Style EXPERIMENTATION – Long Exposures

What is a long exposure?

Long exposure photography is when we are using a much longer shutter speed, and it’s usually used as a specific technique to achieve a certain effect.  There’s no defined transition point at which a shutter speed becomes slow enough to define your shooting as ‘long exposure photography’.  Generally speaking, I tend to think of it as when we are talking about our exposure times in terms of seconds, rather than fractions of a second.  These kind of long exposure times (shutter speed is the same as exposure time), are often used to blur something in a photo, for example running water in stream, or the movement of stars across the night sky.  A long exposure helps us to trace the pattern of time and render things in a different way to how we are used to seeing them.  When we see things differently, it naturally fascinates us and that’s a significant factor in creating a compelling image.

In order to achieve long exposures during the daytime, it’s often necessary to use neutral density filters on a lens, which cuts down the light entering the lens.  With less light entering the lens, the shutter speed needs to be much longer to achieve the same exposure.  Neutral density filters can allow you to shoot exposures of several minutes long, even in bright daytime situations. Here are some examples:

For this mini shoot I wanted to explore how the twisting roads of Jersey would create long exposure by focusing on cars and the variety of coloured lights that are created from them. I want to particularly look at the different textures and patterns I could make out of moving the camera whilst keeping the camera still. However when taking some of the photos I may try at experimenting with a monochrome filter to see if it would effect the outcome of the light trails looking at whether or not they blend the colours together. Here are some of the results from the shoot overall:

Once I had finished the shoot I decided to select ten images that I thought represented the shoot best whilst also reflecting my overall intentions behind what I wanted to achieve and have the outcome of photos look like. When doing the shoto I made sure to try a variety of things such as using a monochrome filter to produce some of the pictures, my aim behind this was to experiment and see whether by devoiding the image of colour if it would provide a smoother transition between shades. Here is my selection of my ten favourite images:

From here I wanted to then go onto whittle the selection down to only three images out of the mini shoot, by doing so it would allow me to analyse each of the image to more detail and understand the visual, technical and coceptual aspects behind the photos and my thought process behind selecting it. Here are my favourite three images:

I selected this image because of how I really love the contrasting colours of red and white which also complimented each other against the emerging floor underneath. The image itself is of a moving car taken going over a speed bump during a long exposure, I really liked how its movement of bumping was captured through the pattern created with no actual goal of where its going. Overall I liked how the image relates well to long exposure as it creates an abstract pattern of the lighting, removing the car completely and leaving me with a series of lights with no coordination.

The reason I chose this image was because of the coordinated composition of the colours against the black backdrop. Personally for me I found that the lightings approach from the bottom left to top right of the photo created a great sense of aestheticism due to how the black space left behind in certain areas leaves enought room so that neither the lights or the darkness becomes too overpowering for the viewer. By mixing together a variety of different colours into the light sequence I found that it really stopped the lighting from becoming repetative and boring, as a result for me the added blues and reds emphasise the movement in the image.

Finally I selected this image because of its simplicity, here I loved how the use of black negative space to highlight a smoke like effect created from a swaying lamp on a boat. What drew me to the image was the symmetry created from the light and how by using a monochrome filter on the image it puts arcoss the impression of smoke filtering down the screen. For what the image lacked I found it made up for it in contrast against the black backdrop with the ghost like lines presenting the viewer with a great sense of aetheticism.

Overall I found the shoot to go quite well as it highlighted the movement in our everyday lives but instead by removing the subjects and leaving on the light sources they have left behind. As a result of this all textures lights and landscapes are a direct reflection of our everyday transport to and from work or school.

Theo Gosselin photo shoot

Images to replicate

My Interpretations

These images I took in the style of Theo Gosselin’s have significant relations towards my project as I believe that they fall into the lifestyle I want to capture. The high contrasts and dull hard lighting throughout creates strong shadows and silhouettes which I believe allows for these images to stand out greatly. As some of Theo’s images are in both black and white I also wanted to edit mine in a similar way. I felt that when editing these images Some where certainly stronger in colour and also in black and white due to the effects I wanted to create within each image; for example the shadows. Furthermore, as I was aiming to replicate some of Theo’s images I wanted to edit the images in a similar way to the specific ones I selected as I wanted my work to have specific similarities to his work. When taking these images I wanted to go out before sunset as the lighting I wanted to use wasn’t too harsh and bright which created perfect colours on the models face. This time is usually known as “golden hour”. I wanted to enhance these colours as I found the colours seen in Theo’s where strong and had a real effect on the models features. As I am focusing on lifestyle I wanted to have the main focus as the model, I believe by enhancing the colours and the background really allowed for the model and his features to really stand out over anything else.

Cyanotypes

Cyanotype is a photographic printing process that produces a cyan-blue print. Engineers used the process well into the 20th century as a simple and low-cost process to produce copies of drawings, referred to as blueprints. The process uses two chemicals: ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferricyanide. The process was first introduced by John Herschel in 1842, just over three years afterLouis Jacques Mandé Daguerre and William Henry FoxTalbot  had announced their independent inventions of photography in silver, using substrates of metal and paper. Sir John was an astronomer, trying to find a way of copying his notes and featured in his paper “On the Action of the Rays of the Solar Spectrum on Vegetable Colours and on Some New Photographic Processes,” . Herschel also gave us the words photography, negative, positive and snapshot. For him science and art were inextricably linked.

The name cyanotype was derived from the Greek name cyan, meaning “dark-blue impression.”  The inorganic pigment
Prussian blue, which is the image-forming material of cyanotypes, was prepared first by Heinrich Diesbach in Berlin between 1704 and 1710. Cyanotypes were not widely used until 1880, when they became popular because they required only water for fixing the image.

John Herschel

One of the first people to put the cyanotype process to use was Anna Atkins, who in October 1843 is said to have become the first person to produce and photographically illustrated a book using cyanotypes. The cyanotype to the right is from a book of ferns published in 1843 by Atkins called Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions. She was a pioneering figure in photographic history, having produced the first book to use photographic illustrations.

Following Herschel’s death in 1871, cyanotype was appropriated by entrepreneurs of a more commercial turn of mind than its true inventor, and exploited as a reprographic medium, although Herschel himself had previously demonstrated its use for copying text and images.Thee acceptability of cyanotype as a pictorial medium had been seriously inhibited, at least in Britain, by the intolerant response of critics to its powerful colour. 
The arbiters of contemporary taste in ‘the art of photography’ were at the time had become accustomed to anaesthetic of monochrome images that were mostly brown, so they declared the unremitting blue of the cyanotype to be anathema. Foremost among these critics was Peter Henry Emerson who said “… only a vandal would print a landscape in red or in cyanotype.” Emerson spent an important part of his life tormented by the debate between those who believed photography could be distilled into a set of hard and fast rules and those who believed that it was a flexible form of expression and impression. In 1886, Emerson began to deliver a series of lectures that defined the correct, naturalistic, way to approach the new medium. He attempted to define an unassailable position in which a photograph should always aspire to represent an artist’s true aesthetic vision, as in the Impressionist painting movement.

John Tennant, the editor of the influential American periodical The Photo-Miniature , conducted quite a spirited defence in one of his issues of 1900:“This prejudice against the blue print because of its color is, in itself, curiously interesting. In every-day life we are inclined to be enthusiastic about everything blue, from the deep blue of the sea or the deeper depths of blue in a woman’s eyes, to the marvellous blue of old Delft ware or the Willow plates of years ago.”

Today we come full circle in witnessing a second revival of the cyanotype process among contemporary photographic artists 

Symbolic blue in art and religion

The universal scarcity of blue pigmentation in the natural world, explains why the cyanotype image might have been considered‘unnatural’.
Its low status in photographic art, however, still remainssomewhat paradoxical when we contrast it with the elevated role of bluein the traditions of painting. 

The association with the colour of the celestial hemisphere adds anextra dimension to the symbolism of blue. Because it appears in the skyafter the obscuring clouds are dispelled, blue is said to be the ‘colour oftruth’. C J Jung conjectured that:“…blue, standing for the vertical, means height and depth (the bluesky above, the blue sea below).”

In a religious context, blue is the colour symbolising some of theloftiest sentiments: spiritual devotion, heavenly love, and innocence. Inthe traditions of Western religious art, for instance, the Virgin Mary’smantle is invariably rendered in blue, and so is that of Christ during hisministry on earth.

Sabattier effect and Solarization

The Sabattier effect, also known as pseudo-solarization, is a phenomenon in photography in which the image recorded on a negative or on a photographic print is wholly or partially reversed in tone. Dark areas appear light or light areas appear dark. Sabattier effect is sometimes incorrectly referred to as solarization which is an increase in the exposure of a film to light or radiant energy by 10 to 1000 times the normal amount of exposure (4 to 10 f/stops) which leads to the film becoming lighter rather than darker, whilst the Sabattier effect is a manipulation of the printing process in which the print is re-exposed to light midway through the development process.

The Sabattier Effect results in a partial or complete reversal of image tones on either film or paper emulsion, as well as distinctive outlines (known as Mackie lines, after Alexander Mackie who first described them) which border adjacent highlight and shadow areas. It was first discovered in 1862 by Armand Sabattier as a result of an accidental exposure to light during development of a wet collodion plate, producing a partial reversal of tone.

Man ray

Amongst Paris of the nineteen-twenties, the artist Man Ray, born Emmanuel Radnitzky, expanded the horizons of photography well beyond its representational means, and through relentless darkroom experimentation, liberated that medium from its place as a mirror to nature. His chosen name would come to reflect that mysterious and intrepid realm his photographs occupy in Modern Art.
His experiments with photography included rediscovering how to make “cameraless” pictures, which he called rayographs.

Like a mad scientist, Man Ray conducted a multitude of chemical and optical experiments in his darkroom, exploiting the elasticity of light and its unrealized affects on light-sensitive paper. “I deliberately dodged all the rules,” he once described his method. “I mixed the most insane products together, I used film way past its use – by date, I committed heinous crimes against chemistry and photography, and you can’t see any of it”.

Man Ray claimed to have invented the photogram not long after he emigrated from New York to Paris in 1921. Although, in fact, the practice had existed since the earliest days of photography, he was justified in the artistic sense, for in his hands the photogram was not a mechanical copy but an unpredictable pictorial adventure. He called his photograms “rayographs.”

Man Ray

By placing a variety of translucent and opaque objects directly on the paper during exposure, Man Ray was able to bend and mold that light into abstraction. Left behind was a shadowy imprint of the object’s form, completely dissociated from its original context in his 1922 series, Champs Délicieux. Man Ray’s “Solarizations” shamelessly broke what may have been the golden rule of darkroom photography—Do not turn on the light while in the darkroom. During the developing process, Man Ray would momentarily flicker his studio lights, forming that distinctive inverse of tones around in his subjects. 

Man Ray also made films. In one short filmLe Retour à la raison (1923; Return to Reason), he applied the rayograph technique to motion-picture film, making patterns with salt, pepper, tacks, and pins. 
Le Retour à la Raison (above) was completed in 1923. The title means “Return to Reason,” and is a kinetic extension of Man Ray’s still photography.

https://www.academia.edu/10303227/Cyanomicon_The_History_Science_and_Art_of_Cyanotype_photographic_printing_in_Prussian_blue

Review of work so far

Looking at the work that I have created too far, I am happy with the individual images, the compositions of the images, the quality, the different techniques used , attention to detail. But looking at the overall collections of the images I dont feel that I have an overarching theme to the images and if I were to start making a book down there would be no structure. At the start of this project I wanes to focus on my relationship between myself and this island that I have livecd on for 18 years and trying to look at it a different light. But that I feel that is necessary to change the focus of the project as I don’t think that this message was coming through in the images and it is a very hard concept to translate into a book form.

So I have decided that I a going to change the focus of the book to look at the four elements that hold the world together. Water, Earth,Fire and Air. As when reviewing images I realised that I have subconsciously taken images that focus on Water, Air and Earth already. The only element that I don’t have an images of is Fire, which is because there is not a continual sources of fire, but in my house we do have a coal fire that I will use. Below are the best images that I already have of each element. Looking at these images in future photoshoots I want to focus on photographing the different textures in each element and how they differentiate from one another. And the variety in each element.,

Water

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Earth

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Air

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Photoshoots Plan

Photoshoot 1:

For my first photoshoot I want to focus on the theme of Commercialism and Consumerism looking at how brands make up everything we do during our life. For this shoot i want to find lots of different brands in my household environment so looking how different products are advertised such as food packaging as well as clothing and even down to items or objects your wouldn’t think had brands. When editing I will look at creative ways to Collage images or brands.

Image result for consumerism photography

Photoshoot 2:

Following with the theme I want to create images as a response to pop art and specific artists such as Andy Warhol as his work is highly Commercialised. I want to create portraiture that responds in a very commercialised sense. For this shoot i will take portrait photography that i will heavily edit to recreate a pop art style in the images. I could also for this shoot look at creating images of brands in a pop art style similar to Warhol’s style with his Campbell soup Prints.

Photoshoot 3:

For Another Shoot I want to do an Environmental shoot looking and how people use brands in their clothing or in their everyday life and using editing highlight their brands showing how they make up basically everything they do.

Image result for upcoming street photographers

Structure & Form Photo-shoot

As I stated in my previous post I planned a photo-shoot in which I would focus on structure and form, I stated that in order to balance out the aesthetic of my photo montages, I believed that it would be a good idea for me to produce some images which focus on structure and form in a minimal manner. Producing minimal images with this simple focus would also give me a way of including conceptual and contextual elements to my work as I can photograph subjects which relate to trade and industries in Jersey which link us with the rest of the world. So after planning this photo-shoot I closely followed my plan and overall I believe that the shoot was very successful as I managed to make photographs which will definitely come in use in my photo-montages. I did this photo-shoot over the space of two days as visiting each location in my plan in a single day may lead to me rushing too much which could have a negative effect on the quality of the photographs which I come out with. I managed to focus on the subjects which I intended on capturing. And as I wanted to come out with the photographs certainly relate to trade and industries in Jersey which link us with the rest of the world.

Anna Atkins

Anna Atkins was an English photographer and botanist noted for her early use of photography for scientific purposes. Some sources claim that she was the first woman to create a photograph. She created the first book to contain photographs, and she paved the way for photography’s power to connect people. In particular, she was interested in the cyanotype process devised by Herschel in 1842, which can produce an image by what is commonly called sun-printing.

The substance to be recorded is laid on paper impregnated with ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferricyanide. When exposed to sunlight and then washed in plain water the uncovered areas of the paper turn a rich deep blue. Eventually this process, known as blueprinting, was used mainly to reproduce architectural and engineering drawings.

Atkins learned directly about the invention of photography through her correspondence with its inventor, William Henry Fox Talbot. Although she owned a camera, she used only the cameraless photogenic drawing technique to produce all of her botanical images. With the assistance of Anne Dixon, Atkins created albums of cyanotype photogenic drawings of her botanical specimens. She learned the cyanotype printing method through its inventor, the astronomer and scientist Sir John Herschel. He had been experimenting with sun prints (or “photograms”) ie. cameraless and lenseless photographs.

She was so disappointed by the lack of illustrations of algae in a guide to British algae published in 1841 that she decided to do something about it. In the autumn of 1843 she began work on creating images of hundreds of different types. “Looking at Atkins’s book today, what is most striking is not the outlines of the algae, however beautifully and delicately they crawl across the pages; it is the glorious depth of the Prussian blue backdrop to the images. The Herschel method dyed the paper, resulting in every page of the book being a deep blue with the algae outlines in cream. (A byproduct of the process was the addition of the word “blueprint” to the English language.)”- The Guardian

‘Before Atkins’s book on British algae and the photographic process, botanical images would have been restricted to the traditional printing processes of engraving or woodcuts, although the art of nature printing was also in its early stages around Atkins’s time’ 

Before the invention of photography, scientists relied on detailed descriptions and artistic illustrations or engravings to record the form and colour of botanical specimens. Anna’s self-published her detailed and meticulous botanical images using the cyanotype photographic process in her 1843 book, Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions. With a limited number of copies, it was the first book ever to be printed and illustrated by photography. The text pages and captions were photographic facsimiles of Anna’s handwriting. In some cases, lettering appears to be formed by delicate strands of seaweed. After her book on algae, she collaborated with Anne Dixon on at least two more botanical books, Cyanotypes of British and Foreign Ferns and Cyanotypes of British and Foreign Flowering Plants and Ferns.

“The difficulty of making accurate drawings of objects so minute as many of the Algae and Confervae has induced me to avail myself of Sir John Herschel’s beautiful process of Cyanotype, to obtain impressions of the plants themselves, which I have much pleasure in offering to my botanical friends.” Anna Atkins (1843, text accompanying the first photographically illustrated book)

Collection of her work:https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/collections/photographs-of-british-algae-cyanotype-impressions#/?tab=navigation

I want to take inspiration from Anna Atkins as I think that her images have a spiritual quality to them as they emphasises the delicate lines and shapes of the nature. To interpret her work I play to make my own cyanotypes by using light sensitive paper for experimentation. If this process does not turn out well I will produce images that interpret the appearance of her work through post editing. I also like the prussian blue colour that all of the cyanotypes have which I think fit well into my project where I have explored cool and warm colours. If my interpretation of her work was successful and I wanted to include the images in my final outcomes, I could contrasts the cool blue tones with the warm tones of other images from my project. I also think that i could use the physical photograms I make in my photobook, rather than just a picture of them, as it would allow the readers to physically hold them and would mean that those images would’ve truly been created without a camera. I also think the fact that the images are created without the use of camera links to my project as it just using nature to create and process i.e sunlight and plants.

Photoshoots

After my initial portrait photoshoot I started editing the photos and decided I needed to take more of different people so that i had a bigger selection to work from. I want to take photos again with a simple background so they are minimal and I can focus on the editing process. I want my models to look real not overdone with makeup or constructed to look perfect. This will work with the concept for my editing which will challenge beauty ideals and myths.