Category Archives: A2 Personal Investigation

Filters

Author:
Category:

Chrystel Lebas

Chrystel’s “Plant Portraits or Weeds & Aliens Studies” is inspired by Edward Salisbury’s approach of documenting species. Lebas takes each plant directly placing it onto colour photographic paper in a darkroom under an enlarger light. She alters the colour of filtration on the enlarger in turn changing the way that the species appears on the paper. Each filtration value and exposure time is annotated alongside the photogram.

Plant Portraits or Weeds & Aliens Studies, 2013-

Pictured above is the species, Fallopia japonica (commonly known as Japanese Knotweed). She chose this species as Salisbury had previously carried out extensive research described in his book, Weeds and Aliens. The species is illegal to plant and come into contact with in the UK. Yet originally this plant was brought over as an exotic import. The shifting of meaning and classification over time fascinated Lebas becoming a thread of her new work.

“For most of history the only criterion by which human beings judged other species was their usefulness but,
in recent centuries, other dimensions became important so that certain species came to be valued for their attractiveness, their novelty or their
potential for game sport.”

– Charles Warren (2009), Managing Scotland’s Environment

Similarly, Animated Nature uses similar techniques of placing species onto photographic paper in this case to form photograms of bird silhouettes.

Animated Nature, 2009, Unique Chromogenic photograms, 40 x 50 cm

Image Analysis

Between about 1907 and 1938, armed with a camera and a notebook, Edward Salisbury worked in four geographical areas: Arrochar, in Argyll and Bute, south-west Scotland; Rothiemurchus Forest, an estate in the Highlands near Aviemore; Culbin Sands, a long spit of sand along the southern shore of the Moray Firth; and Blakeney Point in Norfolk, where as a student Salisbury had made a study of the vegetation, which is now a nature reserve. In 2011, Lebas set off in Salisbury’s footsteps. Using both a medium format and a panoramic camera, and with GPS to help her establish the same locations, she focused, as he had, on three subject areas: habitat, locality and specimens. Through working on this project Lebas has learnt to identify species and types of plants and became immersed in a world of classification.

The images appear flat where the silhouette of dead birds float above a dark surface. These mummified birds were found in Houghton Hall’s attic (Norfolk). Fallen from chimneys, the birds had died there due to being trapped. In the above image, the bones of a Long Heared owl can be seen.

The images show a negative colouring due to the process of using photographic paper where the pure white areas show solid parts of the birds body.

Lebas prefers to work at night, or at twilight when the world becomes more mysterious. “I was fascinated by night itself, by the absence of light and the impossibility of photographing”. “I was interested in challenging how I used the cameras, but also challenging the landscape.” Although not presenting a night landscape, this project uses a colour scheme that still reflects the mysterious feel shown in Chrystel Lebas’ other projects.

Overall, the series questions our relationship to the animal’s death and death in nature as a whole.

Fabricated Footage Edits So Far

My previous blog post covered my editing process for the concept of producing replicated/fabricated footage of CCTV or security cameras. This process was something which I worked out by studying existing CCTV footage. This blog post is a display of the footage edits which I have produced so far. I am satisfied with these outcomes and plan to continue creating similar outcomes alongside the two other subjects withing the theme of surveillance which I am focusing on. Here are my outcomes so far…

Edward James Salisbury

Sir Edward James Salisbury (16 April 1886 – 10 November 1978) was an English botanist and ecologist. He was born in Harpenden, Hertfordshire and graduated in botany from University College London in 1905. Salisbury used photography simply as a tool to record species. He had a purely instrumental approach and was using a fairly primitive form of camera, which had its limitations. Before photography, botanists had to be very talented illustrators or collaborate with good ones. Photography was to provide a more accessible way to get things recorded. However, the medium had its limits, not least because Salisbury was working with black and white photography, missing all the information a colour image would record. It is surprising how atmospheric and artisan his photographs appear from a contemporary perspective. Perhaps this is in part due to a surge of contemporary artists’ use of older cameras and techniques for artistic effect. Lebas uses technically advanced cameras and in her work we see much clearer and sharper images which provide a lot more information than Salisbury’s original, often out-of-focus, images.

Image result for about Edward James Salisbury landscape photographer

His passion for plants began at an early age. During family outings into the surrounding countryside, he would collect flowers to grow on his own patch in the garden at home. He attached a label to each one giving its Latin name. He went on to study botany at University College, and on graduation became a research student. Before long, he was helping to lay the foundations of a brand-new branch of botany called plant ecology. Instead of studying plants in isolation, scientists began investigating their relationship with their environment.

When the British Ecological Society was founded in 1913, Salisbury became a founder member. By now he was working on an even greater project involving the oak-hornbeam woodlands of Hertfordshire. The botanist recorded the light intensity in woods at different seasons of the year, and studied its effect on the flora beneath the trees. This classic study was the first if its kind in the country. When his research was published in 1916 it revolutionised the understanding of woodland ecology.

Image result for about Edward James Salisbury landscape photographer

Interview with Chrystel Lebas:

Focussing on Salisbury’s landscape images to begin with, how do these photographs speak of nature in a historical sense? How do you think Salisbury regarded nature, visually and conceptually?

Chrystel Lebas: This is an interesting question about the act of looking for scientific purposes: what are we looking at? Is it of any importance? How does looking inform research? I concluded, during my research, that Salisbury photographed mainly for scientific purposes; he used his photographs as a document to illustrate his writings and records his experiments. The notebooks and papers archived at The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Library Art & Archives (after he died someone donated them all to Kew) didn’t reveal anything from his photographic past and how he came to use the medium. I know that he was from a wealthy family of 9 children, and they all studied or worked in the Arts, Science or Architecture. I presume they had a darkroom in the house (in Harpenden), so I guess they must have picked up on the beginning of photography together, and Salisbury then carried on using it for his own research.

Fabricated CCTV Footage Editing Process

For one of my three subjects within the theme of surveillance I decided that I would like to produce images that replicate that of a security/CCTV camera. I have begun to produce images that have the aesthetic of an image produced by a stereotypical CCTV camera. I spent a significant amount of time studying online images that have been produced by security cameras in order to see which visual qualities they hold. I found from doing this that most of the footage was overlaid with a visual noise, that which you would see as static on an old Television. On Photoshop you are able to add this visual quality to any image using the noise filter. Within this filter you are able to control the density, size and colour of the noise, so when looking at real footage I was able to see that the noise was quite soft however dense, and most of the time coloured to an extent. Therefore when adding noise to my images I made sure that it remained consistent in this manner. Some people may disagree but I feel that adding noise to certain images can make them much more interesting and mysterious as it distorts how the viewer can identify certain parts of the image. Here is a simple example of how the noise filter can alter an image…

Unedited Basic Raw Image

Image After Adding Noise

Another visual quality of CCTV footage which I have identified is that when monochrome (black and white) the whiter shades within the image has more of a grey tone, as if the image has begun to become slightly inverted. This is again something which can be replicated of Photoshop using the black and white tool and the curves tool. Here Is an example of how this changes the image…

Image After Adding Noise, B&W and Curves

The final visual quality which I have found among the footage which i have looked at is that they have camera time and date tags, such as 12:32:17 or 7:45 18 for example. This as well can be added to an image using Photoshop using the blending tool or the text tool. Here is an example of the final replicated CCTV footage once all of these elements have been added to the original image…

Final Outcome Of Editing Process

 

Reviewing and Reflecting

The Environment linking to the Past and Present:

  • For my project I want to produce a variety of images from documentary photography where i photograph the landscape and then juxtapose that with images of what I find in the area formally. I will photograph plants when I first find them and then again after a period of time to see how it has changed and to represent the effect of time of living things and the environment. I will display this at the start of the book and them at the end of the book, making the overall theme more obvious.
  • I want to take inspiration from the book ‘The Meadow’ by  photographers Barbara Bosworth and Margot Anne Kelley where they explore the connections and relationships formed between humans and the natural world. One specific aspect i want to interpret is how they collect objects they find around the area they are investigating and photograph them formally.
  • I want to take inspiration from Stephen Gill manipulating the lens and exploring themes of pollution by placing object he finds in the lens and  looking at smaller details around a specific area.
  • I want to incorporate this side of Stephen Gills work into my project and use archival images discussing the acts of past and present generations.
  • I plan to investigate one specific area within my book, focusing on the beach ‘La Motte’ where I will document and collect objects and gather archival images.
  • To interpret Mandy Barkers work i want to physically create interesting patterns like the ones she photographed through a microscope. I will then juxtapose these images with one of the landscape or objects I’be photographed, using the same colours and shapes.

Possible Essay Hypothesis

Previously used Hypotheses:

  • In what way do the photographers_______ and ________ reflect the concept of _________?
  • In what way does______ explore ______ through her work as a method of understanding______?
  • Can the work of ______ show how the relationship between ________ has developed and changed over time?
  • How do the photographers _____ and _____ portray the environment and the effects of time?
  • How can photographers ______ and _____ bear witness to the ways of life and events of the world?

Own Hypotheses:

How do the photographers Stephen Gill and Mandy Barker relate photography to scientific investigations?

How do the photographers Mandy Barker in her series ‘Beyond Drifting: Imperfectly Known Animals’ and  Chrystel Lebas in her series ‘Field Studies’ show the effects of mankind on environment over time?

How do the photographers Mandy Barker in her series ‘Beyond Drifting: Imperfectly Known Animals’ and  Chrystel Lebas in her series ‘Field Studies’ address issues of environment?

How do the photo books ‘The Meadow’ by Barbara Bosworth and Margot Anne Kelley and ‘Field Studies’ by Chrystel Lebas represent the environment?

Art Movements and Isms

Pictorialism

The Pictorialist perspective was born in the late 1860s and held sway through the first decade of the 20th century. Photographers wanted photography to be seen as art that resembled paintings, marking their prints to match the texture of a canvas and have it recognized as such by galleries and other artistic institutions.. They constructed their images looking for harmony of matter, mind and spirit as well as individual expression

Pictorialists were the first to present the case for photography to be classed as art and in doing so they initiated a discussion about the artistic value of photography as well as a debate about the social role of photographic manipulation. Both of these matters are still contested today and they have been made ever more relevant in the last decades through the increasing use of Photoshop in advertising and on social media.

Allegory: communicating messages by means of symbolic figures, actiond or symbolic representation- dominant 16th to mid 19th century.

Artists associated:

Julia Margaret Camron – Victorian era, unconventional portraits of that time and illustrative allegories based on religious and literacy works, influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites. She created a blur through long exposures leaving the lens intentionally out of focus.

Pictorialist used a number of different photographic groups to promote photography as an art rather than science such as:

Emerson’s Naturalistic Photography

The Vienna Camera Club (Heinrich Kuhn, Hugo Henneberg)- purposefully construct a picture – it might be ‘taken’ from nature but it had to be ‘made’.

The Brotherhood of the Linked Ring (H.P Robinson, George Davidson, Alfred Horlsey Hinton)

Photo-Secession (New York) founded by Alfred Stieglitz

Methods/ techniques/ processes:

  • Pictures that resembled paintings e.g. manipulating images in the darkroom, scratching and marking their prints to imitate the texture of canvas, using soft focus, blurred and fuzzy imagery based on allegorical and spiritual subject matter, including religious scenes.
  • Soft Lighting- blurred , long exposures (Julia Margaret Cameron)

REALISM / STRAIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY

The term ‘realism’ can mean to depict things as they are, without idealising or making abstract. It is also a 19th-century art movement, particularly strong in France, which rebelled against traditional historical, mythological and religious subjects and instead depicted scenes from life.

In photography, realism is not so much a style, but rather one of its fundamental qualities. From its beginnings in the 1830s and 40s, photographers and viewers of photography marvelled at photography’s ability to capture an imprint of nature. The fathers of photography, Louis-Jacques Mandé Daguerre (1787-1851) and William Henry Fox Talbot (1800-1877), both described it as a medium that allows nature to represent itself, seemingly without the intervention of the artist.

Believed in the intrinsic qualities of the photographic medium and its ability to provide accurate and descriptive records of the visual world

Straight Photographers: photographers who believed in the intrinsic qualities of the photographic medium and its ability to provide accurate and descriptive records of the visual world. These photographers strove to make pictures that were ‘photographic’ rather than ‘painterly’, they did not want to treat photography as a kind of monochrome painting. They abhorred handwork and soft focus and championed crisp focus with a wide depth-of-field.

‘A Sea of Steps’, Wells Cathedral, Steps to Chapter House (1903) Artist: Frederick Henry Evans

This image depicts steps ascending to the Chapter House in Wells Cathedral in Somerset, England. Remarkable for its composition and sense of light and space, the photograph conveys the climbing up the stairs, as if analogous to ascending toward the divine serenity symbolized by the illuminated archway.

He drew on the Symbolist manner of using objects to directly express esoteric ideas. Evans framed the interior view of the flight of stairs (an architectural space) to suggest the ascent up the sancta scala (holy stair), giving the image an emotional and spiritual resonance. A member of the Pictorialist Linked Ring Society in London, he represented the extreme Purist approach within the Society. Evans practiced and advocated for a purely photographic image – thus he was a patriarch of Straight photography.

MODERNISM

Modernism was a movement in art, architecture and literature that responded to the rapid changes in technology, culture and society at the beginning in the 1900s through to the late 1930s. Developments including new modes of transport, such as the car and aeroplane, and the industrialisation of manufacturing had a dramatic impact on the life of the city and the individual.

Playing with space and abstraction, artists such as Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Edward Weston and Grit Kallin-Fisher emphasised the underlying geometry and dynamism of the material world. They used extreme viewing angles, tilted horizons and close-ups to defamiliarise their subject matter and draw attention to the processes of representation and perception.

The most well-known discourse of photographic modernism is that initiated in the USA by Alfred Stieglitz, and developed around his New York journal Camera Work between 1903 and 1917, , this version is characterized by the “straight” photograph

Edward Weston
Dunes, Oceano 1936
gelatin silver photograph

Composition and subject matter or content are the two key components of the modern photograph, but these are also related to the values and views of the photographer and their role in modern culture.

Some of the key approaches of Modern Photography are unique to the medium whilst others align with wider art movements such as Dada and Surrealism. In contrast to earlier relationships between photography and artistic groups, which tended to be imitative, Modern Photography became fully embedded in these movements and provided a new and powerful medium for experimentation and expression.

It caused significant aesthetic change in photographic output as well as a shift in the way in which photography was produced, utilized and appreciated.

Essay Plan

  • Essay question

How does mass surveillance and the ‘big brother theory’ cause a common paranoia and feeling of insecurity within the general public?

  • Opening quote

”The notion that “Big Brother Is Watching” has been around for decades, it is an often-used catchphrase to describe surveillance or privacy infringements. The evolution of the Internet, cellular networks and the growth of high speed connections worldwide has allowed an endless supply of devices to connect to this global network and produce an infinite supply of very specific, personal data.” Robert McMahon – Quoted from ‘surveillance and privacy in the digital age: a primer for public relations’ Page 1

  • Introduction (250-500 words): What is your area study? Which artists will you be analysing and why? How will you be responding to their work and essay question?

For this ‘political landscape’ project I am focusing on the theme of surveillance, and how surveillance actually effects the general public, in both positive or negative ways. Particularly how mass surveillance and the ‘big brother theory’ causes a common paranoia and feeling of insecurity within the general public, and how the awareness of this can cause an impact on the public’s trust of authority.  I am looking at how Thomas Ruff and Trevor Paglen explore this theme within their photography.

  • Pg 1 (500 words): Historical/ theoretical context within art, photography and visual culture relevant to your area of study. Make links to art movements/ isms and some of the methods employed by critics and historian. Link to powerpoints about isms andmovements M:\Departments\Photography\Students\Resources\Personal Study

 

  • Pg 2 (500 words): Analyse first artist/photographer in relation to your essay question. Present and evaluate your own images and responses.

Photographer 1 – Thomas Ruff

  • Pg 3 (500 words): Analyse second artist/photographer in relation to your essay question. Present and evaluate your own images and responses.

Phtographer 2 – Trevor Paglen

http://opentranscripts.org/transcript/invisible-images-of-surveillance/

  • Conclusion (250-500 words): Draw parallels, explore differences/ similarities between artists/photographers and that of your own work that you have produced

 

  • Bibliography: List all relevant sources used