Tableux Photography: Anna Gaskall vs Hannah Starkey; childhood vs adolescent; memories vs fairytales; literature vs cinema

Anna Gaskall

This photograph is interesting to me because of it’s mysterious, abnormal nature that is constructed in which it allows us to delve deeper into the deeper meaning of the photograph, in other words: what is the purpose of the photograph and what is it trying to tell us?  Clearly, this appears to be a direct reference to a childhood memory, reconstructed to tell us how this photographer looks back in the past.  Interestingly, the loss of saturation in the photograph appears to us as quite an old and distant memory because there is a lack of detail on the features of the memory and therefore because of this age of this memory suggests this is quite personnel.  The trees through the use of increased contrast almost show an intricate and diverse environment or world within a world.  This in a sense suggests that this is the girls natural environment in which she should feel  comfortable.  However the fact that through the darkening shades of green and the shadows, the woodland appears quite ghost like and that there is some sort of a creepy and quite scary presence surrounding the girl.  This is interesting because of the girls clothes/  She is initially wearing white which suggests innocence and vulnerability however the slow tint towards more of a cream color suggests a sense of worn use and how the environment has started to have an effect on the girl.  The photograph has been taken from a face on angle and this has helped the viewer to distinguish clearly the effects the hostile environment has had on the girl, for example: she is in the air with her arms and legs stretched out.  This uncomfortable position reminds me that she doesn’t appear to actually want to be there, however she doesn’t have a choice in the matter due to the fact that by her ghostly presence she appears to be of under some sort of influence, reminding me of the dangerous nature of the environment.  This use of tableaux photography is interesting because it allows us to essentially interpret the story in which the photograph is trying to tell us in our own way but still in saying that somehow really understand and connect with the photographer’s emotions that she is expressing.

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 Hannah Starkey

This photograph is strikingly the opposite of the previous photograph in terms of the environment surrounding the subjects but similarly however, both girls appear to be young, impressionable and vulnerable while being presented under some sort of influence.   I find it particularly interesting how Hannah Starkey has chosen to use Tableaux photography to tell a story of the feelings and emotions of the young girl, however I like how the style of documentary photography is incorporated to extradite the very dangers, pressures and struggles that are experienced in young people’s day to day lives in a modern day interpretation.  The elements of Tableaux photography that prevail in this image are the strong features of how the girl’s body language in response to presumably her mother but the fact there doesn’t appear to be much motherly contact or affection being expressed towards her daughter shows how the relationship appears particularly strained or damaged.  This allows us to pose questions that make us naturally curious to find out what these root causes were in this strained relationship.  I particularly like how we can interpret what these causes could be, and through Tableaux we can appreciate the feelings of the subject more easily.  Clearly through the dark surroundings, suggests to me  that the girl is perhaps going through some of her own difficulties that is part of growing up as she although appears confident and comfortable, it doesn’t look like her natural self.  For example by the fact it looks the parent has had to speak to her and put her in her place even though she appears comfortable in her own environment.  This shows by the fact that this environment isn’t actually her environment as there is her parent putting her in her place despite the parent clearly doesn’t belong there.  This therefore explains and tells the story of growing up through teenage years that many experience differing phases and how the parent is a model or guide for a growing up teenager.

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Documentary: Environmental Portraits

For my family Environmental portraits I chose to shoot two very different people doing two very different things of what they like to do within my family.  My first shoot consisted of looking at exploring what my brother does mostly when at home.  He is quite secluded, often not leaving his room very much at all, and I wanted to show very much how he really is on the inside on is own turf.  When not on his own turf, he is particularly uncomfortable and shy.  However when he is in his own environment he is much more comfortable and is somewhat protective of this.  I chose to document how through his appearance such as his style, body language and clothes  and also the environment in which inhabits, he is very messy and so to us the room appears quite a hostile and unwelcome place to be in quite.  However the fact he looks comfortable and is clearly showing ownership in this environment through his facial expression, it suggests the mess despite appearing messy and unorganized, is organised in a way that satisfies him.  There is a strong sense of arrogance depicted in these photographs of my brother, almost appearing that the attitude is somewhat dis-respectful and an exaggeration of over importance to my Brother’s beliefs.

On the other hand I shot my sister who is very much more open and less reclusive than my brother.  She feels comfortable in not so much her own environment, but an environment which is shared by so many other people which is why she is being shot in an open grassy/sandy area.  In a sense, it’s not directly her environment, but its everyone’s environment in which that makes her feel comfortable and happy doing so therefore everyone’s environment is her environment.  I believe this reflects the very sociable and excitable character in who she is.  The particular environment however isn’t necessarily the location in this particular instance, but can arguably be what my sister is doing and engaging in.  For example, she is playing and in doing so engaging ith the environment, something that has been impacted by man for generations and this shows how from a young age, humans are constantly changing and impacting the environment.  However where some people’s impact on the environment is negative and to hurt it, I wanted to show my sister engaging with it and sort of show her personal relationship with the Environment.  In saying this, the environment is essentially like a friend to my sister who brings her as much fun as a human friend might.

Inspiration

The thing that most inspired me over the summer was the ocean. The best part of my summer was spent near or on the sea. I always love spending time on the ocean because it is the place which allows me to think the most and feel free the most. In my opinion, the ocean is the best place to be, and it inspired me because I did a lot of photo shoots near or in the sea. It allowed me to experiment more, and be more adventurous with my photography. Here is one of my favorite images that I took over the summer using the ocean as inspiration. My friend took the picture, however the framing, setting and form of the photo was my idea.

I wanted to experiment with abstract forms by creating different shapes with my body, mainly with my legs. The lighting was really good on this day, and it worked really well with the current. The horizontal line of the sea works as a contrast to the vertical lines of my legs coming out of the water. The reflection of the light off the water, makes the  image much brighter, and much more interesting. Overall, I am really happy with the outcome of this image.

Environmental Portraits

For my environmental Portraits, I used the Documentary Photographer Sian Davey as inspiration. I really liked Davey’s work because she has a spontaneous feel to the environmental portraits.  She always focuses on one particular character within the set of images, and this is what I tried to create within my environmental portraits.  I wanted to achieve a theme within my images, slimier to what Davey does. For my project I chose to focus on my friend, who is like family to me.  I wanted to do something which links closely to what Davey does in her images. According to Davey, she likes to link Psychology with her Photography, so I decided to incorporate parts of my friends personality within the environmental portraits.

Shes a very creative character, who likes to explore nature and live closely with the environment. I aimed to capture a set of images that showed this clearly through the setting and framing of each image. She also enjoys photography like me, so I wanted to interpret this within the photos. I wanted to create a natural, old fashioned documentary feel to the set of images, so I decided to edit them into black and white.  I am really pleased with my final outcome  because each frame is completely different, with some close ups and some far away. The way the model is positioned in each frame is also very different, so I’ve managed to achieve a vast amount of individual images which work together well.

Out of all the images from the shoot, this is my favorite one because of the framing, what shes doing in the photo, and the setting of the image. At the time of the photo, she was simply messing around in the woods, and I managed to capture a series of images of her in her natural environment. This image though is my favorite from the set because of the playful atmosphere around it.

Archive

Recently, I have discussed the life of my great grandfather as my interest in pool and snooker has reminded my mother and grandmother of his hobbies. Raymond Harold Cummins was born in 1912, the year of the Titanic. He was a through and through Jersey bean, born and bred in the island and in this tiny channel island he met my great grandmother, Denise Urroutia. In hearing and discussing my great grandfather’s life, I realized there is a lot of similarities in our interests despite the fact I only met him on three occasions before he died.

Following the Second World War (a topic I’ve recently studied in A2 History), Denise gave birth to my grandmother in 1949, which is when Raymond became a writer for the Jersey Evening Post. Raymond’s talent for writing is reflective of my passion for creative writing and the selection of English Literature as an A Level choice. As my grandmother grew up, she informed me of her memories from her father playing snooker in the local snooker hall known as ‘Jersey Mechanics Institution’, which was formed in 1902. She recollects how she went to watch him play at the club for the island against Guernsey, the local channel island rival. Raymond’s interest and talent in snooker compares to my hobbie of playing pool as I have also represented the island for pool as in 2015, I went to Blackpool for the U15 National Championships.

All of this combined led to me asking for pictures of my great grandfather which is when my grandmother produced this picture.

A perfect portrait of a man who is also described as perfect by my mother and grandmother. In this picture, he is in his late sixties/seventies.

I decided to recreate this picture but with me as a model representing my great grandfather as we seem to have so much in common. I collected some clear lensed glasses, a grey polo shirt and white sweatshirt. For taking the picture, I set up a tripod with the camera attached to the shoe facing at face height, basing my positioning as similar to the one in the image as possible. Once I chose where to take the picture/s, I set up the camera so it was on “Self-Timer:Continuous” so I could get a few images at a time.

I placed these images in a contact sheet in order to help me distinguish which is the most comparable to the picture of my great grandfather.

I edited the photo I thought was best suited to the image of my great grandfather so that it was in black and white.  The difference between our two photographs is of course the person, the glasses, the actual clothes but technically, my photo was taken using flash as the room was dimmly lighted, where as Raymond’s looks as if it was taken using studio lights with a typical white studio background. My photo’s quality is impaired through the shadow on the back wall from my head, as well as the slight flash on my left lens. If I was to do it again, I would be sure to take the image in a studio with the correct lighting.

Developing my curiousity of my great grandfather’s snookering success, I researched the mechanics club online which is when I found this website: http://search3.openobjects.com/kb5/jersey/directory/service.page?id=k81-QexVo6k

This website provided minimal information but I was able to find opening times. So I visited the club and unfortunately, it was not open. The building also looked like it needed renovation so perhaps it is closed temporarily. However, I did take some pictures of the outside building. 

Documentary photoshoot

My Photo shoot was inspired by the photographer Larry Sultans photos of his Father. Especially the one of his Father practicing his golf swing in his bedroom. Just like Larry Sultans work I have taken photos of my Dad taking part in his hobby. This for my Dad is playing the guitar. Almost every night he retreats to his make do office where he places on his headphones and immerses himself in his own world playing his guitar for hours on end. I wanted to take a photograph my dad in the room he usually goes to practice his guitar however the lighting conditions weren’t ideal so in the future I would chose another room to do this. I also wanted to capture his make do practice room/office and how it isn’t anything special yet he spends to much time in that room.

The first two photos I chose to use natural lighting just as Larry Sultan does. I also used a reflection of one of the mirrors that had been placed in there. The second two photos I pulled down the blinds and used the flash. For the last two photos I decreased the iso giving it this blur look almost like another photographer i almost studied called Richard Billingham. I then changed these photos to black and white as I thought it suited the style better than color.  By doing this I wanted to portray movement even though the subject wasn’t actually moving and camera was I wanted to portray a movement in emotion and mood that music has the capability to do.

Documentary Photography and Truth

CONTEXTUAL STUDIES: Truth in Documentary Photography
Week 3-4: 20th Sept – 4th Oct

Can a photograph lie?

robert-capa-falling-soldier
Robert Capa, Death of a Loyalist Soldier, 1936

Are all photographs reliable?

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Joe Rosenthal, Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima, February 23, 1945

A common phrase is to ‘shed light on a situation’ meaning to find out the truth.

‘A picture tells a 1000 words‘, is another aphorism that imply images are more reliable.

Picasso famously said: ‘We all know that art is not truth. Art is a lie that makes us realise truth.’

Magritte’s painting La Trahison des Images in which he painted a picture of a pipe with the words ‘Ceci n’est pas une pipe’ (This is not a pipe) goes some way to towards an explanation.

margritti-not-pipe

‘The camera was there and recorded what I saw’.

A certain delivery of facts?

Claims of truth that most people take for granted?

Art or photography is not reality but can examine and model reality.

Traditional documentary believes the viewer to be a receptive subject taking in the objective information of the world through the photograph.

Documentary photography’s central aesthetic, political and moral associations are:

depicting truth

recording life as it is

camera as a witness.

TASKS: Produce a number of blog posts that show evidence of the following 

DEADLINE: Wed 4th Oct

In order to complete the tasks successfully read and look through supporting material and consider the bullit points too that may prompt you in your answers . Make notes and include direct quotes sources. Conduct independent research too .

1. RESEARCH: Look through these Powerpoints:   Photography and Truth  and Issues of truth, representation, propaganda for a historical and contemporary overview. Read also this text for further context:  Issues in Photojournalism 

Documentary photography is based on assumptions that the photograph represents a one-to-one correspondence with reality, which is nearly accurate and adequate, and that the photographic image is capable of conveying information objectively.

  • Traditional documentary believes the viewer to be a receptive subject taking in the objective information of the world through the photograph
  • Can we rely on its ability to capture a moment in time accurately as historical evidence or as a witness to the world?
  • Postmodernism points out that all forms of representation is subjective? How? Why?
  • Digital photography has made manipulation much easier?

2. ANALYSIS: Choose one image (either historical or contemporary – ppts above) that questions the notion of truth and explain why. Follow this method of analysis: Description – Interpretation  – Evaluation – Theory/Context

3. PHOTO-ASSIGNMENT: Based on your chosen themes, FAMILY or ENVIRONMENT make two images, one that you consider truthful and one that is not.

4. CASE STUDY – EXTENSION: Using current news images as an example, such as the drowned Syrian boy (read article here), consider if photographs can change the world or change people’s perception?

heartbreaking-photo-of-a-drowned-toddler-embodies-the-worlds-failure-in-syria

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Here is a link to another article about the photographer who took the photos of the dead Syrian boy where she speaks about why she took them.

For a different point of view read this blog post by photographer and lecturer, Lewis Bush where he discuss the above in light of recent images of dead Syrian refugees in Europe. Incorporate his views and include quotes, for or against your own analysis and point of view.

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EXTRA READING: For those of you who likes to read theory of documentary practice, see Susan Sontag (1977), On Photography , Roland Barthes (1982), Camera Lucida. John Tagg (1993) or the famous essay by conceptual artist, Martha Rosler, In, around, and afterthoughts (on documentary photography) in book: Bolton, R. (1992) ‘The Contest of Meaning’. MIT Press. See me if you are interested in reading of the above books and essays.

5. CASE STUDY – EXTENSION 2:

Kevin Carter and The Bang Bang Club

Starving Child and Vulture

  • Kevin Carter
  • 1993
Kevin Carter knew the stench of death. As a member of the Bang-Bang Club, a quartet of brave photographers who chronicled apartheid-­era South Africa, he had seen more than his share of heartbreak. In 1993 he flew to Sudan to photograph the famine racking that land. Exhausted after a day of taking pictures in the village of Ayod, he headed out into the open bush. There he heard whimpering and came across an emaciated toddler who had collapsed on the way to a feeding center. As he took the child’s picture, a plump vulture landed nearby. Carter had reportedly been advised not to touch the victims because of disease, so instead of helping, he spent 20 minutes waiting in the hope that the stalking bird would open its wings. It did not. Carter scared the creature away and watched as the child continued toward the center. He then lit a cigarette, talked to God and wept. The New York Times ran the photo, and readers were eager to find out what happened to the child—and to criticize Carter for not coming to his subject’s aid. His image quickly became a wrenching case study in the debate over when photographers should intervene. Subsequent research seemed to reveal that the child did survive yet died 14 years later from malarial fever. Carter won a Pulitzer for his image, but the darkness of that bright day never lifted from him. In July 1994 he took his own life, writing, “I am haunted by the vivid memories of killings & corpses & anger & pain.”


DEADLINE: Wed 4th Oct

Documentary VS Tableaux Essay

All Blue quotes come from the Bate D. (2009) ‘Documentary and Storytelling in The Key Concepts: Photography. Oxford: Berg.

All Red quotes come from the Bright S. (2005) ‘ Narrative in Art Photography Now. London: Thames & Hudson

Documentary photography can be looked through both an objective and subjective lens. This means it could be used to tell a story through a series of images of people involved in real events to provide a factual report on a particular subject. It also could aim to show, in an informal way, the everyday lives of ordinary people with some sort of purpose or theme in mind. This sort of photography can document emotion when photographing people ‘doing something like work, play or travelling.’ which could show people in action ‘shown smiling, laughing or looking angry.’ This shows different aspects of a character and also different aspects of their life, photographs recognised that ‘what ordinary people did in their lives mattered’ to others.T his means that the image themselves would be informative and tell a story by itself with ‘only basic, minimal contextual writing to accompany it.’

Juventus fans struggle as the Heysel stadium wall collapses © Eamonn McCabe- 1985 (Recording an event as it is)

Samantha Box- 2006 (Recording ordinary peoples lives- with a meaning or idea in mind)

However, ‘telling a story with pictures is an old device’, stain-glass windows have been around since the 10th century which was a picture is a head of Christ, discovered at the Lorsch Abbey in Germany. Before photography there were paintings and other forms of art, which would inform and also document lives and create ideas.

Documentary photography became popular during the first world war when documentary photography ‘drew on the idea of information as a creative education about actuality, life itself.’ This reinforced the fact that the photographer themselves wanted to record everyday life, while informing the viewers of what was happening around the world, provoking emotion as well as showing the ‘event or social process unfolding in time.’ This could be individual pictures could be put in a sequence, showing the development of the war. Within this time documentary photography was vital for capturing key events, which would later inform the public.

1917 by James Francis Hurley 

However, documentary is not only to record and document but it’s also used to ‘enlighten and creatively ‘educate’, which is seen in the news. It can also show a story through a series of photographs in depth, which can be slightly different to photojournalism, which photograph key events or reality. Documentary photography gives us a deeper understanding and sense of meaning to critical events, public connections, stories of political justices, and human rights issues which are all very relevant to the audience of the photographs. This means that 1 image could have the power to change or make a difference in today’s society. This image informs the public on the tragic event, which is a funeral procession is passing through a narrow street in Gaza, the children died from the Israeli bomb, which struck their apartment building.

2013 by Paul Hansen 

Nineteenth-century photographers, like Matthew Brady, Jacob A. Riis and Lewis Hine in the USA or John Thomson and Henry Mayhew in Britain. These are all examples of forerunners of those interested in a photo-documentary mode. They all ‘aimed to inform, educate and disseminate that truth about a issue by using photography, alongside writing.’  They documented issues such as war, slums, immigrants and child labour and street workers. They wanted to demonstrate that documentary seeing was way of ‘knowing’ and, ‘that knowing would improve humanity.’  This supports the idea of a photograph providing evidence and the camera being its witness, what is meant by that is documentary photography provides verification that something has happened as the camera has captured it.

This is very different to Tableaux Photography as tableaux is a style of photography where people are staged in a constructed environment and a pictorial narrative is conveyed often in a single image, or a series of images that often makes references to fables, fairy tales, myths, unreal and real events from a variety of sources such as paintings, film, theatre, literature and the media. This sort of photography ‘relays on narrative to create photographs.’ This is because Tableaux photography incorporates elements of ‘fantasy, artifice and make believe.’ They will constructs a narrative through staging people in a set-up scene to tell a visual story through the particular environment. Most of the time the photographer would be working with a subject matter, which would spark their idea to conduct a particular photoshoot. 

Narrative photography relies on a vital source ‘cinema’ as well as other vital sources such as ‘paintings, fashion, theatre and literature’ as they all have equally important parts to play in the production of the photoshoot and the idea process. An example of this was a Victorian photographers such as Julia Margaret Cameron as she turned ‘popular poems and literature’  into photographs by re-enacting them photographically in elaborate ‘Tableaux Vivants’

The Parting of Lancelot and Guinevere (1874) - This was originally a poem

Not knowing what is staged and what is real gives Tableaux images ‘their power’ This is what makes the images so interesting as the view fights wit themselves to understand what the image is actually about and whether it is real or staged. The complex layers built into the photographs show many ‘twists and turns and variations’ that exist in the telling of stories and the deeper the viewer delves into the photograph itself the more they will get out of it.

The main and more significant difference between these two types of photography is that one is staged and creates a story and the other photographs real events and every day life, still holding a theme in mind.

Tableaux photography

Tableaux Photography

Tableaux is a style of photography where people are staged in a constructed environment and a pictorial narrative is conveyed often in a single image, or a series of images that often makes references to fables, fairy tales, myths, unreal and real events from a variety of sources such as paintings, film, theatre, literature and the media.

This type of photography offers a much more open-ended explanation, which allows the viewer to make a subjective judgement on the interpretation of the image. Tableaux photographs often tell a story, which could be created by a model posing for the camera, with theatrical props, costumes and dramatic lighting.

Tableaux Photography is mostly looked through a subjective lens, which allows the viewers to interpret the image in several different ways, creating their own reason for the images creation. I prefer images, which are subjective as I personally like the image of everyone seeing the image differently.


Artist Reference– Anna Gaskell vs Hannah Starkey 

These are two artists who either looks at childhood or teenage years in the theme of memories or fairy tales either using literature or cinema photography to do so.

Anna Gaskell

https://www.guggenheim.org/artwork/artist/anna-gaskell

She was born in Des Moines, Iowa, her early photography was based on self-portraits. However, soon she began photographing girls at they acted out stories, embodying characters from Alice in Wonderland. These images are seen in her series of “wonder” and “Override” where groups of girls dressed in matching uniforms are shown in ambiguous and ominous situations.

These images are either from the series “Wonder” or “Override” they both explore a similar theme and relate in some way. She often takes a literary starting point in her photography, as they can see these photographs are all based on the story of Alice in Wonderland. Her frequently uses adolescent girls as her models within her photography. You can see that her photographs are carefully planned and staged as the environments used are ‘artificial’ as they only exist to be photographed.

Gaskell’s photos are taken as if they are taking the viewer through the events, which appear in Alice in Wonderland. In one of the photographs (untitled #9) a wet bar of soap has been dragged along a wooden floor. In another image later on (untitled #17) it appears again, forced into a girl’s mouth. This suspension of time and causality lends Gaskell’s images a remarkable ambiguity that she uses to evoke a vivid and dreamlike world.

The models in Gaskell’s photographs do not represent individuals, but act out the contradictions and desires of a single person. While their unity is suggested by their identical clothing, the mysterious and often cruel rituals they act out upon each other may be metaphors for disorientation and mental illness. In wonder and override, the character collectively evoked is Alice, perhaps lost in the Wonderland of her own mind, unable to determine whether the bizarre things happening to her are real or the result of her imagination.


ANALYSIS:

This image uses the colour scheme of blue, yellow and green, the yellow stands out within the image and is exaggerated by the bleach blonde hair. There is artificial lighting coming from the models right hand bottom corner, which makes the models face look almost eery and spooky. She looks over her left shoulder as if she feels she always needs to watch her back, which is a scary idea this is displayed through the image. The model looks away from the camera and appears to not know it is there, as if it is a still shoot of a scene, which is moving.  Alice in Wonderland is very strange and unpredictable, which would make Alice feel cautious and apprehensive to what would happen next. She wears the colours, which are seen in the original Alice in Wonderland, which makes it clear which character she is trying to portray. Alice in Wonderland has a spine-chilling story line, which is not what we believed as children, in fact the story was about something a bit more disturbing.


The meaning behind Alice in Wonderland:

Alice was the daughter of the dean of Christ Church, she attended the Oxford college where Dodgson taught mathematics, and she wasn’t the only young girl he befriended. To the 21st Century mind, there is something that makes one deeply uneasy about this scenario. Though there is no evidence of anything untoward in Dodgson’s relationships, it’s hard not to view as suspect a grown man who enjoyed having his young playmates sit on his lap and pose for photographs, often under-dressed.

She begins to take drugs, which makes her feel uncomfortable in her body, which undergoes a series of extreme changes; her sense of her self becomes destabilised, leaving her uncertain of her own identity; she butts heads with authority and strives to understand seemingly arbitrary rules, the games that people around her play, and even death.

Since the 1960s, drug-lovers have read Alice’s antics as one big trip. The lyrics to Jefferson Airplane’s White Rabbit did a fair bit to cement the association: “Remember what the Dormouse said / Feed your head, feed your head”. From its heat-addled opening scene, there is a psychedelic vibe – besides all those pills, time moves erratically, and the grinning Cheshire Cat is here one minute, gone the next.

“You take the blue pill, the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.”

An article on what it’s about


Hannah Starkey

She was born in Belfast, and studied photography at the Royal College of Art. Her more recent images have an almost theatrical character, often depicting women in staged settings, for example with a Coca Cola in a pub or inside a public lavatory. She describes her work as “explorations of everyday experiences and observations of inner city life from a female perspective.”

These are all images from her series entitled “woman”, which focuses a woman’s perspective and put women front and center in her photographs. Her life influences her work greatly as she herself is female and her perception of what its like to be a female in our culture and therefore what the expectations are of the woman of this particular culture. She finds it interesting to look at the two different generations between herself and her daughter as expectations have changed, which has made them much more unrealistic. Therefore, are work explores what is expected from a young woman to an older woman.

This project took over 20 years to make and was slightly biographic as she revealed herself in some of these images as well as using models and strangers.  She explored this idea on a personal level but also on a socialite level. Her images show different types of woman and what would be their perception of being this sort of women.  In all the images they are all engaging in regular routines, showing the everyday life of women. Starkey captures these generic ‘in between’ moments of daily life with a sense of relational detachment. Her still images operate as discomforting ‘pauses’; where the banality of existence is freeze-framed in crisis point, creating reflective instances of inner contemplation, isolation, and conflicting emotion.

Through the staging of her scenes, Starkey’s images evoke suggestive narratives through their appropriation of cultural templates: issues of class, race, gender, and identity are implied through the physical appearance of her models or places.Starkey often uses composition to heighten this sense of personal and emotional disconnection, with arrangements of lone figures separated from a group, or segregated with metaphoric physical divides such as tables or mirrors.

Often titling her work as Untitled, followed by a generalised date of creation, her photographs parallel the interconnected vagueness of memory, recalling suggestions of events and emotions without fixed location or context. Her work presents a platform where fiction and reality are blurred, illustrating the gap between personal fragility and social construction, and merging the experiences of strangers with our own.

When asked about her photography being staged she answers:

“I control most elements of the image, however there’s an element I do not control and that is chance or luck. What happens when the shutter is open for that split second is where the magic happens.” 


ANALYSIS:

In this photograph the two women are sat in a bar/pub opposite each other, maybe mother and daughter.  The pub looks dark and grotty the only light coming in is from the window behind the table, which means it is natural light being used. The man focus of the image is the woman directly in the middle of the image, this is because the light is shining on her, which makes her the lightest part of the photograph, which is what we are usually attracted to the most. They are both from different generations, which is obvious through the different styles of hair and clothes. The younger girl is wearing what looks like a football top as she sits with her head tilted to the side, leaning on her hand, with a bored look on her. This could be because the older woman is talking too much and she is finding it boring and tedious, she is wearing a blue velvet dress, with vintage style earrings, smoking a cigarette. Both of the women’s hairstyles are completely different, which could be showing the difference in style or expectations of their generation. Going back to their clothing, the fact that the younger girl is wearing a football kit shows that society has changed as that would have been seen as boy or men clothing. ‘Tomboys’ are now socially acceptable in today’s society, this would have not been the case in the older women’s generation as this would have not been socially acceptable, which is shown through the way she is dressed, as she is dressed like a “middle class/higher class lady.” Overall, I feel this image is about the different generations and how the expectations of women have also changed with that.


Comparison:

By Hannah Starkey 

By Anna Gaskell

In both of these photographs a girl is the subject and therefore the main focus, they are both looking away from the camera with a particular expression on their faces showing their emotion. In the first photo its more of a casual setting as she sits in a bar with more natural lighting, which creates a spotlight on the girl in the centre of the photograph as the light comes through the window behind the subject. She has an almost bored or fed up look on her face, as if the older figure opposite her is boring her with a conversation she does not want to have.

This is different to the second photograph as the lighting is more dramatic as the light is artificial, which makes the image have a more sinister feel to the photograph. This creates shadows and dark parts of the image empathising the girls face and the second figures body in the right side of the image. She has a scared or frightened look on her face, while she looks over her shoulder to the figure to the right.

The mood of each image is completely different as one is telling a story through character and could be linked to fairytale, while another is showing a mood or a cinema shot through body language and facial expressions. However, they are both tackling the idea of portraying emotion through a photograph.


“Construct a childhood memory in a photograph.”

This photo was recreated from a childhood photograph, of me and my dad on holiday. I am sat on my dad’s shoulders, which is what I did a lot when I was younger as I was short and often got called mini or teeny by my teachers, which then turned into my nickname at school by my class mates. It was not done in a horrible way but I didn’t like being shorter than other people in my class and be classed as the smallest in my year group. My dad always put my on his shoulders so that I was taller than everyone else, making me feel happy that for that 5 minutes, I was no longer seen as the shortest person there. My dad told me not to worry about being the smallest and that I would grow ‘big and strong’ when I was old enough, being one of the tallest. I can’t describe the happiness I felt when being on his shoulders and I would beg him to let me be up there longer, which explains his bored face, he also looks a bit in pain, probably because I had been on his shoulders for that long. When I think of my childhood, I remember being really close to my dad, my dad would do anything to make me happy and we still to this day are still extremely close. I remember always going swimming with my dad on a Sunday and we would go for a walk and when my legs got tired I would get on his shoulders again.  This image reminds me that my dad has always been there for me, making sure I am the happiest I could be and reminds me of how close we have always been.

For this image, I edited it in photoshop by over laying the original photograph on top of the new photograph I had taken, which was a reenactment of the original photograph. Behind the original photograph you can see the shaded outline of the new photo I took on a self timer.  This represents how we have both changed over time, but we still have a close relationship and our bound is still just as strong.

Tableaux Photography

The origin of tableaux stemmed from the multiple translations from the French language meaning either picture, art board, board, slab, writing tablet, canvas or painting. The style of production originated from the again the French phrase ‘tableau vivant’, translating to ‘living picture’. Of course the early sources of tableaux  were paintings, particularly of weddings or other holy celebrations.

Image result for A Burial At Ornans

A Burial At Ornans was a painting constructed by Guastve Corbet, which further came to present a change in nineteenth centruy art. The piece holds a certain level of irony as the style of the image is of course that of a tableau, however, the image itself portrays the funeral of the painters great-uncle

Jean – Francois Chevrier was the first to use the term tableau in relation to a form of art photography, which began in the 1970s and 1980s in an essay titled “The Adventures of the Picture Form in the History of Photography” in 1989.

Jeff Wall is a Canadian photographer renowned for his cibachrome approach to photography and his tableaux productions. Wall’s tableaux work has ranged from 1996 to 2013.

Jeff Wall — Tableaux Pictures Photographs 1996–2013

Jeff Wall — Tableaux Pictures Photographs 1996–2013

Jeff Wall — Tableaux Pictures Photographs 1996–2013

Jeff Wall — Tableaux Pictures Photographs 1996–2013

Although Jeff Wall’s tableaux work also has the same basis of topic, all of his images have their own theme as they consist of completely different composites and colours. This coincides with how each photograph has its own story to tell.

Image result for jeff wall invisible man

Following the production of the movie ‘Invisible Man’, Jeff Wall decided to construct a tableaux image as he attained inspiration from it. In the film,  an African American man’s color renders him invisible and is forced to live recluse in an underground room wired with hundreds of electric lights, operated by power stolen from the city’s electric grid. The character reflects upon his social segregation flashbacks to his high school experience, depicting the racism still present in America despite moves to try counteract racial discrimination, for example the Civil Rights of 1964.

Jeff Wall’s image is a direct reference to Ralph Ellison’s production, meaning he has not much of a story to reveal for himself. A unique technique of using a story and meaning already invented and created and developing on it, almost acting as a sequel to the movie but in tableaux form.

In relation to the reenactment of a childhood memory in the form of tableaux, I thought it would be important to study the work of Hannah Starkey, a British photographer who specializes in staged settings of women in city environments.

Image result for hannah starkey

Starkey’s lighting seems to an interesting variable in her photographs as although we can clearly see the model, there is elements of shadow that cover her face, which links back to the ambiguity of the plain facial expression in environmental portraits. Note the light is all natural, which is a unique and organic feature of her photographs. When recreating a childhood memory, I would try to use as much natural light as possible.