http://www.arnoldnewmanarchive.com/content/about-arnold-newman Arnold Abner Newman born 3rd March 1918 , died June 6th 2006, was an American photographer, best known for his environmental portraits of artists and politicians. In 1946, Newman relocated to New York, opened Arnold Newman Studios and worked as a freelance photographer. Newman normally captured his subjects in their most familiar surroundings with representative visual elements showing their professions and personalities. "I didn't just want to make a photograph with some things in the background," said Newman. "The surroundings had to add to the composition and the understanding of the person. No matter who the subject was, it had to be an interesting photograph. Just to simply do a portrait of a famous person doesn't mean a thing." On December 19, 2005, Arnold made his last formal portrait of director James Burrows at the NBC studio on the Saturday Night Live stage.
Monthly Archives: October 2017
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Environmental portraiture
What is environmental portraiture ?
An environmental portraiture is a portrait executed in the subject’s daily life or environment. For example a subjects home or workplace. This illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings which is usually unknown or unseen.
Both of these examples below which where found on Google show the subjects in their natural workplaces/ environment. The first image is clearly a formal image as it has clearly been set up whereas, the second image is informal as it shows the man working and doesn’t look set up like the first image does. The surroundings and backgrounds in environmental portraits is a key focus as it is used to convey a story within in an image about the person being photographed.
What are environmental portraits
An environmental portrait is a portrait taken in the subject's usual environment, for example it could be taken in their home or workplace, and usually describes the subject's life and surroundings. Below are some examples of environmental portraits by photographer Michelle Sank, there are also two links to some of her projects on her website. http://www.michellesank.com/portfolios/bye-byebaby http://www.michellesank.com/portfolios/teenagers-belfast
Below is another example of some environmental portraits by photographer David GoldBlatt.
Another example of an environmental photographer is Anthony Kurtz. Below are some examples of his photos and also links to his website. https://anthonykurtz.com/Humans-2/India-2007/1 https://anthonykurtz.com/Humans-1/Senegal-Portraits/1
Environmental Portraits
Environmental Portraits
Environmental portraits are portraits taken in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and typically illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings.
Below are some examples found on the internet:
In both of these examples, the image is set up and the subject is aware the photo is being taken so is therefore a formal portrait. The images show the subjects in their natural workplaces. The surroundings and backgrounds in environmental portraits is a key element as it is used to convey further information about the person being photographed.
Homework Assignment – Environmental Portratis
Planning
Task – Take 150-250 formal portrait photos that show an understanding of environmental portraits.
Location – My dad’s workshop, music room
Subjects – My dad at work, Alfie playing guitar.
Camera settings – For images in workshop: shutter speed 1/100-1/200, ISO 800-1600, white balance – shade preset, flash used. For images of Alfie: shutter speed – 1/60, ISO 400, white balance – shade present.
Concept – To capture formal portraits in the style of August Sander and Arnold Newman.
August Sanders
August Sanders (1876-1964) was a German portrait and documentary photographer. He was once described as ‘the most important German portrait photographer of the early twentieth century’.
Sanders’ work includes landscape, nature, architecture and street photography but he is mostly known for his portrait work. He tried to take pictures of the workers in Germany in their natural workplace to show the cross-section of society during the Weimar republic. He released a book series from this called ‘People of the 20th Century’.
August Sanders Favourite Photo:
In this photograph it appears that natural daylight has been used to capture the environmental portrait, which is suitable as the photo should be in the subjects natural environment. The subjects appear to have been positioned close together as if they’re cramped into the photo – this could reflect their living conditions and style. There is not a massive tonal range throughout the photo; there is vary dark but rarely is there a bright white. The subjects have been positioned so that they contrast with the dark background (excluding the black man on the right) this makes the image more dramatic. It appears that a deep field of depth has been used along with a quick shutter speed as the image is not blurred and everything appears static. A medium ISO appears to be used as the image has a slight bit of noise in it. There is a grey overtone to this image.
Due to it being an old photo there is an old-fashioned texture to the photo which makes it seem more rustic and mysterious. The photograph appears 3D in places as the subjects have been positioned at different levels and distances. There are no patterns in this photograph which matches the lifestyle of the people in the environment – they play it by ear and they take each day as it comes.
The photograph is taken from his photographic series, ‘People of the Twentieth Century’. The series aimed to portray the differences in life styles among the German people. This particular image shows circus workers in their natural environment, as you can see it is quite messy and nothing is organised, just like the photo. It helps to show what life was like for these circus workers.
Sanders was known to not be judgmental and was never shy when taking photographs of people. What he wanted to show was how people live their lives in extremely different ways but they’re also happy doing so. Sanders tried to exploit the cross-section during the Weimar republic and opened Germany’s eyes to each others differences.
Arnold Newman
Arnold Newman, born 1918 is acknowledged as the pioneer of the environmental portrait, he is also known for his still life and abstract photography. His images show people in their natural workplaces in the style of formal environmental portraits. He released many books such throughout his life and is an important contributor of portraits to publications such as life and vanity fair.
Arnold Newman Favourite Photo:
In this image it appears that natural lighting was used as the image is dark at the front where it is hidden from daylight and brighter at the back where it is exposed to daylight. The subject has been positioned in the centre of the image to create an intense and sinister image. There is also a wide tonal range in this image, ranging from the darkness of the foreground to the brightness of the background. It is also a very contrasting image which makes the photograph appear even more sinister and mysterious. It appears that a deep depth of field was used along with a quick shutter speed as everything in the image is static and in focus. A low ISO also appears to have been used as it is a clear but dark image.
It is quite a 3D image as the subject is clearly very close to the camera with the trains running along with the roof in the background making the image appear to stretch backwards. There is lots of symmetry in the image as at a glance it appears that it is almost perfectly symmetrical with the line of symmetry being vertically straight down the image.
The image shows armaments manufacturer Alfred Krupp who supposedly used slave labour to make weapons for the Nazis. In 1963 Krupp contacted Newman for a portrait photograph. After this, Krupp found out that Newman was a Jew he refused to let him take the photograph. Newman then asked Krupp to look at his works before settling on a final decision and he changed his mind and allowed him to take the photographs. Newman then went to one of Krupp’s factories and tried to make Krupp appear as evil as possible in the photographs that he took. Krupp was obviously not happy with the photographs at all.
I think that by making Krupp appear evil in this image, it was his way of getting a small bit of revenge on him for his evil doings and showing the world how evil Krupp really is. This small piece of revenge wasn’t done just for Newman, he did it for all the enemies of the Nazi’s and all of the people that have suffered from them. It did not do much but the notion and small victory was there.
My Response
My Edited Images
My Favourite Images
In the above image, a flash was used to deal with the dark atmosphere of the workshop that I was working with. The flash allowed the industrial items in the background to be brought into the image. A medium/shallow depth of field was used for this image so that the focus would be on the model whilst the background was still present but less prominent. A shutter speed of 1/200 was used to create a sharp image whilst the model was moving around as he worked. An ISO of 800 was used to make sure the image was bright enough with the minimal amount of noise.
I chose a black and white colour style for this image as it helped to introduce more contrast into the image and separate the model from the background more, I took inspiration for this from Sally Mann’s work. There is a wide tonal range in this image – going from the black of the background to the white of the machine in the foreground. The image has a slight 3D effect as the model is clearly in the front with the machines further behind him. There are no patterns or symmetry in this photograph as in the building industry, the focus is on getting work done quickly and efficiently, not spending time making the workshop look pretty. I have positioned the model along a vertical line of the rule of thirds to make the image appear more appealing, this helps to bring more attention to the model and what he is wearing.
In this image, I used the dim lighting from the workshop to create an authentic, natural look of my dad in his workshop and to add contrast. A shallow/medium depth of field was used to create a blurred effect towards the background of the image and to keep focus of the model. A shutter speed of 1/200 was used to capture the photo whilst the model was still moving around. An ISO of 1600 was used as the setting was very dark, this allowed me to capture this under-exposed style photograph.
There isn’t a lot of colour in this image because of the settings I used, this helps to create a dark and industrial look in the photograph. There is a wide range of tones throughout the image from the white light and door to the background and the shadows. There is an almost dirty texture to this image as it it dark and you can see the dust/dirt of the wall in the background. It is quite a 3D image as the models hands come forwards towards the camera with his body set further behind. There is repetition in the window frame that he is working on that expands towards the background of the image. I set up the image so that my dad was along the vertical line of the rule of thirds to create a more appealing image.
The two photographs above were set up and taken in my Dad’s workshop, where he works each day and runs his business as a carpenter. He spends lots of time here each day so it is his typical workplace and environment. I simply asked him to do what he does and to look at the camera every so often. To me, my dad and his workshop was the perfect set up for the images as the dark lighting and unusual setting allowed me to create interesting images such as the one shown above
When the task was set to take environmental portraits, my dads work was the first thing that I thought of as it gave me a chance to take advantage of the dark and industrial environment that is my dads workshop. These images show my dads day-to-day life and show authentic hard work instead of someone just modelling for a photo.
Presentation Of Best Images
Full size images:
Week 9 | Mon 6th Nov – Fri 10th Nov | Street Photography | Candid Portraits
Street photography is photography conducted for art or enquiry that features unmediated chance encounters and random incidents within public places.
Street Photography is a sub-genre of photojournalism…
Street photography does not necessitate the presence of a street or even the urban environment. The concept of the “flaneur” or people watcher is often referred to…as is the candid portrait.
Blog Post 1 : Define, describe and explain street photography.
And what is a candid photograph?
Include images, moodboards, hyperlinks to relevant articles and URLs and add a video or two on street photography…
Blog Post 2 :
Henri Cartier – Bresson and The Decisive Moment
Create a blog post / case study about Cartier-Bresson that includes…
- Brief biography
- Mood-board of key images
- Select one image and apply Technical | Visual | Contextual | Conceptual analysis
- His contribution to MAGNUM Photo Agency
- Add any other relevant research / insights
Homework Due in Monday 13th Nov
- Take 150-250 photos as a response to the STREET PHOtoGRAPHERS you have researched and analysed
- Choose a small group of images to edit / enhance
- Present as final outcomes, include evaluation and analysis
Then Compare and Contrast Cartier- Bresson to one (or more) of the following street photographers…
- William Klein
- Diane Arbus
- Vivian Maier
- Robert Frank
- Bruce Gilden
- Martin Parr
- Saul Leiter
- William Eggleston
- Gordon Parks
- John Bulmer
- Trent Parke
- Garry Winogrand
- Raghubir Singh
- Lee Friedlander
- Joel Meyerowitz
- Tony Ray-Jones
- Bill Owens
Discuss in detail the differences / similarities / intentions / outcomes and of course the photographer’s technical and visual approach.
Technique : Taking street photographs
- Be more aggressive
- Get more involved (talk to people)
- Stay with the subject matter (be patient)
- Take simpler pictures
- See if everything in background relates to subject matter
- Vary compositions and angles more
- Be more aware of composition
- Don’t take boring pictures!
- Get in closer (use 50mm lens or less)
- Watch camera shake (shoot 250 sec or above)
- Don’t shoot too much!!!
- Not all eye level
- No middle distance
Watch this clip about Bruce Gilden…
TOP TIP : ANNOTATE YOUR CONTACT SHEETS!
This technique helps you to identify key features in your contact sheets AND helps you make your selections for final outcomes. This is vital…producing the “killer image” or the decisive moment during an event / happening. William Klein was well know for his use of contact sheets as an essential, and visual, part of his process…
Extension Task
1. What Is Photojournalism?
Photojournalism really started to take shape when photographers could easily transport cameras into war zones. The “Golden Age of Photojournalism” is often considered to be roughly the 1930s through the 1950s. It was made possible by the development of the compact commercial 35mm Leica camera in 1925, and the first flash bulbs between 1927 and 1930, which allowed the journalist true flexibility in taking pictures.
For the first time, ordinary citizens could see the impact of the fighting right there in their newspaper. It was a pivotal moment in photography and it became more and more real between the Civil War and World War II.
Yet photojournalism is not just about war or photographers working the beat for a local newspaper. It’s much more than that. Photojournalism tells a story and it often does so in a single photograph. They evoke a feeling, whether its astonishment, empathy, sadness, or joy.
That is the mark of photojournalism; to capture that single moment in time and give viewers the sense that they’re part of it.
2. The Story in a Single Shot
Put simply, photojournalism is about capturing verbs. This doesn’t mean simply taking an action photo. Communicating the verb is much more than that.
Although it is great when it happens, photojournalism isn’t about the best composition, or the best technical details, or a pretty subject.
Photojournalism is about showing the world a story of something that really happened.
Photojournalism allows the world to see through the eyes of the photographer for just a moment. When photojournalism is done right, that one moment conveys volumes of time.
Conveying the full story is part of environmental portraiture where the setting tells us as much about the subject as the subject themselves.
The emotion is often raw in photojournalism. The photographer is not directing the scene as a portrait or commercial photographer would. Instead, the best of them blend into the background and become a shadow figure (unlike the paparazzi). They are there to observe and capture, not become the story or interrupt it.
The photojournalist has a different attitude than other photographers and it’s necessary to capturing those memorable photos. And quite often, that single photo can become a call to action for the millions of people who see it.
3.The Picture Story / Essay
3. Representation, Standards and Ethics in Photojournalism
Another vitally important part of photojournalism is accuracy. This means that what is in the frame is what happened.
Power lines should not be cloned out. More smoke must not be added to a fire scene. What was captured is how it should be. Sadly, the era of digital photography has made it easier than ever to manipulate reality.
The image should be a window into the event. At most, lighten the shadows a touch to see faces or sharpen the image a bit for clarity but do not change the essence of what you capture in the photo. If you do, you change the story.
4. What is meant by “The Camera As Witness”?
Week 8 | Mon 30 Oct – Fri 3 Nov | Environmental Portraits
An environmental portrait is a portrait executed in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and typically illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings.
Blog Post 1 :
- define, describe and explain what an environmental portrait is
- add a moodboard of suitable images
- include hyperlinks to suitable URLs to help you
- add at least one video to create inter-activity on your blog
Blog Post 2 :
Choose either Arnold Newman or August Sander to write a CASE STUDY and create a blog post that includes….
- a brief biography of the artist
- Mood-board of key images
- Select one image and apply Technical | Visual | Contextual | Conceptual analysis
- Add any other relevant research / insights
Arnold Newman (photographer) // Igor Stravinsky (Russian composer) 1946 // New York
August Sander // Pastry Cook 1928 // Germany
But… you may be influenced by an alternative, contemporary photographer that you have discovered or researched so please show clearly where your ideas and inspiration has developed from…
For example…Anthony Kurtz
Click here http://www.anthonykurtz.com/
Key things to consider with formal / environmental portraits…
Technical= Composition / exposure / lens / light
Visual= eye contact / engagement with the camera / neutral pose and facial expression / angle / viewpoint
Conceptual= what are you intending to present? eg : social documentary? / class ? / authority ? / gender role ? / lifetsyle ?
Contextual=back ground / story / detail / information about the character(s) / connection to the photographer eg family / insider / outsider
Extension Task
Environmental Portraits are a type of formal portrait, which can be similar to documentary / narrative approaches to portraiture. You may want to look at the work of the following artists and respond visually, or create a blog post that explores some of their work and shows awareness of this important genre too.
Walker Evans
Dorothea Lange
Sally Mann
Sian Davey
Alec Soth
James Nachtwey
Michelle Sank
David GoldBlatt
Portraits | Unit 2 | Planner | Homework Assignments
Final Image
I chose this image as my final piece out of the three as it contains similarities from both the other final images through their geometrical designs and similar triangular shapes that I previously created with the paper. I also chose this photograph as I did not want my project to to turn into an art project and wanted to create variation within my work. This photo was taken with inspiration from Hilla and Bernd Becher’s work in my typologies homework, but I also think it contains elements from other homeworks (such as line, repetition and pattern as well as abstract and texture) which is why i chose it.
This photograph uses Ansel Adams zone system with contrasts from light to dark within the picture creating a photo with varied tones. One reason I like this photo is because of the reflection in which the building has that mirrors the clouds from behind, making the building bright on one side, and dark on the other. This photo also shows repetition through the thin black lines on the building creating a pattern, contrasting with the other side which does not. The building also has a thin black line outlining it, emphasising the structural properties as well as abstract appearance that it has. The fast shutter speed and sharp focus used to take the photo shows the details on the building as well as the clouds behind also showing texture and pattern. The composition of this photograph is aesthetically pleasing through its symetrical appearance.
Overall this project has allowed me to develop my understanding and knowledge of camera skills, and my ability to take better photographs, as well as allowing me to explore artists linking to my work in depth.