6. Tableaux and Staged Reality | Portraits

What is Tableaux Vivants?

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Stage Performance after Caravaggio (Italian Renaissance painter / dramatic use of chiarascuro lighting)
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Student re-enactment after Caravaggio (The Beheading of St John the Baptist) 1608

CLICK HERE FOR LINK TO TATE DEFINITION

tableau vivant (often shortened to tableau, plural: tableaux vivants), French for ‘living picture’, is a static scene containing one or more actors or models. They are stationary and silent, usually in costume, carefully posed, with props and/or scenery, and may be theatrically lit.

Tableau Ideas and Starting points

  • re-create or re-enact an existing story-based photograph or painting, or scene from a film or even an album cover
  • You could …illustrate a poem, story, song lyrics, fable, moral, mythology, legend, dream etc
  • You could portray…one or more of The Ten Commandments
  • You could elaborate on…one or more of The Seven Deadly Sins

             Tableau Photography is staged. Think of it like theatre.

              Tableau Photography is dependent on a defined NARRATIVE, theme or storyline

Blog Post 1 / TASK 1 .(extend and complete for homework)

  1. You must develop and PLAN a story / part of a story that involves at least 1 x character.
  2. You could / should explore gender roles, masculinity, forms of social commentary, sexism, feminism, equality, isolation, belonging, alienation, disenchantment, political agendas, hierarchies, power, status, imperialism, bullying, environmental concerns etc
  3. Include props, backgrounds, costumes and outfits and mise en scene that connects to your theme somehow.
  4. Introduce symbolism and metaphor in your image(s) and produce a series of images (like stills from a film)
  5. You may want use the lighting studio…or experiment with suitable locations (connect the location to the theme / storyline)

Final Outcomes : a choice of

  1. 3-5 photographs that clearly show your understanding of TABLEAU and STAGED REALITY
  2. GIFS / TIME LAPSE / SLOW-MO
  3. STOP FRAME ANIMATIONS
  4. A SHORT FILM (can include sound , soundtrack)

Blog Post 2 / TASK 2 (minimum 1 x blog post)

  1.  Choose a Tableau photographer to research from the list below
  2. Analyse and evaluate a key image by your chosen artist : A CASE STUDY
  3. Demonstrate creative links to your own idea

COMPLETE TABLEAU UNIT BY FRIDAY 14th DECEMBER

Example 1 :

Just a few notes on DiCorcia’s working methodology:

  • Dicorcia’s work is a mixture of documentary and staged tableaux for which he is best known
  • Well known for his use of lighting in street photography
  • While shooting Hustlers, he paid his subjects, causing controversy in the photographic community
  • DiCorcia only plans / stages his photographs up to a point and then relies on something unexpected to happen
  • He does digitally manipulate some of his images by removing or adding items
  • He does not direct people
  • Very often he does not know his subjects
  • He usually has his camera on a tripod
  • Sets his photos up so that the viewer can assert his/her own interpretation to the image – open narrative

DiCorcia has no patience for visual passivity. “I’ve been trying to create photographs in which the emotional and psychological content is time-released… From the very beginning, I was fighting against this media-created idea that imagery is so disposable that it’s exhausted within a very short amount of time.” His tendency is to slow time down, an apprehension that has nothing to do with entropy. Instead, it is a seduction into the act of looking.

Example 2 : 

  • He uses a large format camera and tripod
  • He uses polaroids for planning out his scenes
  • Draws inspiration from iconic Victorian paintings and recreates the scenes in a contemporary setting
  • Infuses the mood of the Victorian paintings into his modern industrial settings
  • His work is socially aware and pays tribute to art history
  • He uses well known art motifs in his work, e.g. the window as in Vermeer’s paintings
  • His portraiture pays tribute to the Dutch Renaissance and pre-Raphaelite master painters
  • He simulates similar colours and tones as those used by Vermeer
  • His portraits are of the disenfranchised people living close to the margins of society
  • His work is a blend of fictional and factual
  • He most often replicates Vermeer’s methods of portraiture:

… amongst the art historical references glimpsed within Hunter’s oeuvre, the voyeurism of Vermeer is most discernible. Subjects are often shown full figure, in private spheres (e.g. sites of domesticity), and set in the mid-ground in order to include something of their environment.

Birch, Tim


You must show that you know and understand that…

Tableau Photography makes use of symbolism and metaphor.

Allegorical paintings / photographs contain metaphor and symbolism

Pictorialist Photography was the starting point for  Tableaux art

Narrative is vital to successful tableau / staged reality


here are some examples that could inspire your own ideas…

Research each of these examples…

Grant Wood, American Gothic 1930
David LaChapelle, Last Supper, 2008
Christina’s World , Andrew Wyeth, 1938

 

Jeff Wall, A Sudden Gust of Wind, 1993

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Edward hopper, Nighthawks, 1942

 

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Yinka Shonibare,Diary of a Victorian Dandy, 1992
yinka Shonibare, Fake Death Picture (The Suicide – after Manet), 2011
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Lottie Davies
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Jeff Wall
Snow White, 1938, Disney Productions
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Paul M Smith, Lads Night Out
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Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still, 2003
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Alex Prager, Staged Reality
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Ryan Schude
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Gregory Crewdson, Staged Reality
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Phillip Lorca Di Corcia, Cruise, 2015
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Martha Rosler, Bringing The War Home, 1967-72—Tableau / Conceptual
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Hannah Starkey, Untitled, 1999—Women in everyday urban setting, from a woman’s perspective
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Tom Hunter, Woman Reading a possession order, 2012 (after Vermeer)
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Liberty Leading The people, Eugene Delacroix, 1830
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Gerard Rancinan, Raft of Illusions, 2005
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Gerard Rancinan, Raft of Illusions, 2005
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The Raft of The Medusa, Theodore Gericault, 1818

Historical / Contextual Example :

The Raft of The Medusa…Theodore Gericault

https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/becoming-modern/romanticism/romanticism-in-france/v/g-ricault-raft-of-the-medusa-1818-19


Ensure you have enough evidence of…

  1. moodboards
  2. mindmaps
  3. case studies (artist references)
  4. action plans
  5. photoshoots + contact sheets (annotated)
  6. appropriate selection and editing techniques
  7. presentation of final ideas and personal responses
  8. analysis and evaluation of process
  9. compare and contrast to a key photographer
  10. critique / review / reflection of your work

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