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Essay Writing

Week starting Monday the 18th January 

Objectives and Criteria from the syllabus 

Be aware of some of the methods employed by critics and historians within the history of art and photography.
Demonstrate a sound understanding of your chosen area of study with appropriate use of critical vocabulary. – use for image analysis
Investigate a wide range of work and sources
Quotation and Harvard System of Referencing

Use quotes to support or disprove your argument
Use quotes to show evidence of reading
Take notes when you’re reading…key words, concepts, passages etc.
Write down page number, author, year, title, publisher, place of publication so you can list source in a bibliography
Use Harvard System of Referencing…see Powerpoint: harvard system of referencing for further details on how to use it.
Here is an overview of an essay structure. See below for a more detailed breakdown on what you could focus on in each paragraph.
Blog: Produce a number of posts that show evidence of the following:

Essay: Complete writing paragraphs 1 , 2 & 3 in your essay

Paragraph 1 Structure (500 words) : Use subheading. This paragraph covers the first thing you said in your introduction that you would address. The first sentence introduces the main idea of the paragraph. Other sentences develop the subject of the paragraph.

Content: you could look at the following…exemplify your hypothesis and introduce your first photographer. Select key works, ideas or concepts and analyse in-depth using specific model of analysis (describe, interpret and evaluate) – refer to your hypothesis. Contextualise…what was going on in the world at the time; artistically, politically, socially, culturally. Other influences…artists, teachers, mentors etc. Personal situations or circumstances…describe key events in the artist’s life that may have influenced the work. Include examples of your own photographs, experiments or early responses and analyse, relate and link to the above. Set the scene for next paragraph.

Include relevant examples, illustrations, details, quotations, and references showing evidence of reading, knowledge and understanding of history, theory and context!

Paragraph 2 Structure (500 words) : Use subheading. In the first sentence or opening sentences, link the paragraph to the previous paragraph, then introduce the main idea of the new paragraph. Other sentences develop the paragraphs subject (use relevant examples, quotations, visuals to illustrate your analysis, thoughts etc)

Content: you could look at the following…Introduce key works, ideas or concepts from your second photographer and analyse in-depth – refer to your hypothesis…Use questions in Pg 1 or add…What information has been selected by the photographer and what do you find interesting in the photograph? What do we know about the photograph’s subject? Does the photograph have an emotional or physical impact? What did the photographer intend? How has the image been used? What are the links or connections to the photographer in Pg 1? Include examples of your own photographs and experiments as your work develop in response to the above and analyse, compare, contrast etc. Set the scene for next paragraph.

Include relevant examples, illustrations, details, quotations, and references showing evidence of reading, knowledge and understanding of history, theory and context!

Paragraph 3 Structure (500 words) : Use subheading. In the first sentence or opening sentences, link the paragraph to the previous paragraph, then introduce the main idea of the new paragraph. Other sentences develop the paragraphs subject (use relevant examples, quotations, visuals to illustrate your analysis, thoughts etc)

Content: you could look at the following…Introduce key works, ideas or concepts from your third photographer and analyse in-depth – refer to your hypothesis…Use questions in pg 1 and pg 2 or add…How does the photograph compare or contrast with others made by the same photographer, or to other images made in the same period or of the same genre by other artists. How does the photograph relate to visual representation in general, and in particularly to the history and theory of photography, arts and culture. What are the links or connections to the photographers in pg 1 and 2? What are the similarities, differences or links and connections? How does this work compare to yours? Include examples of your own photographs and experiments as your work develop in response to the above and analyse, compare, contrast etc. If more paragraphs are required, set the scene for the next paragraph.

Include relevant examples, illustrations, details, quotations, and references showing evidence of reading, knowledge and understanding of history, theory and context!

William Eggleston

William Eggleston is an American photographer who is known for working with colour photography. Using his home environment  Memphis and Mississippi as his subject matter, Eggleston became famous for monumentalizing everyday subjects in his large-format prints. Eggleston captured Large amounts of his home environment, making his images very personal to him. William then went on to more commercial photography where he continued colour photography and highly saturated images in an awe for people to see insight of his life. I felt William was an idea artist for me to work from as his works his way around peoples lifestyles in an interesting and captivating way. I feel his utilising images are powerful in a sense that each individual has a very different routine in life and that different moments spark different opportunities. In this instance, every person has a journey and within that journey are multiple opportunities and goals within a day to day basis. I am going to continue by using Eggleston’s work as a guideline and inspiration into capturing random moments with an open mind.

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Huntsville, Alabama, CA. 1970

“Sometimes I’ll leave the house with a fully loaded camera and end up with nothing. Its just about being there. Anywhere. Even the most uninteresting, ugly or boring places can for an instant become magical to me”.

I really like this quote from Eggleston, he understands about there being a time and place. I feel my ambitions for my project may take of in the style of Eggelston, as he knows how to compose a story. Above, “Huntsville, Alabama, CA. 1970″ shows a strong image of a man with a high working class status of his time. His trimmed clothing and wide open spaces signifies his detailed identity of power and wealth. Eggleston’s work is very symbolic, an iconic representation of humans in a position of various power and status. I wish to base this aspect primarily around my own family, so the reader is able to understand a story without a composed narrative.

William Eggleston’s Memphis: Photographs by Joanna Welborn

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William Eggleston at the offices of his archive in Memphis, Tennessee, August 2008

William Eggleston’s groundbreaking reinvention of color photography in the 1970s established him as one of America’s most original and influential artists. In Autumn of 2008, photographer Joanna Welborn made portraits of William Eggleston at the offices of his archive in Memphis, Tennessee.  Welborn then spent time photographing throughout Memphis, at some of Eggleston’s favorite haunts as well as making photographs that evoke Eggleston’s own groundbreaking color images. Welborn here discovers a more intimate side to Eggleston, exploring the reminiscences of where he spends his time creating new ideas and media, the heart of his lifestyle and time. In my own project, I wish to accomplish a similar response so that the viewer could understand the relationship between my parents and our house.

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Welborn captures some of Eggleston’s past times and interests, other than just his workplace. This significant representation makes the reader understand the diversity of his lifestyle in a broader depth.

Here is a link to the Article about Joanna’s project on Eggleston:  http://www.cdsporch.org/archives/2590

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‘The Democratic Forest’

 

 

 

Hypothesis of overall Personal Study

Objectives:

  • Establish coherent and sustainable links between your own practical work with that of historical and contemporary reference.
  • Show evidence for an on-going critical and analytical review of your investigation – both your written essay and own practical work in response to research and analysis.

Hypothesis: Possible questions to investigate

Within my personal study, there is evidence of various techniques. These include: Portraiture, Documentation, Landscape, Abstraction and Reflections on Photography (themes of Aesthetics, Codes, Truth, Seeing, Looking)

Questions to consider concluding my overall hypothesis:

Portraiture

Does a portrait tell us more about the person portrayed or the photographer?

Here is a link to an interesting article by Canon, who released a project directed to the relationship between the camera and the person.

Canon Experiment Article – http://petapixel.com/2015/11/04/6-photographers-asked-to-shoot-portraits-of-1-man-with-a-twist/

After reading this article, I strongly believe that a portrait can be re-represented in any way. The photographer is the pivitol force within a photo-shoot. Emphasis to strong stereotyping and styles are reflected throughout the article, but with persuasion photographers perceive an image in a different way, therefore reflecting the photographer more.

Can personality and identity be expressed in a portrait?

Visual Arts –

  •  Portraits contain clues about the people pictured in them that can tell us things about the subjects’ cultures, identities, traditions, and roles in society.
  • Portraits can express how people think about themselves and their world.
  • Portraits can include symbols that reference interesting aspects of the people in them.
  • When creating a portrait, an artist makes many artistic choices that affect how we understand the image.
  • Artists make choices about media, style, background, and embellishments to visually describe themselves or others

What are the differences/ similarities in a formal or informal approach to portrait photography?

What makes an iconic Photograph?

What are the Influences of the Old Masters and other painters on modern photographic portraiture?

What are the key elements if Portraiture and Intimacy?

How Can Photography reflect inner emotions such as fear and isolation?

Documentary and Street photography:

Is it possible for photography to capture moments in time objectively and truthfully?

Examining the documentary aesthetics: A photograph should not be manipulated, so that its authenticity, veracity and sense of realism can be maintained?

What is the relationship between photography and realism?

How can photography bear witness to the ways of life and events of the world?

What is the relationship between Henri Cartier-Bresson’s theory of the ‘decisive moment’ and subjectivity?

What are the intentions of Voyeurism and the nature of observation and intervention in documentary photography?

Landscape photography

Issues in Landscape Photography: Romantic or idyllic representation of nature vs culture and the man-made world.

What is beauty in landscape photography?

How does people control, interact and construct the environment in which they live?

In what way has the work of Ansel Adams influenced Joe Cornish?

To what extent could the work of Ansel Adams be considered spiritual?

What is the Meaning behind William Eggleston?

How Is William Eggleston At War With The Obvious?

What was so different about the ‘New Topography’ exhibition in 1975?

Two Photographers, One Aim: Preserving nature. Looking at the different approaches to landscape photography between Ansel Adams and Robert Adams.

Abstraction:

Two photographers, one aim: Looking at the different approaches to abstract photography between Eliot Porter and Aaron Siskind.

In what way can abstraction make visible what is invisible in the natural and urban landscape?

Reflections on Photography; Aesthetics, Codes, Truth, Seeing, Looking

Examining the documentary aesthetics: A photograph should not be manipulated, so that its authenticity, veracity and sense of realism can be maintained?

 

 

 

 

Art Movements

Modernism / Post modernism 

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  • Modernism – broad movement encompassing Avant Gard ‘isms’ – another word for ‘new’.
  • Discovered at the first half of the 20th Century.
  • Define Avant Gard – transgressing the limits, non-mainstream.
  • Push the boundaries Manual labour- beginning of the industrial revolution.
  • What happens outside art?  – Societies expectation at large.
  • Queen Victoria, Victorian times, invention of photography 1839 – part of modernism, machine, optical device and object, interpreting reality, development of machinery, lasting over 100 years.
  • Different interpretations of Avant Gard – cubism, tantrism, futurism, surrealism, social realism, formalism, in photography and art.
  • Invention of the press, beginning of the 20th century, mass production of newspaper and magazines, money in the early 1900’s.
  • References to Abstraction / expressionism / cubism – abstraction and modernism, different multiple interpretations
  • Post modernism – ‘after’ 1970s-80s, post second world war, destruction to our civilisation, ordinary people killing ordinary things – questioning authority in society – law enforcements, police, various occupations – complex movement.
  •  Investigating a process’s rather than the finishing product. E.g. Conyrast to Picasso who never realved the process of his art, only ever cared about the end product.
  • More stage photography, ref. to tableau photography, using yourself as a self-portrait, using people that are creating an image which is highly constructed, ref to political, historical, or in the art world.

Example Artist  (landscape Photography) Ansel Adams

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  • Ansel Adams is seen as a modernist, his photographs are intrinsic to modern photography, of his time / very contrasted / vivid imagery / looking back he was he was now he isn’t as its very traditional of his time – now seen as contemporary.
  • Modernism changes over time.  Romanticism – leading into post-modernism.

Example Artist  John Millais – 1852

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  • Millais shows deliberate references to other things outside of the art world, not trying to hide the production / stages with references to Shakespeare.

Other Techniques relating to Modernism and Post-Modernism 

Pictorism vs Realism

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  •  Photographers who wanted to make photography an art form, invented as a scientific experimentation – not scientific experiment but an artistic experiment.
  • Deliberately used processes to make photographs seem ‘fuzzy’ and out of focus. In the dark room they’d create textures, manipulating chemicals in dark room, photographs became more like paintings making them overall more eccentric forms in the art world – debating what’s the point of the photography, should be sharp and in focus.
  • Straight photography was a  direct reaction against the pictorists.
  • Celebrating vivid, realism in photography. Realism can be found I theatre, architecture. – Frank Eugene (pictorism) – subject matters of mythology, fairies. Straight Photography (Sally Mann)

Dadaism and the development of the Photo Montage

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  • Constructivism Photography shows extreme angles and advantage points
  • Example: El Lissizky 1890-1941 was apart of a communist regime, based in what happened in 1917 – part of the political regimes, photography turned into propaganda / contextual resources / origins of change /manipulating the public through social media of the time / advertisement / creating a shift in social movements.
  • References to the Russian Avant Gard.

Surrealism

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  • Founded in Paris in 1924,
  • Example: Psychologist Froid – ‘Psych Analysis’,  which displays themes of dreams and internal forms.
  • Feminism against realists, sexists in their subject manner, predominately men. The Female was seen as the ‘Muse, catalyst for Male psyche – misogynists – segregation in today’s society, majority of governmental power is male, male dominance has various debates towards sexism.
  • Looking at stereo types in modern day society, how its developed from years since Surrealism was introduced.
  • Patriarchal structures, men seen as ‘rulers’ women seen as workers in the home.
  • Example: Man Ray (Solarization / Rayograph) cameraless photographs, exposing an object into sensitive paper, superstition versus reality 1890-1974).

Social Reform photography 1895-1965

1936 --- Florence Owens Thompson, 32, a poverty-stricken migrant mother with three young children, gazes off into the distance. This photograph, commissioned by the FSA, came to symbolize the Great Depression for many Americans. --- Image by © CORBIS
1936 — Florence Owens Thompson, 32, a poverty-stricken migrant mother with three young children, gazes off into the distance. This photograph, commissioned by the FSA, came to symbolize the Great Depression for many Americans.

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  • Example artist: Dorothea Lange 
  • Includes Interdisciplinary – other knowledge from different subjects, e.g. gothic texts

Question to consider in my final paragraphs / conclusion:

What ism does my work fall under in my personal study?

Has the development of photography overtime impacted the outcome of modern day photography today? 

Main Concept and Plan of my project: Living in History Versus Modern Day

Overview 

My initial concept was to show the theme of ‘family’ and ‘community’ through the comparison of ‘history’ and the modern day. Using archival material, I plan to demonstrate a clear example of how family traditions change, within architecture, the work place, and within every day lifestyles. I also wish to display the privileges of living a lifestyle in the modern day compared to a lifestyle in war and the post-war era. This is all connected to my recent move to a new house.

Thoughts and Ideas 

  • I wish to dig deeper into the history of my house. Primarily using archival material which i extracted during my recent work internship at the Societe Jersiase.
  • The lifestyles of when it dated back
  • To interview and photograph previous owners, builders, landlords,
  • To discover the beauty around my house,
  • To show what my other family and friends think of the location, what the new build means to people,
  • The debuting controversy over the production of  a ‘block house’ on a old heritage site.

How can I show this? 

I believe I  can show this by producing various types of media. Voice Recording, Video, and Photography with various techniques such as montage and collage in Photoshop. I believe the manipulation of my images and the merging of old and new can subject the transition of time and passage, connecting to my family and the community around me. Another idea is use the technique of placing text on a photograph to show a distinct narrative. This is all in connection with the work of Wendy Ewald.

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In  the style of Ewalds work, I could produce an image, adjust it, then allow the person i photographed to write on the image to signify the personality, community and familiarity of the subject, condoning an overall sense of transition and modern and new.

Modernism Versus Minimalism

Photographers and Research 

Martin Toft – Similar concept as he was comparing the history of one location to another. Martin in his project ‘Atlantus’ discovered the movement of ‘Jersey’ (Channel Islands) to ‘New Jersey’ (State, United States of America), and how it has evolved, compares and works with the background and history of being part of a place most people haven’t even come across.

“A visual an oral exchange of cultures, histories and identities”

Bryan worked as a herdsman in America making may trips to export cattle to New Jersey, to look after the cows in quarantine in Clifton and to prepare them for sale to American buyers. It was Bryan who accompanied Precious Galinthia amongst forty head of Jerseys to New Jersey onboard a K.L.M. DC 7F freight plane bound for New York in March 1964.
Bryan worked as a herdsman in America making may trips to export cattle to New Jersey, to look after the cows in quarantine in Clifton and to prepare them for sale to American buyers. It was Bryan who accompanied Precious Galinthia amongst forty head of Jerseys to New Jersey onboard a K.L.M. DC 7F freight plane bound for New York in March 1964.

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Tamika Tolliver, Asbury Park, New Jersey, United States, 1 Augus

 

Shoot 2: Christmas

In the  Holidays, I planned to conduct a shoot aiming at documenting my life as a family in the new house over christmas.

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This is my favourite image of the whole shoot. I felt I framed this image well with my Grandma in-between the two candles, and with my Granddad’s elbow amongst my Grandma’s shoulders. You can instantly tell they’re both in a relationship due to their close stance, embarking emphasis to family and closeness.

 

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