Here is the link to the final edit of my photo book, Wabi Sabi.
rinko kawauchi // photo book analysis // illuminance
Illuminance is a series by Rinko Kawauchi about focusing on the tiny gestures and details throughout our day to day lives. She explores the extraordinary in the insignificant things that we would normally ignore or not even notice. All her images within her series contain this spiritual, unique style that she creates effortlessly. She has a feminine touch that you can see in the soft, pastel colours throughout the book. The photobook, Illuminance was published in 2011 and costs £40 to purchase. The form and functions of the book is the first thing we think about when seeing the book. It is produced as a cloth bound book using Japanese binding to hold it together. The book has a material texture too it because of the use of the cloth cover. This effect makes the book much more interesting because the cloth cover creates a rough texture for the hand to touch and feel. It gives the brain something extra to think about. The book is big and heavy to pick up because it contains hundreds of images by Kawauchi. The pages within the book are thick which improves the quality of the book and makes it feel and look more professional.
The book contains a spiritual and sublime aesthetic that runs throughout the whole series. Each image links to the next somehow. They flow in a sequence that symbolises a story or narrative that Kawauchi is trying to create. The images are about day to day events so the narrative Kawauchi is capturing could be in the time period of a day. She could be using the series of images to symbolise a series of events throughout a day. The images flow really well and link together in a good way because of the use of shape and colour. The pastel colours within each image is highlighted. Although some of the images presented next to each other are contrasting, its the contrast within them that works well together, such as the light and shadow and the line compared the circular shape.
Rinko Kawauchi has a very contemporary approach to her work. She breaks the rules within photography and creates her own unique perspective of the world. She has an unusual way of framing and she also uses symmetry and patterns to add to her complex series. Her images are very bright and contain a feminine touch which is delicate. As a viewer of the photobook I can tell that Kawauchi adds her own personality and emotion into each image.
Rinko Kawauchi is a Japanese photographer and I believe you can see this in her work. Japan is a very spiritual culture and they care a lot for the body and soul. They view things very differently to the western world. Everything is seen to contain a spirit and an element of beauty, no matter how insignificant it is. When looking through the photobook I can see Kawauchi’s point if view and imagine looking at the image through her mind. She sees more then just a tree or a reflection. She sees remarkable beauty. I think the name Illuminance suits this series really well because it is a word we would use to describe something bright, and something radiating beauty. This is how she describes the objects and scenes she’s captured.
After researching more about the photo book illuminance I came across an article by lens culture about Rinko Kawauchi and her many series such as ‘Search for the Sun’, and Illuminance. The article contains a paragraph describing the series. “Inspired by the subtle aesthetic of wabi-sabi—a philosophy of reduction, modesty and the beauty of imperfection—these luminous images offer an enchanting gaze on the world around us.” Wabi Sabi is the name of my project which ties in well with my whole theme and research because Kawauchi herself was also inspired by the aesthetic Wabi Sabi.
final print // layout
The images below are the final edits that I’ve chosen to display. I plan to present them in groups of six based on a certain theme. The first set of images will be printed out size A3 because I want to show all the details within them very clearly. I’ve chosen the images based on their colour and form and how interesting they each are. The first six work really well as a group because of the contrasting colours of the cool blues and the warm reds and oranges. The different shapes and textures also well work together, such as the tiny square shapes in the top right image compared to the large abstract shape of the clouds. Each of the diagonal corner images work really well together because of the colours within them. The warm colours of the orange and the cool colours of the purple and brought out.
The second set of six is of the body. I will be presenting them in this order at size A5. I really like this combination because they are all different and similar at the same time. There’s tones of pink, purples and orange in each image. There is also a different tone and texture in each image with the use of shadow and shape. They flow well as a group and tell a unique story. They are all close ups of the human form, but they are highlighting a particular area such as the ear or the foot. My aim was to capture them and represent them in a way that hasn’t been done before. I used Rinko Kawauchi’s idea of highlighting the insignificance and thats what I’ve tried to achieve.
wabi sabi // shoot
This is a set of images taken at Queen’s Valley Reservoir. The images were taken during my film shoot. I didn’t take many images because I was mainly aiming to take film rather then images. However, when I saw something interesting and worth taking I did. I edited the best images to put into the photo book. I am very happy with the set of images that I managed to take. I edited the images using photoshop. I love the pale, pastel green that occurs throughout the images. It makes the set work really well together.
EXPERIMENTAL EDITS
As well as some simple edits I wanted to experiment with my images to make more artistic fine art edits. For one of the experimental edits I used one of my sky images as a background. I wanted to incorporate my sky image with my image of the water drop on the blade of grass. They are both really good images by themselves, but I wanted to combine them to see what It would look like.
For the second experimental edit I wanted to incorporate my idea of using film as a backdrop for an image. I used my film clip of the flowers because It works well with image of the flower. I edited both of the clips into black and white because I think it makes the clip much more powerful. The shapes and the tones become much more highlighted without the colour.
COMPARISON
After doing this photo shoot I came across this image by Rinko Kawauchi that has a very similar theme to this series by me. Within the image she is focusing on two blades of grass with a spiders web hanging from them. On the blade’s of grass there’s also water drops on them which creates an extra dimension to the scene which makes it more interesting, and visually pleasing….
MINE
RINKO KAWAUCHI
Artist References – David Bailey / William Klein / Wolfgang Tillmans (Fashion History)
David Bailey
David Bailey is a portrait photographer that has shaped and formed the way artists in his footsteps photograph – he is one of the most famous contemporary portrait photographer known for his ability to capture a subject so truly in black and white.
The Visual Artists on David Bailey: “considered one of the pioneers of contemporary photography, David Bailey is credited with photographing some of the most compelling images of the last five decades. He first rose to fame making stars of a new generation of models including Jean Shrimpton and Penelope Tree. Since then his work has never failed to impress and inspire critics and admirers alike, capturing iconic images of legends such as: The Rolling Stones, the Kray twins, Damien Hirst and Kate Moss, these simple yet powerful black and white images have become a genre in their own right.”
Looking at the work of Bailey is will be vital in ensuring I can create real and true portrait images because form looking a his work, I will be able to study the way he captures a subject using different facial expression and body positioning. Bailey often uses different shot types such as close ups or medium shots that include the models abdominal. Bailey is known for using plain white backgrounds as backdrops for his shots and then dresses each model he shoots in dark clothes that will deliberately contrast this white background to allow the black and white film to work to its full effect and provide that heavy contrast he is known for capturing between the subject and the background – making the subject so defined and at the forefront of the frame – as they should be. I aim to take inspiration from the way Bailey captures close ups so well in his photoshoots and will attempt to do this in my own because I believe that close ups are the most expressive because this is when the audience feel the closest to the subject and can see the intricate details on their face. As well, Bailey will tell his subjects to mostly keep a straight face for most of the time and to look directly in to the cameras lens in order to capture their personality in the best way.
Furthermore, it is the little touches that Bailey implements into his work that makes it so expressive and unique – in the mages below, you can notice how each subject has their mouth open ever so slightly and this is likely intended and has been instructed and directed by Bailey.
However, Bailey uses a studio on all shoots and takes advantage of his access to a professional studio to interact with his subjects on personal level to direct them fully. Because Bailey photographed most predominantly and at his peak in the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s, street fashion photography was unknown and unheard of because photographers were so comfortable with photographing in a studio environment where factors such as lighting, interaction with the model and background were much more controllable by the photographer. Street photography relied on natural circumstances including natural light and the backdrop of photos would have to be carefully chosen by the photographer as well as the day of shooting to take into account weather.
However, Bailey soon took up street fashion photography and again, became a pioneer of this. After photographing the most famous people in the world in his studio in London for many years, he tuned to street photography and used his most preferred model and girlfriend at the time, Jean Shrimpton.
The image below show Bailey’s attempts at street fashion photography using his girlfriend Jean Shrimpton. Shrimpton was an English model and actress. She was an icon of Swinging London and is considered to be one of the world’s first supermodels.
To fiullfil Baileys fiull poetntila as astreet photographer, him and his girlfeind, Shrimnpton made their first foreign trip for Vogue.
NY JS DB 62 is a groundbreaking series of work that was made into a book first published in 2007 from the images produced by Bailey and Shrimpton’s New York trip. The images made were made with Bailey’s recently acquired 35mm camera. Newly freed from the confines of the studio, he shot rapidly on the streets.
The book is entitled NY JS DB 62 – the NY stands for New York, the JS, Jean Shrimpton, the DB, David Bailey and the 62 for 1962 – the date which the series of street photographs was shot.
The images in the book were completely different to what both Bailey was ever used as he explored the streets of America with his camera in an environment that he was very unfamiliar with and it was also a shock for the people who were followed the work of Bailey for so long as they would be used to carbon copy versions of the same image Bailey was capturing fr many years – studio shots of actors, musicians, artists faces. Now, Bailey was using the street as his studio and capturing much more candid, informal and unstaged shots of his girlfriend exploring the New York. The above images shows this perfectly as Shrimpton strands, poised to begin playing an arcade game.
William Klein
William Klein was another very famous photographer who also used the street as his alternative studio set up to capture much more urban-inspired fashion shots of the most sought-after models as well as strangers in the street. Klein, like Bailey used black and white film on his large forma camera to capture with what looks like a 24mm lens, close ups of crowds of people in the streets of America. Klein is an American-born French photographer and filmmaker noted for his ironic approach to media and his extensive use of unusual photographic techniques in the context of photojournalism and fashion photography.
What is evident in Klein’s work is his ability to capture people in the streets without their knowing the presence of the camera. Although they will be aware of Klein’s presence and the camera presence, they will not perform anything for the camera and instead just go about their life whilst Klein uses his camera as a tool of recording. Klein, as shown int here images below picks out particular characters in the streets that he spots and uses either methods of physically getting close to the subject or using a large zoom, which would only have been possible later in his career after the introduction of digital cameras and he captures the features that he has recognised as interesting in a character. The characters that Klein photographs have been chosen carefully by the photographer as he would usually spend a day in a couple of key spots on the streets and watch the world go past. He would attempt to pick out characters that could show the area he is photographing well.
Widely acknowledged as a significant innovator in the history and design of the photo book, Klein published his first book Life is Good and Good For You in New York in 1956, which won the Prix Nadar the following year. Capturing the rough and tumble of daily life, Klein’s brutally honest images caused a major sensation.
Soon after Klein made a name for himself in the recently introduced street fashion scene that saw photographer take to the streets and use the natural happenings on the street as their content, he had achieved widespread fame as a fashion photographer for Vogue and for his photo essays on various cities. And despite having no formal training as a photographer, Klein was a natural and won several awards.
However, Klein stated to a journalist for The Guardian in 2014 that “my feeling for the city hasn’t changed” and “the photographs I took were a corroboration of everything I resented in America and in New York.” Here he saying that his images were a confirmed physical evidence and validation of his resent for the city and country and he aimed, in his photographs to show everything he disliked about the city. His photographs are very gritty and this is what I have taken inspiration from for my own images.
Although I am not capturing my subjects in the same manner as Klein does in a very candid and typical street photograph manner that consists of quick snapshots of people running through streets. I want to capture a gritty and very personal presentation of my subject and will use Klein’s technique of getting close to his subjects at times to capture the details of faces.
Klein was another photographer that was naturally a studio photographer, like Bailey but then turned to the streets in order to capture a different mood and tone in his images. In Klein’s case, from shooing in the street he was able to capture a much more gritty sand raw depiction of America which was emphasised by the black and white format he shot in.
Wolfgang Tillmans
Wolfgang Tillmans is a German photographer. His diverse body of work is distinguished by observation of his surroundings.
Tillmans was the first photographer – and also the first non-British person – to be awarded the Tate annual Turner Prize.
Tillmans was initially known for his seemingly casual, sometimes snapshot-like portraits of friends and other youth in his immediate surroundings and scene. His photos – from the Europride in London (1992) or the Love Parade in Berlin (1992), for example – appeared in magazines such as i-D, Spex, Interview, SZ Magazin and Butt, and established his reputation as a prominent witness of a contemporary social movement.
Most of Tillmans work is staged, with the artist choosing the clothes and the location, as well as setting his models up in their positions. Furthermore, in Tillamns work, he tries ot capture freedom through the way the model presents him/herself to the camera. In his early photographs of people, Tillman’s portrayed freedom in a different way and he says: “I wanted to somehow represent what was not being represented elsewhere.” Tillmans uses the themes of gender identity and sexual orientation to define the way he photographs and how he presents them. His portraits, still lifes, sky photographs (e.g. the Concorde series) and landscapes are motivated equally by aesthetic and political interests and like I said, especially related to homosexuality and gender identity.
In 2012, he abandoned film photography altogether and became a full-time digital photographer which is what separates Tillmans and Bailey/Klein because Tillmans is photographing in an era that is much more technologically advanced and this allows for him to control his shoot more and capture a more crisp and true image. As well, Tillmans has a passion and love for the streets and the club and these inspire him in his work along with his work in the gay movement rights.
Tillmans’ himself has in fact experienced AIDS and has suffered from its consequences. This battle with AIDS has informed his work and he uses his knowledge and experience of it to create meaningful works. His experience with AIDS began at the age of 26. Ever since, Tillmans has been fighting AIDS and he states in his interview with SHOWStudio’s, that after experiencing this feels he like life is fragile, and should not take advantage of it.
Tillmans touches upon very tender subjects in his work and this is what has made him so successful because his work is very true and the actual quality of his photographs, taking away the message behind them are of a very high quality. Tillmans uses quite warm colours and dark colours such as burgundys, browns and maroons to provide body to what he is photographing.
In an interview with The Guardian, Tillman’s speaks of his recent projects.
Shoot 1///color filters
The point of this photo shoot was to manipulate and focus on turning a persons body into shapes and shades making each part unrecognizable. This worked in some cases and in other you can clear see what it is. However I like the final product so that’s why I included it.
Stephen Gill Artist Study
Stephen Gill has a variety of works some of which really break the “rules of photography”. The work I was mostly interested in was his photos using film and how he manipulated them. This would be something I would be willing to explore. Stephen Gill has a real sense of Freedom when taking photos, to be able to explore and think of original ideas then produce them. Instead of manipulating the image after it was taken Gill manipulates the camera or the film making these interesting photos.
This photo is from the book “Best Before End”. In this book Gill develops his photos in energy drinks. His aim was to show how bad these drinks are and how they contain so many chemicals that they actually destroy images. Stephen Gill does this in such a creative way that the destruction of these images is almost beautiful, giving these photos a new refreshing pattern.
The photo above is from the book “Talking to Ants”. In this book Gills photos featured objects and creatures sourced from the local surroundings of East London between 2009 and 2013. He achieved this effect by placing the objects he found in the body of the camera. He wanted to evoke the feeling of the area as the subject was both in front and behind the camera lens at the same moment. I like these photos because they have a sense of creative freedom. This is very rare, as many photographers limit themselves with unwritten rules that do not necessarily need to be followed. In this photo we a portion of the photo a different color to the rest of the photo. I like this effect and would be interested in using this in my own photography. The color lens highlights the buildings that would be able to be seen without the filter due to the mist. I think it is a very clever and different way of making a photo more interesting. It is also another way of incorporating color into photography. As I could have one image where the background is one color and the part inside the circle is a different one.
Artist References – Vicky Grout / Ben Awin / Saskia Ivy (Contemporary)
Vicky Grout
Vicky Grout is a London-based photographer shooting predominantly on analogue, however, also shoots digital and specialises in portraiture, music and street photography.
Grout is a very current photographer who has begun to make a big name for herself in the UK music scene, particularly, the grime scene where she has photographed the likes of Stormzy, Skepta, Novelist, AJ Tracey and J Hus. Therefore, because of her very current style being very contemporary, looking at her work will help me in producing similar work.
Below is a range of images that Grout has shot and these are all present on website also. The images below show shots of Skepta, Novelist and J Hus and are images that I personally really like. I only recently came across Grout’s work when exploring the internet when I came across the fashion/music magazine PUSH. I saw the photographs they were publishing and had to find out the photographers name. This is how I found Grout’s website and this was a contributing factor to what made me decide to carry out fashion work for the exam. I have bene wanting to do it for a long time but did not know how to start but I have taken the risk to do it.
Grout is a young photographer and this is another thing that I think is great about her work – that she is so young at 20 years old but is doing so well and becoming very successful at the very niche and specialised area she has found a passion for – grime music photography. From this, she has developed many friendships with the people she works with – making it a comfortable atmosphere when she shoots with her regulars. This is something that is important when shooting very intimate and collaborative portraiture and I knew this was going to be vital when shooting my own images – to make the occasion comfortable for the model, considering I have never spoken with a couple of the models I have recruited.
Grouts work has very light touch to them – the colours are not heavy or very contrasted and the look has a hazy, fade style to them – making it evident that she shoots on analogue. I would have liked to shoot on analogue also but knew this would be difficult considering the time period I had to complete the entire project in and it would mean I would have to finish a whole roll of 35mm film consisting of 36 exposures. As well, I have recently purchased a half frame camera and this would mean I would have to capture 72 exposures. I have still used a couple of my film cameras but understand I will not be able to use these in my magazine because I will not have developed them.
The image above shows the style that I would be able to achieve with my half-frame camera as a very frame captured is only half of a frame and the next frame taken will be paired with the previous to create a full frame – a really nice effect that I love the look of. It works especially well with portraits as shown above.
It is clear Grout works very well closely with her subjects to get then perform for the camera and this pays off excellently with the facial expressions and body language that is shown by the subjects makes each of the photographs – it adds character not only the image but to the actual subject.
Ben Awin
Ben Awin, although very similar to Grout, has quite a distinctive style and a much wider range of clients. Awin, like Grout is a young London photographer who photographs people who he wishes to tell stories of whose styles captures his eye and this passion for clothes and photographing it comes for his own desire to own the most sought after cotes and brands.
Awin has photographed the likes of Lazy Oaf, a London based fashion label designing womenswear, menswear and accessories featuring bold colours and graphic prints. A couple of the images that presents a half-frame like style of the solo male are for Lazy Oaf shoot to promote one of their collections. Awin has also photographed A$AP Rocky, Jorja Smith, Kurupt FM, Virgil Abloh and Bugzy Malone – a couple of these similar to the clients of Grout.
Most if Awin’s work adopts a ‘snapshot’ style and they appear less conscious of composition, framing and colour balance than Grout. They definitely have less of a heavenly look to them and they are more gritty as Awin seems to connect better with males in his work, shown from the collections that present young, adolescent boys behaving badly if you like on the streets of London – they have more of a darker tone to them as models are scene with straight, serious and sombre facial expressions.
Shown below is also an image of a confident teen leaning against a police van as Awin snaps him looking very assure of himself and confident in his actions.
This style that Awin adopts in is work is the style I aim to create in my work and what I have done thus far – my models have expressed quite sombre facial expressions as they perform different acts for the camera, either crossing his arms, leaning against a set of railings , sat on public stairs or parading around pubic car parks. My images have more of a gritty tone to them like Awin’s and this coincides with the usage of male models throughout as I aim to present their typical boisterous personas through the camera whilst, at the same time, getting the to present a more vulnerable, timid character to the camera that is often covering the confident nature bys have. I have explored this in my imagery very subtly but will emphasise it more so in my text in the end product.
Awin uses bright colours paired with dark and dull backgrounds such as London’s streets or estates. He focuses on the clothing to provide that colour burst that is necessary to complement the much more darkened background where colours in the colour palette include browns, blacks and greys.
Awin’s models are witnessed styling very bright colours in their clothing and the running them throughout is yellow or orange. These bright, luminous and neon colurs are what gives Awin’s photos a very modern tone and they epitomise the street culture of London – the UK’s capital.
Awin, as well as Vicky Grout ranges his photos from landscapes to portraits and this is a very useful skill to use in photography but I have fund that my images are mostly portraits and this is because I have been predominately using my 50mm lens that os best used for close-up portraiture imagery. Therefore, for my final couple shoots, I will make an effort to photograph more wide angle images to provide a variety among my photographs.
Saskia Ivy
http://saskiaivypuxley.tumblr.com/
Saskia Ivy, another young photographer who also photographs UK’s young youth culture, mainly on the streets of the UK where youth are most active, lovely and present because this is where they interest and can be themselves, on the streets which some say is their own – where they grew up. This is a contributing factor to the quality of images from the work of these three contemporary artists – they all have the opportunity to photograph youth on the streets of the UK where young people feel most confident and this confidence is shown through the models acts in front of the camera – something I have tried to encourage from my models in the images I have produced because it has a great effect on the outcome of a series of images.
Saskia Ivy’s photographs are shown below. Although she is lesser known than Vicky Grout, she is one of my favourite photographers in the way she captures her subjects. She uses low angles quite often where she photographs looking upward on the subject and thus has a great effect because the subject is required t look down on the audience and they it draws attention to their confidence and mature manner more so.
Ivy also photographs mainly males as well and has carried out a few mini series of works that looks at male behaviour on the streets of London – an example of this is shown in the 4th image shown – the triple exposure of a few boys sat on some stairs.
Ivy also captures much more informal and candid shots and she explores Loudon clubs and nightclubs – the rave scene of the UK capital to see if she can find any people in the moment who are enjoying themselves and do not care about anyone else but the music and the place they are in – people in the moment oblivious to the camera make great photographs and this is achieved recently by Ivy as shown below. She adopts camera angles, such as canted and tilted angles that show this candid style and uses a flash for these particular environments which work very well, especially in the image below as the camera picks ups some flare and catches the reflection of the models jacket.
Magazine Basic Draft Layout Mock-Up
In Adobe Photoshop, I decided to create a mock-up layout/storyboard-type document that outlined the very basic, primary ideas and thoughts for how I may want to structure my magazine for the final product of this exam project.
I created a range of a black, portrait boxes using the rectangular marquee tool and then duplicated these to create a storyboard-like layout to illustrate and begin creating a rough draft or the structure of pages for the magazine.
The purpose of this is to give me a better idea of what I want to do – it will allow me to understand how many pages the end result may be and will give me more confidence to branch off from this to create a more precise ad specific page-by-page mock up of the magazine. Doing this task can also be used a yardstick to judge my progress so far as I can see how many shoots I have done and haven’t.
Through the process of research, planning and actual construction of this project, I have realised how difficult it is to do in the little time I have and therefore, I have decided to keep it very minimalistic and in-turn, the final product will likely end up more like a mini photobook and in a sense, a little like a look book for a fashion house may produce.
Furthermore, it will also be very difficult for me to create words and text to the extent to which other fashion magazines such as i-D and Dazed do because this is an dependent project and because of this, I ma happy to showcase more so my photography and have little inserts of text that accompanies the imagery at times, however, it is certain that there will be a question and answer segment for each “character” as such. This is what I have called my models because I am exploring their stories behind their fashion and showing this to readers, therefore, they can be branded as characters to this story of modern0day fashion in adolescent teens.
I reiterate that this is a very brief primary mock up of what the magazine may end up being because I need to complete all shoots first and then I can decide how I want to present my work and in what order but I understand this will likely change as I am producing the magazine but it is useful to have a vague idea before starting.