ARTIST REFERENCE // MICHELLE SANK

MICHELLE SANK:

Michelle Sank was born in South Africa and has been living in the UK since 1987. Her photographs have been exhibited and published extensively in England, Europe, Australia and Mexico, South Africa and the U.S.A and are held in collections in the UK and the USA.

She has undertaken numerous commissions for prominent galleries and magazines in Europe and the USA. Her practice is concerned with the notion of encountering, collecting, and re-telling. She is interested in creating sociological landscapes, interplays of human form and location that are significant in their visual, sociological and psychological nuances. She has three published books to date: Becoming (Published by Belfast Exposed Photography and Ffotogallery,). The Water’s Edge: Women on the Waterfront (Published by Liverpool University Press,). The Submerged (Published by Schilt)

I wanted to look at the works of Michelle Sank because she came over to Jersey in 2013 and work with the Jersey Archilse project. She was a resident of the island for around 6 months and worked with the archives as well as the local citizens of jersey to created a series of photos which she continues with once she left jersey. Her project ‘In My Skin’ focused on capturing individuals who were under the age of 25 and had been challenging there body image. Although this doesn’t obviously relate to my project it relates in the way that she focused on young people challenging their freedoms to express the way they present their body and as im focusing on the second wave of feminism which looks at how women thought for the freedom to express their body and femininity there is a loose connection between the two projects.

She is also a modern day photographer which adds variety to my artist reference as i don’t only want to focus on how photographers in the seventies portrayed women, i want to developed my projected into looking at the freedoms and limitations of the modern day female. Therefore Michelle Sank’s works are hugely helpful to me as she looks at how /body image is one of the biggest limitations for individuals in the modern day. I think it is really interesting to also contrast between the different limitations that females are experiencing since the twentieth century. As limitation on the political front are less evident now days however females internal thoughts are limiting them as body confidence as social consensus in Western society today is particularly focused on physical beauty and achieving and maintaining the “perfect” face and body.  This constant pressure fed through the media has led to a growing number of young people becoming dissatisfied with themselves and trying different ways to achieve the ‘beautiful’. This desire for perfection has been largely disseminated through photographic imagery in magazines, adverts, television etc. In My Skin makes use of this image dissemination but turns it on its head showing a different side – the human stories behind the decisions of these young people to undergo the physical changes. In those transitioning it is about them achieving an inner beauty by finally freeing themselves from society’s expectations and becoming comfortable in their own skin.

Below is Sank’s Website which allows you to gain some further understanding of what her series ‘In My Skin’ is about aswell as view all the images in the series:

Official Website

The images below are ones that i selected as photographs which most link to my project. Both subjects are young females, possibly teenagers who have expressed to Michelle Sank that they have challenged their body images. I chose to analyse these images further because of the camera angles that Sank has used as well as the body position, stance and positioning of the model. The way they look at the camera is also very telling about who they are and engages the audience in the images more.

Hannah, 17, Botox

Michelle Sank seemed to state why she photographed each indivual, however i was unable to find why this particular teenager was used in her project, however she must have had some form of issue with her body which has led her to try and change it in a certain way. I chose this image because the way she is lying on the bed seems to portray that she is confident working with the camera and who she is. She is dressed up in a nice dress with her hair done and this may symbolize that she wants to present herself nicely and possibly likes the attention she receives from people when dressing in this way. The individual gives us an idea that she is uninhibited about having her image taking and that she is a confident female, this is the type of personality i want to capture in my images. I want to portray women with confidence and that they are strong as this is the freedom which i consider the suffragettes and the waves of feminism gained for women.

The image shows a young female lying across her bed in a red dress against white bed sheets, this may be to show her femininity but also her new found freedom to express her sexuality. The way she is lying is slightly suggestive and i noticed that this is similar to how a lot of females began to be photographed in the seventies. the use of colour works well in this image as the red stand out strongly against the predominately white background. The lighting that Michelle Sank uses is also notable. A lot of her images she focuses on using the natural light coming in from the individuals windows however if there is not enough bright lighting she takes a light along with her to her shoots and sets it up directing the light onto the individual she is photographing. In this image the direction of light is coming from behind and slighting the the right of Sank and is therefore illuminating the subject so we can see them in a clear, slightly harsh light, where the bed in the foreground o the image is near to being over exposed. Framing in this image is created by the whiteness of the bed sheets as it frames around the subject making her in red in the middle stand out almost dramatically and in the audience face, this may be because Sank is trying to replicate the individuals personality. She is also right in the centre of the image breaking the rule of thirds making the image a statement and putting the issue of young people challenging there body image in the audiences face.

FREEDOM AND LIMITATIONS // INSTAGRAM

Instagram is a mobile, desktop, and Internet-based photo-sharing application and service that allows users to share pictures and videos either publicly, or privately to pre-approved followers.

As the focus of women in the 1970’s has always been of interest to me and the women’s right movements i actually follow a few accounts on Instagram which regularly post images f women during the feminist protests in the 70’s aswell as how women where presented through images. There is also one account which posts images of females which are inspired by the 1970’s and the movements that occurred during this period. As this is extremely similar to the project which i am doing i managed to gain a huge amount of inspiration, which helped me too plan my next few shoots and give me ideas of the ways that i could present feminism and the decade i am focusing on. Below are some screenshots of my saved folder on Instagram which is where you can save certain images which you would like to revisit or have in a collection.

A lot of the photographs are head shots or face on shots of women looking into the camera with strong facial expression and expressing themselves as strong independent women who have broken away from the stereotypical idea of the ‘Stay at home mum’. There a big mix of styles of images in my inspiration collection, varying from documentary street photography to studio work, too capturing women in their natural locations such as there homes. These are all different styles which i would like to capture through my photography as i would like to show a diverse range of images which show young women in the present day as well as imitating the way women where presented in the 1970’s

 

 

ARTIST REFERENCE // GARY WINDOGRAND

The first retrospective in twenty-five years of work by Garry Winogrand (1928–1984)—the renowned photographer of New York City and of American life from the 1950s through the early 1980s—this exhibition brings together more than 175 of the artist’s most iconic images, a trove of unseen prints, and even Winogrand’s famed series of photos made at the Metropolitan Museum in 1969 when the Museum celebrated its centennial. It offers a rigorous overview of Winogrand’s complete working life and reveals for the first time the full sweep of his career.

Born in the Bronx, Winogrand did much of his best-known work in Manhattan during the 1960s, and in both the content of his photographs and his artistic style he became one of the principal voices of that eruptive decade. Known primarily as a street photographer, Winogrand, who is often associated with famed contemporaries Diane Arbus and Lee Friedlander, photographed with dazzling energy and incessant appetite, exposing some twenty thousand rolls of film in his short lifetime. He photographed business moguls, everyday women on the street, famous actors and athletes, hippies, politicians, soldiers, animals in zoos, rodeos, car culture, airports, and antiwar demonstrators and the construction workers who beat them bloody in view of the unmoved police. Daily life in postwar America—rich with new possibility and yet equally anxious, threatening to spin out of control—seemed to unfold for him in a continuous stream.

While Winogrand is widely considered one of the greatest photographers of the twentieth century, his overall body of work and influence on the field remain incompletely explored. He was enormously prolific but largely postponed the editing and printing of his work. The act of taking pictures was far more fulfilling to Winogrand than making prints or editing for books and exhibitions; he often allowed others to perform these tasks for him. Dying suddenly at the age of 56, he left behind proof sheets from his earlier years that he had marked but never printed, as well as approximately 6,600 rolls of film  that he had never seen, more than one-third of which he had never developed at all; these rolls of film were developed after his death.

Among Winogrand’s favorite subjects were women, and he described himself as being “compulsively interested in women” and having “compulsively photographed women.” A large part of Winogrand’s images in the collection of the MoCP form part of the Women are Beautiful portfolio (1981), which was initially published as a monograph in 1975. For the monograph, John Szarkowski, curator of photography at The Museum of Modern Art in New York at the time, selected eighty-five images featuring women from hundreds of photographs by Winogrand. The resulting book offers a random collection of women caught on the street, in parks, getting into cars, at parties, marching in parades, skinny-dipping in ponds, etc. The images capture not only Winogrand’s attraction to the women he photographed, but also the styles, activities, gestures, and energies pertaining to gender in the 1960s and 1970s, an era of transition during second-wave feminism and the sexual revolution. In the monograph and in the portfolio.

 “Whenever I’ve seen an attractive woman, I’ve done my best to photograph her. I don’t know if all the women in the photographs are beautiful, but I do know that the women are beautiful in the photographs.” – Windogrand

I love this image captured by Gary Windogrand, he compleatly captures the natural elegance and beauty of women in the 1970’s. His image can immediately be seen to link to the whole idea of female actresses emerging as being beautiful and subjects that are glamorous yet not highlighting women’s intelligence. However i do not think this is the purpose of Windogrand when taking this image. He loved to capture images of women, which is evident when he completed his series ‘Women are beautiful’ which is where this image is from. He shoots in a documentary style where he observes women in their day to day lives photographing there natural movements. As the images are unstaged they give us a more truthful representation of women in the 1970’s. This image does not have a caption or title as it came from the massive amount of films which were not developed until after his death, however we can make assumptions of what the image is of and the location. I think that this image was from a high end party or maybe even a movie premiere as the female protagonist is dressed very glamorously with a silk dress and pearls.  Windogrand may have been trying to capture how desirable actresses where i the 70’s by the fact that she is surrounded by many men in the image.

Furthermore, although Windogrand captures this series of images as documentary photography and on the spot images i think that he does consider the composition of the image before taking it. This is evident in this image especially as the female is placed just of the centre of the image which means that he wants to show her as the main focus of the image but follow the rule of thirds making this image aesthetically pleasing and composed correctly. He has also considered framing for this image as the focal point is surround by males in black which create a frame to the edge of the image and then in the center is the women in a white dress which further highlights her as the focal point as she is the area of the photo which your eye is immediately drawn too. This can also link into the way he has used contrast between light and dark tonal range to tell the story and portray his message. The dark suits which create the frame directly contrast with the lightness of her dress. Depth of field is also created in this image by the natural business of the situation. The men seem to be surrounding her creating framing but also adding depth of field to the image as they are slightly in front of her being the foreground of the image as well as being behind her creating the background and then the female in the middle is again shown to be the aspect Windogrand is highlighting. His clever composition is what attracted me to this image as he creates an artistically beautiful image as well as portraying the narrative of the role women began to play in the 1970’s.

Gary Windogrand series of images have widened my ideas of what i want to photograph and i am interested in maybe doing a documentary shoot where i use my film camera so i don’t know what images i have captured and just have to take one which is the right image. Documentary photography would add to my project in the way that it captures the young females of the twenty first century in a similar way to in the 1970’s where i could then compare how things have changed as well as how i subconsciously portray the role and freedoms of the modern day female in my images.

ARTIST REFERENCE // CINDY SHERMAN

CINDY SHERMAN

Cindy Sherman is a contemporary master of socially critical photography. She is a key figure of the “Pictures Generation,” a loose circle of American artists who came to artistic maturity and critical recognition during the early 1980s, a period notable for the rapid and widespread proliferation of mass media imagery. At first painting in a super-realist style in art school during the aftermath of American Feminism, Sherman turned to photography toward the end of the 1970s in order to explore a wide range of common female social roles, or personas. Sherman sought to call into question the seductive and often oppressive influence of mass-media over our individual and collective identities. Turning the camera on herself in a game of extended role playing of fantasy Hollywood, fashion, mass advertising, and “girl-next-door” roles and poses, Sherman ultimately called her audience’s attention to the powerful machinery and make-up that lay behind the countless images circulating in an incessantly public, “plugged in” culture. Sexual desire and domination, the fashioning of self identity as mass deception, these are among the unsettling subjects lying behind Sherman’s extensive series of self-portraiture in various guises. Sherman’s work is central in the era of intense consumerism and image proliferation at the close of the 20th century.

Recalling a long tradition of self-portraiture and theatrical role-playing in art, Sherman utilizes the camera and the various tools of the everyday cinema, such as makeup, costumes, and stage scenery, to recreate common illusions, or iconic “snapshots,” that signify various concepts of public celebrity, self confidence, sexual adventure, entertainment, and other socially sanctioned, existential conditions. As though they constituted only a first premise, however, these images promptly begin to unravel in various ways that suggest how self identity is often an unstable compromise between social dictates and personal intention.
Sherman’s photographic portraiture is both intensely grounded in the present while it extends long traditions in art that force the audience to reconsider common stereotypes and cultural assumptions, among the latter political satire, caricature, the graphic novel, pulp fiction, stand-up comedy (some of her characters are indeed uncomfortably “funny”), and other socially critical disciplines.
Sherman’s many variations on the methods of self-portraiture share a single, notable feature: in the vast majority of her portraits she directly confronts the viewer’s gaze, no less in the case of posed sex dolls, as though to suggest that an underlying penchant for deception is perhaps the only “value” that truly unites us.
Long assumed to be a medium that “mirrors” reality with precision, photography in Sherman’s hands simultaneously constructs and critiques its apparent subject. In this sense, Sherman’s unique form of portrait photography functions, in part, as a sign for the subjective nature of all human intelligence and the unstable nature of visual perception.

in 1977 Cindy Sherman began capturing images of women which became one of her most world renound projects,  “Untitled Film Stills.” Over three years, the series grew to comprise a total of seventy black-and-white photographs. Taken as a whole, the this series of images resembles publicity pictures made on movie sets of stereotypical female roles inspired by 1950s and 1960s Hollywood, film noir, B movies, and European art-house films. But while the characters and scenarios may seem familiar Cindy Sherman’s “Stills” are entirely fictitious; they represent clichés (career girl, bombshell, girl on the run, vamp, housewife, and so on) that are deeply embedded in the cultural imagination. While the pictures can be appreciated individually, much of their significance comes in the endless variation of identities from one photograph to the next. As a group they explore the complexity of representation in a world saturated with images, and refer to the cultural filter of images (moving and still) through which we see the world.

FURTHER RESEARCH:

I got hold of a couple books containing Cindy Sherman’s works as well as the book below which contained an essay analyzing her works, the way she created photographs and her purpose for taking mages of women in the style that she did.

In the book above, Retrospective, different art critics look at pieces of work by Cindy Sherman attempting to discuss them from a non objective way. Amelia Jones, who writes the ‘Tracing the Subject’ essay in the book initally considers how Cindy Shermans work is ‘A feminist negotiation of the male gaze’. She considers how cindy sherman has looked a her subjects from a male point and view and then views context on the theory of ‘The Projective Eye’ which in the 1970’s was a way in which the male could be seen to be looking at the female. There are three ways in the projective eye theory that of which the victims take their place relative to it. The first being that they internalize the penislike eye (meaning the photography considers what a males viewpoint and perspective would be. The second being that they aggressively enact themselves according to the rules that have been established and then they confuse its potentially disempowering effects by throwing the gaze back at the viewer.

Performing gender

“the adoption of feminimity as a sign of the ways in which particular subjects are aloowed to experience themselves produces the subject as an object trapped within the inexorable purview of the projective gaze.” I consider what Jone’s is saying her to be that no matter whether male or female, as soon as they are stood in front of the lens they are subject to the eye of the photographer and they will be represented in the way that their projective eye sees. This links to the idea of objectification and how no photograph can really be holey authentic. However in consideration to the role of female and how females are presented during the 1970’s and 80’s they were more than not subject to the idea of the male gaze which Sherman considers a lot during her work especially when looking at her untitled film stills series which was created to resemble movies sets where women where sexualised. Jones goes on to consider the Untitled Films Still series by Sherman saying how it is obvious that she is trying to show feminimity through her images however it still contains the generic structures of the gaze. A really interesting point which i found when reading this essay was that Jones says “her entire body of work’s performance of the sexual subject as an effect of the other.”. I think that this is notable to consider when looking at other artists and photographers throughout my project that images may only ever be subjective and sexualised because of the eye of the creator.

IMAGE ANALYSIS

I chose to analyse this image because the subject that Cindy Sherman was photographing was portraying a sense of uninhibition (expressing one’s feelings or thoughts unselfconsciously and without restraint.) and this is why i was initially drawn to Shermans work. Her models in her series ‘untitled film stills do not seem to be shy in front of the camera they are focusing on strong confident women who are embracing there beauty. ‘Untitled Film Stills’ was a key series of works in showing women’s femininity and before the 1970’s women’s bodies hadn’t really been revealed in front of the camera. I also chose this image as i really liked the strong pose and the way the subjects body is positioned as well as an interesting camera angle being used.

The image is of a young women lying across white bed sheets holding her hair brush in her underwear and night robe. The image, taken in 1977, is taken in the style of the way actresses were represented. Actresses were partly negatively represented in the 1970’s as they were shown as beautiful women who were sex symbols and adored. However they were only portrayed as this, they were not shown to be intelligent or independent women and i think that this is conveyed through Sherman’s image #6. Her close of portrait of the subject breaks the rule of thirds as the subject takes up nearly the whole screen however i think that this is clever composition as it keeps her as the main focus point of the image and there is nothing taken away from the subject.  The composition complements the framing of the image as the subject reaches each edge of the image so the framing has been captured around where the subject is getting her to just film the frame. Colour tones and contrast play a key part in creating this image. The nearly pure black of the hair brush and bra stand out really strongly against the the white sheets and her skin tone. I think that this may have purposely been set up as these two items are very feminine  objects. The angles that Sherman’s uses are also key to analyse as she does not photograph from a typical eye level mid zoom shot. She has been more experimental with the perspectives that she captures of the females she focused on. Her she is above the subject looking down on them, this could be a connotation of men looking down on women or us looking into the lives of female movie stars in the 1970’s. It is hard to figure out but i think that the lighting in this image may have been coming from a big open window on a bright day which providing a lot of light into the room making the scene well lit with no shadow occurring.

The image relates closely to the context of my project which is Freedom and limitations which i have refined down to being females freedoms and limitations in the 1970’s. ‘Untitled Film Stills’ being some of the most famous feminist photographs are taken are a key starting point for me to look at the understand the status of women during the time period of the 1970’s and has given me some initial ideas of how i am going to represent the femininity of young women and how they can express it in a tasteful way.

EXPERIMENTATION:

I decided to do an initial experimentation shoot which took place during lesson time where i used the school library to experiment taking images with natural lighting. As images in the 1970’s were predominantly captured in black and white: lighting, tonal range, and contrast where very important to making a successful image. Therefore i needed to practices and get some experience in the amount of natural light i would need and the setting and clothing colours which would need to be used in shoots to create well contrasted images without them being over exposed or under exposed

I took inspiration from Cindy Sherman’s image taken in 1978,from her ‘untitled film stills’ series #13

Doing this shoot helped my understanding of the lighting needed and they angles which i wanted to focus on creating in my images. I struggled to get the right amount  of contrast and as it can be seen in the above images which i edited the tonal range was correct.  The outcome of the images was that they just looked a bit flat and from looking at the images i came to the conclusion that it was because i was photographing with the light behind the subject as well as the background being white, this meant that the white areas of the images where too white and the blacks in the images when changed to black and white where too pure black. However this shoot was helpful in understanding this and i now have a greater understanding of how to position the subject and the camera to get the portraits that i want.

 

 

 

FREEDOM AND LIMITATIONS // FILM THEORY

THE VISUAL PLEASURE – LAURA MULVEY

In Laura Mulvey’s ‘Visual pleasure and narrative Cinema’ she explores the theory of psychoanalysis and how it can be used as a ‘political weapon’ to show how the patriachic subconscious of society shapes our cinema itself as well as the audience’s film watching experience. According to Mulvey the cinematic text is organized along lines that are corresponding to the cultural subconscious with is essentially patriarchic. Mulvey argues that the popularity of Hollywood films is determined and reinforced by preexisting social patterns which have shaped the fascinated subject. And this is why i was drawn to this piece of work to enriched my understanding of why Cindy Sherman may have created her Film stills in the way that she did.  Mulvey explores the methodology of cinematic means of expression of how the female and the male are represented as well as looking into how the formation of subjectivity is created. Mulvey helps us to understand how films produce the meaning that they did in the 1970’s. Mulvey’s main argument in “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” is that Hollywood narrative films use women in order to provide a pleasurable visual experience for men. The narrative film structures its gaze as masculine. The woman is always the object of the reifying gaze, not the bearer of it.

The way that she deciphers the role of the female as the surrogate, highlights the role of women in the 1970’s. She discusses how women are in films purely for the sexual pleasure of the male on the screen with them as well as the audience. Men are portrayed as the hero through the cameras movement and the angles which are presented on the screens. The main subject of the first half of her essay is the theme of ‘scopophilia’ which is the sexual pleasure from watching others when they are naked. Mulvey states that this is the importance of the female in cinema. In her essay she states that ‘Freud isolated Scopophilia as one of the component instincts of sexuality which exists as drives quite independently of the erotogenic zones.’ This highlights the use of people as objects in films. Males, who play the role of the protagonist, tell the narrative of the film whilst women are simplified to objects of erotica. She further states that ‘The cinema satisfies a primordial wish for pleasurable looking’ – stating that the purpose of films were to provide satisfaction and for this to be provided women were used. The role of women in Hollywood an be seen as sexual objects where the ‘female figures is styled accordingly’. Women in cinema in the 1970’s were dehumanised and feminized compositional features to the narrative. Often, it’s women’s bodies as sexualized objects, women as problems to conquer not people to interact with. For example, Mulvey notes that many “classic” Hollywood films show women’s body parts for example a leg, but not women as whole beings–the camera literally butchers women into their most tasty, delectable cuts. Cutting up women, objectifying them, that’s what we like, aesthetically, in classic Hollywood cinema.

After reading and analysing this article, picking out key aspects which are relevant to my project, i thought that it would be useful to actually watch from films which were produced in the 1970’s to see for myself how they have been portrayed and if i can highlight key points in the film where women are shown as objects and that there role in the film has been sexualized. I have decided to pick movies which have beautiful women who at the time where huge film stars in Hollywood and were very popular with the male gender.

Still grieving over the accidental death of their daughter, Christine (Sharon Williams), John (Donald Sutherland) and Laura Baxter (Julie Christie) head to Venice, Italy, where John’s been commissioned to restore a church. There Laura meets two sisters (Hilary Mason, Clelia Matania) who claim to be in touch with the spirit of the Baxters’ daughter. Laura takes them seriously, but John scoffs until he himself catches a glimpse of what looks like Christine running through the streets of Venice. – Wikipedia

Throughout the movie, it is hard to decipher who is the protagonist of the film as both have n equal role in the movie. However it is evident who is the stronger role in the relationship. This is the male actor played by Donald Sutherland who plays the dad of the young girl that unfortunately dies right at the beginning of the film. John seems to be slightly in control of his wife, making her seem crazy when she is fascinated by the two sisters who say that they are in touch with her daughters spirit. One scene definitely catches the eye of the audience and does seem to be slightly out of place with the narrative of the film and this is were i believe that Laura Mulveys theme for her essay can be noted in this film. Around half way through there is a nude scene where John and Laura begin to role around on the bed which turn into an erotic sex scene. Her role in the film seem to immediately change and she is now playing the role of the sexualized object that Mulvey describes. Through fast movie camera angles the audience is drawn in through the ‘graze’ of this scene, and as many cinematic presentations did during the 1970’s it provides scopophila for those watching.

Furthermore, the analysis of film theory and watching an actual film has enriched my knowledge and understanding of the way females where portrayed in the seventies and eighties and provides an understanding for the need of the second wave of feminism. In my photography i am going to try and portray how women were presented during this time, through my stills which will create the sense that women are feminine and sexual however i will try to do this without exploiting them and simplifying them to sexulaized objects.

Abstract Artist study

Wassily Kandinsky 1866-1944

“Color is a means of exerting direct influence on the soul.”-Wassily Kandinsky

Kandinsky contributed massively to the abstract expressionism movement as one of the pioneers of abstract modern art. Kandinsky believed abstraction offered the possibility for profound, spiritual expression and that copying from the surrounding environments prevented. He was inspired to create art that that connected with people on a spiritual level, innovating a pictorial language that loosely related to the real world and expressed largely about the artists inner experiences. For Kandinsky painting wasdeeply spiritual . He sought to convey profound spirituality and the depth of human emotion through a universal visual language of abstract forms and colors that transcended cultural and physical boundaries. Kandinsky viewed himself as a prophet. He viewed non-objective, abstract art as the main way to allow someone to have  a deep emotional connection.

Kandinsky viewed music as the most supernatural form of non-objective art. He strove to produce similarly object-free, spiritually rich paintings that represent sounds and emotions. The painting below is one of these paintings. Kandinsky has used color, structure, form, composition, dimension and shade to convey and show the spiritual experience he had when listening to a piece of music.

Music is also a large influence in my work. I often edit images while listening to music and sometimes even take photos while listening to music. This often affects the mood of the photo as the music effects my mood and the way I edit a certain photo. Whether that’d be increasing the dark’s or lights, increasing the saturation and vibrance or making the image black and white. I understand the mindset and mostly agree with what Kandinsky says about music. How it affects the soul deeply and how it is a huge influence. His careful composition of shapes and colors is something else I will use in my project. I want to take inspiration from this and carefully compose some my images to show different shades and shapes. Kandinsky was one of the first artist’s that completely allowed the spiritual, surreal emotions to be placed on a canvas. His work showed the freedom to express himself. It showed art without barriers, how art doesn’t need to show something physical like nature and trees to give a sense of spirituality. His art was a gateway for other artists to explore the freedom of painting and capturing their subconscious thoughts, their moods and feelings.

Image result for KandinskyKandinsky-Composition VIII, 1923

The painting above is one of those that has been heavily influenced by music. It features many circles, straight lines, squares, triangles and colors. As you can see it looks like a mixture of different shapes and colors almost like an organised mess. To me the lines that subsequently turn into boxes look like a psychedelic, dream like piano keys. Other lines remind me of music notes and the circles are like the color of emotions and mood the artist was feeling when listening to the music. Kandinsky is clearly trying to show the music and his thoughts through the picture. I am only attempting to intepret what the picture means. However, I do not think we need to know what it means as it is clearly an emotional response to piece of music.

Specification///Color filters///Planning shoot 1

In previous years studying photography, I have been inspired by many other photographers. Due to my focus on color it has reminded me of my previous study of James Welling. James welling takes photos of landscapes using different colored filters to change the image (as shown on the left).  Below is a photo that I did a year ago trying to emulate that same effect (one on the right). I filtered the image digitally unlike James Welling who did it manually using real filters. I’d like to explore the idea of filtering and using different colors to convey certain moods in a photo.

One of my largest strengths in photography, I would say is photographing people and faces. I’d like to do this but use filters just as my chosen artist has. Welling has never tackled portraiture but I think with these effects and good portraits would make a good photo. Overall I am exploring color and it’s link with faith and spirituality. When I hear the word spirituality it is hard to image that without people. The belief I have in God massively involves people. It is completely focused on the relationship with God and people. For me personally, if I am going to take photos that correspond with spirituality it needs to include the people. I have studied other artists in this project and focused mainly on the art movement Abstraction. Abstract Expressionism focused on giving the viewer a sense of transcendence just using color and shapes.  I would like to focus on close-ups of a persons face turning there face into shapes and shadows, turning them into a figure that you can barely recognize or not recognize at all. This is similar to the experimentation shoots I did early in the project as shown below. Instead I will use colored filters to add another aspect to the photo.

I have found this blog post on lomography.com that shows you how to make your own color filters. I will use this to make my own and test this. If this does not work I will either buy some filters or do it digitally. The link to the blog post is below.

https://www.lomography.com/magazine/181536-make-your-own-color-filter

Practise Photoshoot w/ Lucy

On Saturday 10th March, I carried out my first practise/experiment shoot with Lucy as my model for the day. I based my photoshoot at Les Quennevais Estate where there are many opportunities to capture my subject in an urban environment as the area is surrounded by maisonettes, apartment buildings and garages all within close proximity of each other and so I saw it is as the perfect opportunity to begin my project and I intend to re-visit this location again with another of my models.

From the shoot., I can take many positives but also many negatives and ways I can improve for next time however, I am pleased  there were weaknesses in the shoot as this gives me a basis of which to judge on how to better my performance of my next shoot on Wednesday 14th March (today).


This shoot was a very successful and useful photoshoot as I have managed to retrieve several positives outcomes in terms of edits; I have edited my best images – this being around 30 images out of the 330 I took and I did this on Adobe Lightroom as it is a very easy software to import, edit and export images with. Using this software allowed me arrange my images into contact sheets and it also allowed me to reject any images I did not like or were not of a good compositional quality and I was also able to put aside and rate images that were a success and that I intend to use.

In terms of the actual day of the photoshoot, it was a perfect day for me to take photos. The weather was perfect – it was sunny and this was the perfect light for my shoot considering I was working solely with natural light – the clear sky and sun provided perfect lighting for the afternoon and this in-turn benefited the final outcomes because the colours were very warm and this complemented Lucy’;s makeup and I was able to get very clear and crisp shots using my new lens. However, I am aware that on my future shoots, the weather will be very varying and I may not get the best weather conditions and because of this I may have to postpone any shoots where I deem it is necessary. As well, it is likely that I will be shooting after school hours at about 4pm and I need to take into consideration that the lighting may also not be great as the sun will soon be going down so will have to work around this to get the best results.

I will discuss later on in this post about the location and why I chose it as well the problems I had using my camera and how this affected the final results. As well I will comment ton my edits and my reasoning behind my choice of images and why I edited them very subtly with the intention just to enhance any colours that needed lifting or to crop any images where the composition/framing was not the best.

Contact Sheets

These are all the contact sheets from the shoot which I have created using Adobe Bridge. Creating these contact sheets gave me the ability to view all images in an orderly fashion all in one place and from this I was able to roughly mentally discard of any images I was not happy with.

Contact Sheet 1
Contact Sheet 2
Contact Sheet 3
Contact Sheet 4
Contact Sheet 5
Contact Sheet 6
Contact Sheet 7

Once I had created my contact sheets, I was then able to import all my images into Adobe Lightroom to begin making a shortlist of my favourite images and begin editing them from this step onwards.

On this software, I was able to make a selection of my best images and discard any  images that were not up to the standards of the others. From 330 images, it was quite difficult to narrow this down to a smaller array of images but at the same time it was quite easy because I was able to decipher easily between the successful images and weaker images; this being because most of my images were out of ficus and I was immediately able to understand the reason for this fault.

Because this photoshoot was the first time I was using my new 50mm fixed lens, I was not completely aware of the results of I was going to get from it as I was not sure on the right settings to use for different shots. Because it is a fixed lens and has a much lower f/stop of f1.4, I was very keen to use this feature as it is perfect  for portraits shots where you want to focus on the subjects face and isolate them from the background in which they stand. I was using this throughout the shoot and kept my camera aperture between f/1.4 and f/3.6 for the majority of the time, rarely switching to much higher aperture which I needed to do. On top of this, I was often standing to far away from the subject for the camera to actually focus on anything in the frame and this is what the cause was for a large range of my shots being out of focus and I now know how to improve upon this for my next shoot where I will be more cautious of the f/stop I am using for specific shots.

On Adobe Lightroom, it gives me the ability to rate each image out of a star rating of 5. From all my successful frames and after editing them all how I wish, I did exactly this and rated all the images I had gathered into this one place to allow to understand my best ones and the weaker ones.

2 Stars 

These are the edits which I have rated 2 stars because although they are still good images, they are my strongest ones and I would not be happy using them as finals if I was to keep these images as finals for the overall project.

3 Stars

For the following images I have given them a rating of 3 stars because I felt that they were a little better than the images above but still not the standard of my other edits. Furthermore, the edits below are other variations of the better shots that I have rated 5 stars later on in the post. Some of them are from the same area which we based a few of the shots and I have still edited them but have not out them in the 5 star rating because they are weaker variations of similar range of shots. However, the first two are still one of my favourites from the whole shoot and especially out of the photographs rated 4 stars because of the colour provided by the blue garage door behind Lucy.

The images following these two are also other variations of the better versions of the mini shoot we based on the road near Les Quennevais School where Lucy is seen on the road/pavement posing in front of a set of apartments on the green area behind her; but I still feel these images are strong and worth showing.

Also, most of the images I am showing work as a mini sequence if they were taken in close succession to each other and frame similar actions in the image and these would be obvious.

5 Stars

Below are my best images; the ones which I have rated 5 stars because of their quality and they are my favourite because of this.

In these images, I have also included a few images that do not frame Lucy and instead are images of landscape/environment we were surrounded by and where I was taking my images. I decided to do this and intend to do this throughout my perfect in all other shoots to provide consistency but more importantly, give the project something more that just portraits – it will fragment the structure of portraits and divide these up to give the audience a break to digest other images bit it will also provide a really effective look and a a basis for me to structure my other subject based images. It will show a different view to what is shown in the images that has a heavy focus on faces and subjects and will instead focus on admiring the beauty that is provided by a range of environments where I am basing the shoots.

On Adobe Lightroom, I was also able to narrow down my edits even further to the ones I would likely use in the magazine end product and the ones shown below would be the selection I would again have to narrow down even further to leave me with just 5 images that I would be happy to show in my magazine. In real magazine publications of fashion coverage, a photographer/editor would only have room to select between 5 and 1- images, if that for the final cut as you need to keep the audiences interests hooked and this is easily done with a good handful of effective images. I was able to colour code the shortlist of edits I selected that I believe would work in a magazine whilst taking into account pairs of photos that could work and trying top include a range of portraits and landscapes as well as close ups and wide shots. Below is a primary screen of the selection process and the final selection of images to choose from for the final cut.

The yellow colour coded images represent the edits I may use and these are ones I am insure on in terms of if they would actually work in the magazine and although they are goof images I feel they work well, I have chosen to select, with a green colour code, the bets images that would look most effective in a magazine when put together, however, this distribution between the green and yellow images may change later on as I may decide to remove some green ones and replace these with some yellow ones.

Wabi-sabi project // sea shoot

Within my personal project I plan to do many shoots to capture the insignificant events of day to day, however in a detailed and abstract way. The initial scene that I decided to start with was the sea. However I didn’t want to simply capture the whole scene, I wanted to fragment the environment and try to frame specific details that no body notices.

The shoot was done at Green Island beach at high tide so I could capture the water against the rocks. They shoot was done at around two in the afternoon and on a sunny day so that the lighting was good and clear. Here are the original images from the photoshoot.

I wanted to edit the best images from the shoot that really show what I wanted to capture.

FREEDOM AND LIMITATIONS // MANIFESTO

What is a Manifesto?

a public declaration of policy and aims, especially one issued before an election by a political party or candidate.

A manifesto is a published verbal declaration of the intentions, motives, or views of the issuer, be it an individual, group, political party, government or an artistic movement. In etymology (the study of the origin of words and the way in which their meanings have changed throughout history), the word manifesto  is derived from the Italian word manifesto, itself derived from the Latin manifestum, meaning clear or conspicuous.

Some of the  most well known manifestos to people in the United Kingdom are political manifestos, the three main parties; Labour, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats were the parties in the last election in 2017.

Jersey also has a Manifesto, which is called ‘Reform Jersey Manifesto’. Below is a link to the Manifesto that the Deputy in the states assembly presented in 2016 as the ‘MANIFESTO – 2016’ Senatorial By-election

Reform Jersey Manifesto


Examples of other manifesto’s:

  • 1 The Bible and the Ten Commandments.
  • 2 The US Declaration of Independence.
  • 3 Martin Luther King’s I Have a Dream speech.
  • 4 The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
  • 5 Apple Ad: Here’s to the Crazy Ones.
  • 6 Andre Breton’s Surrealist Manifesto.

  • FEMINISM MANIFESTO’S:
EXAMPLE OF A MANIFESTO

The manifesto has been an important genre for feminist writers because the form enables women’s voices to be heard at their most provocative, independent, irreverent, and demanding. Feminist manifestos are often short and pointed declarations of identity and politics that use radical rhetoric to upend the status quo of gender and sex. Whether they take the form of letters, brochures, pamphlets, or even full-length books, feminist manifestos try to change reality by using the power of words to resist male domination and to envision women’s liberation. There were many feminist manifesto’s that occurred during my focused time period of second wave feminism, such as: ‘The Women identified Women’ written by a radical lesbian formation as well as Valerie Solanas’s 1967 SCUM Manifesto. The 1960s and ‘70s witnessed the creation of some the most iconic feminist manifestos, thanks to renewed global and local women’s liberation movements.

However, during research i came across a feminist manifest from 1991 which caught my eye and highlighted how radical manifestos can be. I watched the short clip which was created around the riot grrrl manifesto and thought this would be an interested example of how radical feminist were and the protests that they were making to continue their fight for rights throughout the waves of feminism.

  “Grrrl Love and Revolution:  Riot Grrrl NYC”  (Women Make Movies, 2012)


The Riot Grrrl Manifesto:

BECAUSE us girls crave records and books and fanzines that speak to US that WE feel included in and can understand in our own ways.

BECAUSE we wanna make it easier for girls to see/hear each other’s work so that we can share strategies and criticize-applaud each other.

BECAUSE we must take over the means of production in order to create our own moanings.

BECAUSE viewing our work as being connected to our girlfriends-politics-real lives is essential if we are gonna figure out how we are doing impacts, reflects, perpetuates, or DISRUPTS the status quo.

BECAUSE we recognize fantasies of Instant Macho Gun Revolution as impractical lies meant to keep us simply dreaming instead of becoming our dreams AND THUS seek to create revolution in our own lives every single day by envisioning and creating alternatives to the bullshit christian capitalist way of doing things.

BECAUSE we want and need to encourage and be encouraged in the face of all our own insecurities, in the face of beergutboyrock that tells us we can’t play our instruments, in the face of “authorities” who say our bands/zines/etc are the worst in the US and

BECAUSE we don’t wanna assimilate to someone else’s (boy) standards of what is or isn’t.

BECAUSE we are unwilling to falter under claims that we are reactionary “reverse sexists” AND NOT THE TRUEPUNKROCKSOULCRUSADERS THAT WE KNOW we really are.

BECAUSE we know that life is much more than physical survival and are patently aware that the punk rock “you can do anything” idea is crucial to the coming angry grrrl rock revolution which seeks to save the psychic and cultural lives of girls and women everywhere, according to their own terms, not ours.

BECAUSE we are interested in creating non-heirarchical ways of being AND making music, friends, and scenes based on communication + understanding, instead of competition + good/bad categorizations.

BECAUSE doing/reading/seeing/hearing cool things that validate and challenge us can help us gain the strength and sense of community that we need in order to figure out how bullshit like racism, able-bodieism, ageism, speciesism, classism, thinism, sexism, anti-semitism and heterosexism figures in our own lives.

BECAUSE we see fostering and supporting girl scenes and girl artists of all kinds as integral to this process.

BECAUSE we hate capitalism in all its forms and see our main goal as sharing information and staying alive, instead of making profits of being cool according to traditional standards.

BECAUSE we are angry at a society that tells us Girl = Dumb, Girl = Bad, Girl = Weak.

BECAUSE we are unwilling to let our real and valid anger be diffused and/or turned against us via the internalization of sexism as witnessed in girl/girl jealousism and self defeating girltype behaviors.

BECAUSE I believe with my wholeheartmindbody that girls constitute a revolutionary soul force that can, and will change the world for real.


MY MANIFESTO:

Make photo’s of:

  1. A Feminist
  2. Adolescents exploring their sexuality
  3. Women expressing their Femininity
  4. Women being exploited – similar to actresses in the 1970’s
  5. Women where the rule of technicality is broken (grainy/blurred)
  6. Portraits with strong facial expression and stance