally scaling back into Photomix. This was the last piece of the jigsaw for the finished work.

My tutor pointed me to the work by Martin Parr(3) and Daniel Meadows and their work from the 1970`s inspired by Coronation Street. They captured simple shots of people surrounded by their stuff and their place. I could see a connection with the Ambassadors. The way the people are placed, the confident way they look straight out at the viewer. a lot of them by furniture and soft furnishings. I like the photos a lot they are strangely comforting. But you can see the struggle these people endure to make ends meet. They have filled the space with textures and details just like Holbein’s characters.

in this work I noticed a common shape formed by the corner of the room. This shape adds depth to the work. Making it appealing to the eye and giving a common theme to each piece. Below I show some examples of what I mean. This shape appears in art frequently. Picasso uses it in his nudes to show female genitalia. Here it adds depth to the pictures.

This led to me looking at Susan Brights(4) Autofocus. Her book takes the formal portrait then gives it to 75 artists. This allows lots of interpretation and variation. I like the shots using brash colours they shout out from the page and emphasize Gender, Race and eccentricity. Challenging but great fun. It is a surreal sight seeing a normal situation but each shot has a twist that makes you think. Such as the project by Dita Pepes(5) work in which she plays various woman with various men. At first glance you see a natural situation. Only later do you realize what you have seen The shots do not look staged at all.

I also looked at Chauncey Hare(6) and his work “Protest Pictures”. In this work he documents homes and the residents in the USA in the sixties. He show the gap between the American Dream and reality. His work has a similar look to Daniel meadows.

In looking at Hares work I found Dianne Arbus(7) and her photograph “Child with a toy hand grenade. This photo is outside in a park. However the shot has many of the elements seen in Holbein’s painting. It asks lots of questions about the world in 1963. A boy playing in a park with a weapon of war. He gazes out from the page with the same startled look I have on my face in my photo.

My tutor pointed me to Jemima Stehli (8) and her work “The Strip”. The subject is bare and objectified. The gap between the painting and photograph has grown wider. But it still works very well. One is voyeur looking out, the other the object looks inwards.

Jemima Stehli, (Left) Jemima Stehli. Strip no. 4 Curator (Shot 11 of 12), 1999; (Right) Strip no. 6 Critic (Shot 9 of 10), 2000. Courtesy of the artist from the Strip series.

Finally I found Maureen Paley,(9)in her work Falling and Walking (phhhhhhhhhhh phossshhhhh crrhhhhzzz mn huaooogh), (detail))”.she paired the picture down to it minimum. With no people in the work. It still has plush colour with texture and intriguing patterns. It has the same sumptuous feel.

I think somewhere in these approaches is a photo I can create that will portray me to someone who doesn’t know me.

  1. Must have detail and texture with supporting props to tell the story.
  2. Must be formal so try different poses etc.
  3. Have a level of eccentricity to make the viewer linger.

Works Cited

(1)Holbein, Hans. The Ambassadors. The National Portrait Gallery., London.

(2)Berger, John. Ways of Seeing. London: Penguin, 1972.

(3)Meadows, Martin Parr and Daniel. “June Street, Salford.” Science And Media Museum. June Street. Bradford, UK, 1970s.

(4)Bright, Susan. Autofocus. London: Thames and Hudson., 2010.

(5)Pepes, Dita. “Self Portraiture with Men.” Thames and Hudson. Autofocus. London, 2010.

(6)Chauncey Hare Protest Pictures: Steidl and Steven Kasher 2009.

(7)Dianne Arbus “Child with a toy hand grenade”. https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/2001.474/ 1963.

(8)Jemima Stehli, (Left) Jemima Stehli. Strip no. 4 Curator 1999; (Right) Strip no. 6 Critic.

(9)Falling and Walking (phhhhhhhh phosshhhh crnhhhzzz man huaoogh. (detail) exhibition view: Art Night, London Co-commissioned by ArtNight and the Contemporary Art Society.

Reflection on Assignment 4 Earthrise

Reflections.

img_9497-1I spoke with my Tutor earlier today he gave me feedback on Assignment 4.

My Tutor thought I had chosen a good photo for the assignment. We discussed its simplicity and power. I found it interesting that we shared many of the same views on the photograph and the USA.

We discussed how to narrow down the aim to get to the nub of the piece to get your point over using fewer words. This was extremely helpful. Plus we talked about how to write academically. I have a difficulty as I write how I speak. So academic writing is a challenge for me sometimes.

My tutor adviced me to change three things in the work.

  1. Check for writing in the 3rd Person and change where I found it.
  2. Add references for all in the passage of work.
  3. Make it clear what my message is by adding a sentence setting it out.

I agreed with all that was said and so got to work straight away to make these changes. I checked the passage and changed where i found 3rd person narrative. I cant believe I had done so much of this. Plus it was mixed up with all other kinds of narrative so i had to concentrate on unravelling this work……..I think I succeeded.

I added 5 more references and checked they were correct links to the work I had referenced. Referencing doesn’t get easier. I added the reference for Susan Sontag which I had missed.

Finally I took some words out of the body of work to give me some words back to add a sentence to make my intentions clearer. Plus thinking and taking words out made my work clearer. So my tutor was spot on with pointing me to this.

I managed to get this back to 1000 words exactly whilst keeping my message in the work.

My tutor discussed (2)John Berger`s “Ways of seeing”, Which I downloaded and I am enjoying reading so far. It is helping me set up assignment 5 with its focus on symbolism.

I asked my tutor what I should think about for Assessment. I have struggled to think what to present as most of the work has been written. The advice given was extremely helpful. I am experimenting with printing and printers to get the best from my photos. I will discuss results with my tutor when the prints arrive.

I enjoyed this assignment and could have written 3000 words about my chosen photo.

Work Cited
(1)NASA Photograph “Earthrise”. NASA USA.
(2)Book John Berger “Ways of seeing”. Publisher Penguin Books, London.

Assignment 4 Earthrise.

Assignment

In 1968 I was shown a picture taken from Apollo 8. It comprises just three elements. The Earth, the moons grey dusty surface and an inky black frigid sky. It’s simplicity took my breath away.

When thinking about this assignment Earthrise kept coming to mind. This is the first photograph I remember. It’s simplicity has become etched onto my memory. I want to explore if we need to burn huge amounts of resource to get people to think about the damage we do to our home.

It is the first colour photograph of Earth rising over the moon taken by a human. It isn’t the first photograph taken of (1)Earthrise. Lunar Orbiter 1 had taken one in monochrome in 1966 and the Russians had taken a photo of Earthrise in Monochrome from an unmanned spacecraft earlier.

The mission was part of Apollo Project building up to a moon landing. It was the first craft to go to the Dark Side of the Moon.

Apollo 8 was manned by Captain Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot Jim Lovell and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders. They carried cameras to record the flight. Borman was taking a monochrome shot when Anders looked out of the port and the following conversation ensued.

(2)Anders: Oh my God! Look at that picture over there! There’s the Earth coming up. Wow, is that pretty.

Borman: Hey, don’t take that, it’s not scheduled. (joking)

Anders: (laughs) You got a colour film, Jim, Hand me that roll of colour quick, would you…

Lovell: Oh man, that’s great!

Earthrise was taken using a (3)Hasselblad 500EL camera modified with larger knobs so thick gloves could operate them. A circle ring instead of a normal reflex viewfinder to allow framing through a helmet. Settings of F11 and 1/250th of a second shutter speed. The film was Ektachrome Kodak Film, in a cartridge for easy loading.

In 1968 The Tet offensive culminated a challenging year in Vietnam for the American Military. Civil rights disturbances in universities and cities around the US caused many deaths and injuries. Russia were winning the space race amidst the Cold War. France endured student uprises quashed by police violence. Czechoslovakia was invaded to prevent its exit from the Warsaw Pact. Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy were both assassinated.

So at the end of a year packed with turmoil Earthrise could be seen as a ray of light from the inky dark.

Earthrise was widely published around the world and triggered debate among academics and the general population in equal measure. (4)Galen Rowel called it “The most influential environmental photograph ever taken”. The environmental movement started in the next few years. Earthrise played its part by allowing humans to view home. (5)Susan Sontag discussed in On Photography, “Something we hear about, but doubt, seems proven when we are shown a photograph of it”. We had heard about our planet now we were shown it in all its glory.

However, all wasn’t triggered by Earthrise, some people were concerned about the way humans were using the Earths resources before it was taken. In 1962 (6)Rachel Carson wrote “Silent Spring” which spoke of the effects human actions were having on our planet. It details many ways we threaten the Earth. The photo reinforced her work. In 1965 (7)Barbara Ward spoke of “Spaceship Earth”, discussing the Earths resources being used and wasted and that they would soon become scarce at the rate we are using them.

Later, In 1979 (8)James Lovelock wrote “The Gaia Hypothesis” which spoke of a planet which is one big organism. With a system that keeps life in balance. Humans threaten this balance using resources too quickly.

Huge resources were used to take Earthrise. A Saturn V first stage burnt for about 3 minutes and consumed 2 Million Kilo Grams of fuel. Whilst the photo wasn’t the aim of the mission, massive resources were burnt to get this camera into a position to take a single photo..

The majority of us won’t get to venture outside Earths Gravity but others have tried to encourage thoughts and discussion about the environment through their photography.

(9)Ansel Adams showed the beauty in detail in his photos of Yosemite Park in the USA. He did this, though, to show the quality of his photography not the poor use of Native Indian Land.

Edward Burtynsky(10) shows our misuse of resources in an artful way. His from within his oil work photos grab your attention, then provoke thought about our achievements.

Daniel Beltra(11) takes a different route still aerial but showing cleaning up a spill. Using chemicals. I first thought they showed beautiful shapes and colours. Then you see the clean up plane spilling chemicals to clean up the spill, revealing the irony in the frame.

Whilst this work is brilliant it has still used resources. Some practitioners are looking at using social media to get to their medium without using a camera, burning only the resources to power a personal computer or tablet.

Mishka Henner(12) uses Google Earth screenshots stitched together to make full frame depictions of man’s effect on the planet. Some show sprawling cities. But the most effective I have seen are his composites of Texan feed pens. The geometry grabs my eye then I read what they are and I question everything. The ethics, use of resources and the waste of land.

David Thomas Smith(13) uses ancient Persian Rug patterns as inspiration to create patchwork’s from screen grabs from Google Earth. The patterns are pleasing and make me consider land consumption.

We don’t need to burn resources to get our points across. Technology and imagination can help us be armchair environmentalists. However using social media could increase the chances of fake news  being produced. Checking content accuracy must become integral in every piece of work.

Employed effectively we can use technology to create art that is thought provoking Without burning resources. All of the above work encourages us to think of home.

The crews closing words broadcast from Apollo 8 are very appropriate.

“God bless all of you – all of you on the good Earth.”

References

(1)Anders, W. (1968). Earthrise. [Photograph] Fort Lauderdale,USA.: NASA.

(2)Apollo 8, (1968). [TV programme] NASA.

(3)Hasselblad 500EL Camera. (2016). In: Sale Catalogue, 1st ed. New York: Setadel Studios, p.60.

(4)NASA. (2017). Apollo Astronaut Shares Story of NASA’s Earthrise Photo. [online] Available at: https://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/home/earthrise.html [Accessed 30 Dec. 2017].

(5)Sontag, S. (n.d.). On Photography.

(6)Carson, R. (2002). Silent spring.

(7)Ward, B. (1968). Spaceship earth. New York: Columbia University Press.

(8)Lovelock, J. (1998). The Gaia Hypothesis. Films for the Humanities and Sciences.

(9)Adams, A. (1938). Half Dome, Merced River, Winter. [Silver Gelatin Photograph.] USA.: Ansel Adams Gallery.

(10)Edward Burtynsky. (2017). Home Page. [online] Available at: https://www.edwardburtynsky.com/ [Accessed 30 Dec. 2017].

(11)Danielbeltra.photoshelter.com. (2017). Daniel Beltrá. [online] Available at: https://danielbeltra.photoshelter.com/ [Accessed 30 Dec. 2017].

(12)David Thomas Smith. (2017). HOME. [online] Available at: https://www.david-thomas-smith.com/ [Accessed 30 Dec. 2017].

(13)Mishkahenner.com. (2017). Mishka Henner. [online] Available at: https://mishkahenner.com/

Research for Assignment 4.

Assignment, Research

I wanted my chosen photograph to show what had influenced me in my formative years. I thought about my earliest memories and made a list. (1)England winning the World Cup is an early memory. I had also seen a photograph of a (2)1947 suicide victim, a lady who had jumped from the Empire State Building I had seen this in an old copy of Time magazine, it shocked me but hadn’t influenced me. I remembered (3)Earthrise, this did influence me so this was the one I chose. It had influenced other people more.

 

 

On 24th December 1968 on the Apollo 8 mission, manned by Captain Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot Jim Lovell and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders, the photo Earthrise was taken by William Anders this photo is my choice.

My research started around the picture itself, what does it show me? Then how was it taken? What was it’s affect on me and others? What was happening when it was taken across the world? Finally what had it influenced since it was taken up to the present day ?

Earthrise is a very simple photograph comprising three elements, The Earth, The Moons surface and the black void of space. Very simple, till you think that everyone that ever lived except the three photographers is in the shot. All the elements of our universe are there too in this one photograph. At the age of Seven it’s beauty took my breath away and made my imagination work overtime.

Earthrise was taken using an Hasselblad 500EL which had been modified for use with thick gloves and composition through a helmet. Large knobs had been fitted to enable the camera settings to be made easier to use. Plus the viewfinder had been changed to a ring so composition was seen from inside a helmet. I found the camera had been up for sale in the USA for $750000 in 2015. The astronauts were taking monochrome exposures of the Earthrise but luckily one of them decided to change to colour.

“Earthrise” had an immediate effect on the people on the Earth. Everyone was amazed to see it in colour. Monochrome versions had been taken from USA and CCCP missions but these were unmanned so didn’t get the feeling that Earthrise shows. The worlds media printed it over and over across the planet. I saw it in a magazine at my parents home.

Within a short period environmental organizations sprang into existence. Surely they too had been influenced by such a great photograph. Academics published books and papers to make us think about how to protect our home. Greenpeace in 1969 and Friends of the Earth in 1971.

Earlier in 1962 Rachel Carson said in (4)“Silent Spring” that human actions were threatening the planet. In 1967 Lionel Robbins received an honorary doctorate from the Heriott Watt University for his essay of 1932 in which he wrote about (5)“the earths resources being scarce”. This work is still used today. Earthrise only reinforced the planets fragility.

Looking across the world in 1968. France had student riots. Czechoslovakia was invaded by Russia. The Tet Offensive was the biggest attack of the year in Vietnam. A photo was taken in Saigon of a (4)Vietnamese policeman shooting a protester in the head that shook the world. All these events were extremely violent, so I would think that for everyone, Earthrise would be ray of light shining from the dark. It should have shaken us up but it didn’t.

Others have taken up the baton trying to make photographs that make us think of our planet.

However most people don’t get to go into space to get shots like Earthrise.

(5)Edward Burtynsky takes shots from the air of mass industrialization of the planet. They have amazing colour and composition. It’s only when you look that you realize what you are seeing.


(6)Mishka Henner shows our use of the land to pursue food and profit so destroying our environment. These are taken from Google Earth so no travel is needed minimizing the carbon footprint used to create thought provoking art.

My message in this piece of work must be that we don’t need to burn resources to make art. We can innovate what is around us to be creative. This is what our cavemen ancestors did after all.

References
(1)England win the World Cup. (1966). [Colour Photograph] London.: BBC News Website.
(2)Wiles, R. (1947). The most beautiful suicide.. [Monochrome photograph] New York.: Time Magazine.
(3)Lovell, J. (1968). Earthrise. [Colour Photograph] USA: NASA.
(4) Carson, R (1965) Silent Spring. (Book) Houghton Mifflin. USA.
(5)Robbins, L (1932) Essay on the nature and significance of economic science.(Paper).
(6)Adams, E. (1968). Man shot in head on Saigon street.. [Monochrome Photograph.] London.: Telegraph Newspaper.
(7)Burtynsky, E. (2008). Oil spill. (Colour Photograph). Online: Burtynski.com.
(8)Henner, M. (2009). Coronado Cattle Feed. [Colour Photograph.] Online.: mishkakenner.com.