Week 4 Homework – Ralph Eugene Meatyard

“No Focus”

Ralph Eugene Meatyard (1925–1972) lived in Lexington, Kentucky, where he made his living as an optician while creating an impressive and enigmatic body of photographs. 

https://fraenkelgallery.com/artists/ralph-eugene-meatyard
Meatyards images are usually deliberately unfocused. Therefore for my shoot I deliberately unfocused my camera to try to get the same effect as meatyard. In my images I experimented with ISO, focus control and depth of field.

Here are examples of Meatyard's work:

Here are unedited JPEG examples of my shoot:

Here are some of my favourite photos from the shoot that I have edited. I used adobe lightroom to manipulate these images. I applied a black and white preset to all of my images because Meatyards images were mainly in black and white. I then manipulated the exposure, contrast and cropped some images until I was satisfied with the outcome.

Although I like the outcome of the photos of the trees and the lake, I particularly like the photographs I took of the cat behind the fence. I like the depth of field created by the unfocused fence, which therefore focuses the audiences attention on the cat. I feel the black and white preset also aids in directing the attention on the cat because the bold and vibrant colours of the green grass and ivy could redirect and confuse the audiences attention.

Week 5 | Class Challenges | Selecting, editing and presenting abstract ideas

By now you should have generated plenty of images in response to abstract and formalist themes…

Man Ray Lampshade 1938

 

The Formal Elements

  • Line (horizontal, vertical, diagonal, thick, thin etc)
  • Shape
  • Form
  • Texture
  • Pattern
  • Colour

Ensure that you are incorporating the formal elements in your decision making process at all stages of the process…

Task 1

Exploring high contrast images with Keld Helmer-Petersen

 

Helmer-Petersen was a Danish photographer who was inspired by Albert Renger-Patzsch, the experiments at The Bauhaus in Germany and by Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind at the Art Institute of Chicago. He achieved fame for his colour photographs but he also published several books of black and white images that explore dramatic contrasts of tone. In some, we are only presented with images that are black and white. All mid tones have been removed. He created and found these images, using both cameras and flat bed scanners to achieve the effects he was looking for. These books are beautifully designed and encourage us to consider the space around the image and the accompanying text as integral to the meaning of the work.

Click on the images for more…

 

 

  • Choose 4 x images of your own to work with
  • Edit the images using the THRESHOLD ADJUSTMENT in Adobe Photoshop
  • Add a “stroke” to the final image
  • Present your final images in a grid of 4 x square format

 

Original Image
Threshold Adjustment in Photoshop
Adjusting the threshold level slider
Cropping the image
Rotate the image if necessary
Finished image

  • Create a blog post that includes your experiments, including original images, edits and final outcomes
  • Include key information about Keld Helmer-Petersen
  • Add annotations to describe and explain your process
  • Critically evaluate your outcomes
  • Print your final design A4 to Photography Printer

Task 2

  • this task is designed to encourage you to explore Adobe Photoshop further and select areas of an image to reveal / conceal
  • You will begin to use LAYERS and LAYER MASKS
  • You will also use the 2 x OPACITY sliders

METHOD

  1. Open an image in Adobe Photoshop
  2. Add a new layer from the LAYER PANEL > SOLID COLOUR
  3. Reduce the opacity in the LAYER PANEL to reveal your image
  4. Click on the LAYER MASK (white box) in your LAYER PANEL
  5. Choose the brush tool from the TOOLBOX
  6. Adjust the size of the brush using the {} keys
  7. Check / adjust  the opacity level of your brush (top bar)
  8. Click on various areas of the image to create circular “holes”
  9. Using the opacity slider in the LAYER PANEL, bring the level up to 100%
  10. You have a completed image. Flatten the layers, save and upload.
  • Explore ways you can extend this basic idea
  • Create a blog post entitled “Conceal / Reveal”
  • Describe and explain your process and include visual evidence
  • Critically evaluate your process

Remember to use the model :

TECHNICAL -VISUAL-CONCEPTUAL-CONTEXTUAL

here are some helpful examples for you to work from…

Picture

Extension

Now you must carefully select from your images, including homework photo assignments to decide what you will present as a Final Outcome (AO4). You must look at a range of presentation methods, and show in a range of blog posts that you can…

  • sequence images
  • create diptychs (pairs) and triptychs (sets of 3 images)
  • design a grid of 9 x images (square format)
  • explore circular shaped images
  • juxtapose contrasting images

Deadline for final selection of printed images = Monday 15th October

Follow the 10 Step Process for each unit to ensure you tackle all Assessment Objectives thoroughly :

  1. Moodboard (AO1)
  2. Mindmap of ideas (AO1)
  3. Artist Reference / Case Study (AO1)
  4. Action Plan (AO3)
  5. Photoshoots + contact sheets (AO3)
  6. Image Selection (AO2)
  7. Image Editing/ manipulation (AO2)
  8. Presentation of final outcomes (AO4)
  9. Compare and contrast (AO1)
  10. Evaluate and Critique (AO1+AO4)

Albert Renger-Patzsch – information and contact sheets

Albert Renger-Patzsch was a German photographer born on June 22nd, 1897, and was associated with the New Objectivity.
Renger-Patzsch experimented with photography as a teenager. After serving in World War I, he studied chemistry at Dresden Technical College. In 1920 he became director of the picture archive at the Folkwang publishing house in Hagen.
In 1925 Renger-Patzsch began to pursue photography as a full-time career as a freelance documentary and press photographer. He rejected both Pictorialism, which was in imitation of painting, and the experimentation of photographers who relied on startling techniques. In his photographs, he recorded the exact, detailed appearance of objects, reflecting his early pursuit of science. He felt that the underlying structure of his subjects did not require any enhancement by the photographer. In his book Die Welt ist schön, he showed images from both nature and industry, all treated in his clear, transparent style. Such images were closely related to the paintings of the Neue Sachlichkeit movement of painters, who created detached and literal renderings of reality that were so extreme that they produced an eerie effect.
In the early 1930s, Renger-Patzsch taught photography. From the 1940s until his death in 1966, he focused on his own projects, working as a freelance photographer and publishing his photographs. His later subjects included natural landscapes, industrial landscapes, trees, and stones.

The New Objectivity was a movement in German art that arose during the 1920s as a reaction against expressionism. The term was coined by Gustav Friedrich Hartlaub who used it as the title of an art exhibition staged in 1925 to showcase artists who were working in a post-expressionist spirit. As these artists—who included Max Beckmann, Otto Dix, George Grosz, and Jeanne Mammen—rejected the self-involvement and romantic longings of the expressionists, Weimar intellectuals in general made a call to arms for public collaboration, engagement, and rejection of romantic idealism.
Although principally describing a tendency in German painting, the term took a life of its own and came to characterize the attitude of public life in Weimar Germany as well as the art, literature, music, and architecture created to adapt to it. Rather than some goal of philosophical objectivity, it was meant to imply a turn towards practical engagement with the world—an all-business attitude, understood by Germans as intrinsically American.
The movement essentially ended in 1933 with the fall of the Weimar Republic and the rise of the Nazis to power.

Albert Renger-Patzsch

This is my favourite photography by Albert Renger-Patzsch. It shows a snake coiled up with an intense stare. I love the details on each individual scale of the snake is visible and clear for us to see, and the dark tone of the picture gives the snake more of a menacing look. The contrasting light and darks of the image makes it look dramatic, and the fact that it’s been cropped to only view its head makes us focus in the detail of its expression and it’s pose.

To produce pictures inspired by his work, I’ll be taking 150+ pictures of objects which might relate to nature, or anything that’s been man made. To copy his effect, after I take my images i’ll be editing them to have a black and white tone, and cropping them to focus on the small details, and to give them as much as a dramatic effect as possible.

 

Photo shoot – Long lens camera

I went around the school and took pictures , using a long lens camera. I quite actually enjoyed using the long lens camera, it being favourite so far when it comes to the type of lens. I like how I was able to zoom in and catch the small details in a sharp picture, and was able to blur out the background and focus on the object I wanted to take a picture of.

 

 

 

ISO

One of the three pillars of photography that can dramatically affect the look of your images is the camera ISO. ISO stands for the International Standards Organization. In digital photography ISO measures the image sensor. It is a crucial setting to use properly if you want to take the best possible images. The lower the number the less sensitive your camera is to light and the finer the grain. Higher numbers mean your sensor becomes more sensitive to light which allows you to use your camera in darker situations. The problem with choosing higher ISO settings is that you begin to get higher grain in your images the higher you go. Every camera has a different range of ISO values that you can use. When you double your ISO speed, you are doubling the brightness of the photo.

ISO 100
ISO 200
ISO 400
ISO 800
ISO 1600
ISO 3200
ISO 6400

Keld Helmer-Petersen

Keld Helmer-Petersen was a Danish Photographer who passed away on March 6, 2013.

He was born on August 23, 1920 in Copenhagen (the capital of Denmark) which is also where he grew up. He started taking photographs in 1938 when he received a Leica camera as a graduation present. The international prospect and an interest in contemporary art and architecture contributed to the fact that at the age of 23 Helmer-Petersen began to work with an abstract formal language. Inspired by the Bauhaus and Albert Renger-Patzsch, he published in 1948, the bilingual book ‘122 Farvefotografier/122 Colour Photographs’. Today, the book is considered to be a pioneering work in the area of colour photography.

Helmer-Petersen’s ‘122 Colour Photographs’ gave him a grant from the Denmark–America Foundation to study at the Institute of design in Chicago. During his stay at the school, he both taught and studied under the American photographer Harry Callahan. Helmer-Petersen began to experiment with the contrast in graphic black and white expression influenced by constructivist artists and their fascination with industry’s machines and architecture’s constructions.

Helmer-Petersen’s approach to photography was by and large experimental and explorative. He worked on the borders of what we normally consider to be photography. Among other things, throughout his career he worked with “cameraless” photography, the photogram (which is a darkroom technique in which objects are put directly on light-sensitive photograph paper). His curiosity about pushing the limits of the media was expressed in several experimental short films, including Copenhagen Boogie from 1949.

In his last works, Helmer-Petersen experimented with digital technology. In so doing, he returned to the black and white graphic expression. From 2008 up until his death, he placed a variety of old negatives and found objects such as insects, wires, etc. on a flatbed scanner in order to treat them digitally. This process resulted in the experimental trilogy: Black Noise (2010), Back to Black (2011) and Black Light (2014) which was published after his death.

My response:

This is the original photo, a photo of the crane operator leaving after finishing work.
I edited the image so that it was in a similar style to Petersen’s work. I did this by adjusting the threshold of the image and adjusting the brightness and contrast slightly to make the shapes stand out more.
This is the final image. I have applied the previously mentioned filters/adjustments and cropped the image slightly so that the crane is more central.

I have repeated this process for the following images to achieve the same style.

 

White Balance

White balance is the process of removing unrealistic color casts so that objects which appear white in person are rendered white in your photographs. Camera white balance has to take into account the colour temperature of a light source which refers to the relative warmth or coolness of white light. Our eyes are good at seeing what is white under different light sources but digital cameras have difficulty with white balance and can create unwanted color casts. By understanding white balance, you can avoid these colour casts and improve your images under a wider range of lighting conditions.

Auto
Daylight
Shade
Cloudy
Tungsten light
White fluorescent light

Ralph Eugene Meatyard – Response

Ralph Eugene Meatyard was born on the 15th May 1925, in Illinois. At the age of eighteen he was forced to join the Navy, at the time of the Second World War. Lucky the war had ended before he was sent on an overseas assignment. Soon after the war he dedicated his studies into becoming an optician, but still continued with his passion for photography.

His photographic series ‘No Focus’ has combined his occupation with his hobby, showcasing what he was really passionate about. In this series the photographs are completely out of focus, reveling what it is like for blind people seeing the world. This powerful photographic series changed the way people captured photographs, as it went against the stereotypical techniques we would use to capture an image. His work within this series is very inspiring to photographers as it shows that experimentation with the camera is vital part of photography, and that breaking the stereotypes can actually result in effective images.

This photograph has been taken to be apart of Meatyard’s ‘No Focus’ series. As mentioned before the whole frame is out of focus, reveling what it is like to be blind. The first thing my eyes are drawn to is the silhouettes, which seem to be of people or a building. Due to us not being able to tell what the silhouettes are, makes this image more effective as we are left questioning what it is. Therefore it is a more memorable photograph. Moreover, it shows the reality of people’s lives, making an emotional attachment between the image and the viewer. My eyes are then drawn to the light source, which is located at the bottom of the photograph. The main formal elements which are being presented in this photograph is shape, tone and texture, which are all being presented through the silhouettes. All the images within this series are presented as black and white, which contextually shows the period of time when the photograph was taken. It suggests that this image was captured when coloured images could not be captured. Due to the images being in black and white it allows the different tonal regions to be much clearer, and allows the silhouettes to be seen much easier. The overall image is quite dark which suggests that the white balance of ‘cloudy’ could have been used in order to make it darker. Furthermore, the dark images creates a cold temperature to the images, due to this the overall image is seen as much more dramatic and hard hitting. The aperture used to capture this image is also likely to be quite small, in order to not allow much light into the lense resulting in the overall image to be much darker. In contrast the ISO could be high as there is a lot of noise in the image. However, the noise could be created from the focus, resulting in the ISO to be low. The shutter speed used could be a slow shutter speed, which would create a blur, adding to the overall out of focus effect. Conceptually, the photograph is trying to distort the viewers eye sight, outlining the life styles for those who struggle to see, presenting the reality of others within one image. Overall, Meatyard’s photography within this series are well thought out and portray a very powerful meaning.

Planning

For this photoshoot I am hoping to capture my images during the day, in order to use the sun as my natural lighting. However, I would like to capture some of the images at night which will add to the dark and gloomy effect. Possible locations that could work for this photoshoot are forest, office, building and street. I am quite looking forward to capturing these sorts of images, where the frame is out of focus, as I believe I will be able to be creative with what should be turned into silhouettes and what should actually be in the frame. Looking ahead of time I would like to keep the edits simple, I am thinking about just turning the images black and white and levelling them.

Contact Sheets

Edits

As mentioned in the planning the aim of these edits where to keep things simple. To start of with I levelled the images slightly darker than usual, to allow different tones to be shown and the light patches to be brighter. I then turned the photographs in to black and white by lowering the saturation.  I am really happy with the way these three edits have come out as they create the similar blur/distorted effect that Meatyard’s photographs did. I also believe that these three images successfully meat the aim of Meatyard’s series ‘No Focus’, thus resulting in this photoshoot being successful.

Another photographic series that Ralph Eugene Meatyard has produced is called ‘Zen Twigs’. Within this series, we are able to see Meatyard experimentation with depth of field and focus. The title of the series is ‘Zen Twigs’ which is a unique name. It suggests to us that the twigs are in a peaceful state, as Zen means a state of peace and meditation. Before looking at the images in this series viewers are able to predict that the main focus point will be of twigs, due to the name of the title.

Looking at this image, we are able to confirm that the main focus point (subject) is the twigs which are located in the centre of the frame. Due to this being the main focus point it us where the viewers eyes are first drawn to. They then follow the twigs line, which moves their eyes out into the blurred background. Due to this it implies that the image has a narrow depth of field. This also means that the aperture of the lense is likely to be low in order to help capture the blurred background. This image is also presented in black and white, which outlines the different tonal regions within the image, making the depth of field more noticeable to viewers. The image being in black and white contextually shows the period of time when the photograph was taken. It suggests that this image was captured when coloured images could not be captured. Moreover, the formal elements which are being presented in this in this photograph are line, tone and texture. These are all shown through the twig which is gradually becoming out of focus. Due to the foreground of the image being in focus, it implies that a quick shutter speed has been used. We are able to see a clear link between the title of the series and the images, this is because the twig is seen very still and in focus (alone) which shows a sense of Zen. Conceptually, the twigs are used to create peace and a sense of relaxation between the viewers and the image, creating an emotional connection. I really like the images within this photographic series, due to the simplistic techniques used making the subject detailed. I also like the peaceful mood which is presented through the image, as it is easy to look at.

Planning

For this photoshoot I would like to use natural lighting, in order to allow the twigs to seem more natural and it will provide context to the images. To capture the photographs I am going to go into the woods and aim to capture as many interesting twigs I can see. I am going to attempt to use depth of field, focus control and leading lines within this photoshoot in order to make the images interesting and like Meatyard. Moreover, I will keep the edits simple, like the first photoshoot, in order to make my work look more like the artist.

Contact Sheets

Edits

For all of these edits I decided to level the images, allowing the different tones to stand out more and make the images seem sharper. I then adjusted the curves, in order to support the effect I mentioned above. I then turned the images into black and white, like Meatyard did. I am very happy with the way the edits have come out as I believe that I have produced some strong responses to Meatyard’s work. I have been able to use the skill of manual focus, depth of field and leading lines, which has definitely improved these images.

The World Is Beautiful

A contact sheet is a method used by photographers to easily display the work from a photo-shoot and scrutinize the images, making a fine selection of final images from the entirety of the photo-shoot.

They are useful as they allow a photographer to see all of the images at once on a single sheet and notate any changes that they may want to make to the images as well as entirely disregarding images if they are beyond editing or are simply not composed to their standards. Displaying any errors also allows the photographer to progress their work and learn from the mistakes more easily.