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Essay 1st Draft

How do Nan Goldin and David Kirscher’s photographs represent the concept of Love?

“A lot of people seem to think that art or photography is about the way things look, or the surface of things. That’s not what it’s about for me. It’s really about relationships and feelings… It’s really hard for me to do commercial work because people kind of want me to do ‘Nan Goldin’. They don’t understand that it’s not about a style or a look or a setup. It’s about emotional obsession and empathy.” – Nan Goldin 

My intention for my personal study is to show the pejorative and ameliorative sides of a romantic relationship. I am going to investigate what a ‘healthy relationship’ and an ‘unhealthy relationship’ is as I want to show the contrast of the two. I also want to investigate the intimacy of young relationships and show the difference of different relationships within my friendship group. Another idea that I want to investigate is the relationship between myself and my boyfriend, as I have never looked at myself in a project before.

This area of work interests me as I am in a relationship myself and would like to show people what my relationship is like. I would also like to show other relationships as every romantic relationship is special and different. I want to challenge the idea of teenagers thinking love is ‘weird’ or ‘strange’ as I have seen this myself in the younger generation. Especially in Britain, we do not like to talk about the subject of death, love and intimacy, but I wish to talk about this and convey this in my essay and my photographs. 

I am going to experiment my camera skills by using the manual mode setting and aperture mode on my canon 1300D camera to capture my images for my photo book. I am going to be using ISO, white balance and shutter speed to experiment with how the photos are going to look. On light room, I will be experimenting with different presets such as ‘Colour’, ‘Creative’, ‘Grain’ and ‘Sharpening’. I will also be experimenting with photo shop to edit skin complexion and other things that I can edit out of the photos. Additionally, I will be experimenting with ICM (Initial Camera Movement) to achieve a blurry and distorted image and to make the image abstract and unique.

The photographers that I would like to analyse are Nan Goldin and David Kirscher. I am analysing these photographers because they both work with the ideas of love and intimacy, and that is what I am exploring in my personal study. Nan Goldin’s work portrays a more pejorative view of relationships as she tackles abuse from her boyfriend and shows the life of the LGBT community in the 80s and the prejudice they suffered. Whereas, David Kirscher’s work portrays a more ameliorative view of relationships as he follows couples around different cities and photographs their intimate moments such as cuddling in bed and lounging around the house. 

Nan Goldin is a contemporary American photographer for her gritty, intimate and chaotic images of friends, lovers, and herself in the Boston queer and party scenes of the time. Goldin has helped the public to understand that universal human experiences of desire, love, violence, and death are shared between all of us, and to create understanding between mainstream and sub cultural societies. She was very influenced by cinéma verité and was no doubt aware of the work of American photographer Larry Clark. Goldin took up photography about 1971 and her first published works (1973) were black-and-white images of transsexuals and transgender individuals. In 1974, she began to study art at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where she embarked on an enormous portrait of her life, making hundreds of colour transparencies of herself and her friends lying or sitting in bed, engaged in sexual play, recovering from physical violence against them, or injecting themselves with drugs.  

David Kirscher is a photographer based out of Paris and Madrid. His work is very diverse ranging from fashion and editorial work with models to even just photographing his friends in different situations. His passion for photography started when he was 15. Whether he is shooting with professional models and artificial light or with friends and natural light, he says the bottom line is always the same: how to tell a story with pictures. He says he likes to play with the boundary between fiction and reality. He likes to photograph travels, parties, love scenes, black and white or colour photography, mostly analog, but also digital.

Historical Context:

Realism is a 19th-century art movement, particularly strong in France, which rebelled against traditional historical, mythological and religious subjects and instead depicted scenes from life. The movement began in the 1830s and 40s and photographers and viewers of photography marvelled at photography’s ability to capture an imprint of nature. Louis-Jacques Mandé Daguerre (1787-1851) and William Henry Fox Talbot (1800-1877), both suggested that it is a medium that allows nature to represent itself, seemingly without the intervention of the artist. Photography’s ability to depict people, objects and places realistically made it suitable for trying to record and document scientific discoveries and foreign places. From the early 20th century, photographs were regularly published in newspapers as part of the representation of local and national events. The main concept that Realism photographers tried to show were taking photographs which retaliate with pictorialism, and shows real life. They moved away from trying to make photographs look like paintings and focusing on detail, shapes and images. Realism captures real life society and brings up issues of society and was made with the intent to impact and change the lives of the subject. This then influenced the movement of photojournalism and documentary photography among the genre. Calotype, also called talbotype, is an early photographic technique invented by William Henry Fox Talbot of Great Britain in the 1830s. In this technique, a sheet of paper coated with silver chloride was exposed to light in a camera obscura. The areas that were hit by light became dark in tone, yielding a negative image. The revolutionary aspect of the process lay in Talbot’s discovery of a chemical (Gallic acid) that could be used to “develop” the image on the paper. The developing process permitted much shorter exposure times in the camera, down from one hour to one minute.

Image result for realism photography
Lewis Hine‘s 1908 collection of photos for the National Child Labor Committee

Nan Goldin:

Image result for nan goldin
Nan and Brian in Bed, New York City. 1983.

Since the 1980s Nan Goldin has changed the nature of art and documentary photography. By taking her camera everywhere she goes and shooting intimate photographs of otherwise invisible, underground moments in her community, she has turned photography of everyday people, of parties, of sexual moments, and private events into something important striking. The Ballad of Sexual Dependency is a deeply personal narrative which portrays the artists’ life events. This project was formed out of the artist’s own experiences around Boston, New York, Berlin, and elsewhere in the late 1970s, 1980s. Within the project, she includes photographs of herself, her friends, her lovers and other close relatives in intimate moments of love and loss. These people experience ecstasy and pain through sex and drug use. They rejoice at dance clubs and bond with their children at home and they suffer from domestic violence and the ravages of AIDS. Goldin states “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency is the diary I let people read. The diary is my form of control over my life. It allows me to obsessively record every detail. It enables me to remember.” In later work she expands her interest in desire, violence, and shows viewers that these interests have always been important to us, whilst also unsettling the languages of desire in paintings by male artists, through her own complex visions of sexuality, gender, and intimacy. The photo above depicts a dark scene of Goldin and her boyfriend after an argument. The tone of the photo shows how severe the conversation was as the image is dim and gloomy, again depicting the severity of their interaction. The fact that “Brian” is looking away from Nan shows that there is tension between the couple and that he is obviously angry or upset at Nan. Additionally, this image conveys the abusive nature and environment that Nan was in at the time. A quote that portrays her ideology of relationships, “I often fear that men and women are irrevocably strangers to each other, irreconcilably unsuited, almost as if they were from different planets. But there is an intense need for coupling in spite of it all. Even if relationships are destructive, people cling together. The tension this creates seems to be a universal problem: the struggle between autonomy and dependency.” Also, Nan looking at Brian shows that even though they had a heated argument, she was still feeling love and pejorative emotions towards him. This photo also shows the pejorative side of relationships and how dark and emotionally painful they can become.

David Kirscher:

Image result for david kirscher photography
David Kirscher

David Kirscher is a photographer based in Paris and Madrid whose work is mainly surrounded by intimacy and emotions. Kirscher works on the assumption that if a picture doesn’t make him feel any emotion, it won’t to anybody. Kirscher also says to create a safe space for his models, communication is the key. David always explains what he’s doing, and tries to go step by step, and never forces anybody to do anything. When working with couples his main idea that he wants to portray is “definitely intimacy”. David states that he projects his imagery by writing every day, writing ideas, phrases, watching a lot of movies, going to the theater, gossiping on Instagram, going out, listening to music, etc. When he prepares a photo shoot, he takes that mass of information to create visual environments and images. He says that his intention is not to stimulate anyone’s sexual desire and what interests him is to provoke reactions from his viewers. A quote that hones in the ideas that David shows what I would like to present in my photographs is, “I honestly think that love is what we are here for. Not to accumulate more and more belongings, running from one meeting to another, to spend hours in a traffic jam to get to work, first to throw things away just to buy new ones, at the expense of us all, nature, people, animals, the earth. Our home. I honestly think that we are here to love. One person. Many people. The nature. The earth. Our home.” The photo above shares an intimate moment with the lovers Mateusz and Giulia. “This set is about heat, longing and trustful love…” David Kirscher. The light nature of this photo portrays a ameliorative scene and shows the love and relationship between two individuals. It also conveys a sense of trust and loyalty as the two models are holding one another and are close to each other, which also shows intimacy. Additionally, Giulia is smiling at Mateusz which shows her affection towards him and her love for him.

Conclusion:

To conclude, I think that both artists show love and intimacy differently, one pejorative and one ameliorative. The contrast between the two are very present and by showing this contrast, I can display the different types of relationships people have. Even though both artists take very different approaches at technique and the overall aesthetic of their images, they still both have the main idea of intimacy. Additionally, both artists display a level of passion in their images, which also greatly inspired me to be more passionate and personal with my own work. Nan Goldin’s eerie and ominous approach really helped me take photos that were more dark and gloomy, portraying a more negative feel to the photos. David Kirscher’s caring and loving approach helped me take more luminous and light photos, portraying a more positive feel to my images. I think I was able to successfully present the ideas I had for my photo book in this project as these artists really inspired me to go out of my comfort zone. Furthermore, by experimenting with my photo shoots I was able to figure out if I wanted to do just me and my boyfriend or other relationships, and I settled with photos of me and my boyfriend. Lastly, I am very satisfied with the outcome of this project and the overall aesthetic of the images I produced and how the layout looks for my photo book.

Bibliography:

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Nan-Goldin

https://www.theartstory.org/artist/goldin-nan/

https://beloved-stories.com/david-kirscher-exploring-intimacy-through-photography/?fbclid=IwAR2LoYfRQmJJskTWK5AG_JS9A_-aqKixJt6TT_489jcDEoPHv1FTK45zUhA

https://www.arismoskov.com/index.php/event-experience/310-david-kirscher

https://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/education/learning-resources/education-kits/photography/realism/

https://courses.lumenlearning.com/atd-sac-artappreciation/chapter/reading-early-photography/

https://www.britannica.com/technology/calotype

https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/1651

Nan Goldin: Artist Reference

Mood Board:

All Images By Nan Goldin

“Nan Goldin is a contemporary American photographer who became famous in the 1980s for her gritty, intimate, often chaotic images of friends, lovers, and herself in the Boston queer and party scenes of the time. Her most famous body of work The Ballad of Sexual Dependency has become an invaluable record of a creative community soon to be torn apart by the AIDS crisis – with many of the artist’s photographs now haunting memorials of friends and lovers lost to the disease.

Since the 1980s Nan Goldin has changed the nature of art and documentary photography. By taking her camera everywhere she goes and shooting intimate photographs of otherwise invisible, underground moments in her community, she has turned photography of everyday people, of parties, of sexual moments, and private events into something important and worthy of attention – exhibiting in major galleries around the world.

In later work, Goldin’s photographs are placed alongside images of famous works by Old Masters in the Louvre. Here, she expands her interest in desire, violence, and looking to encompass the Western history of art and image-making, and shows viewers that these interests have always been important to us, whilst also unsettling the languages of desire in paintings by male artists, through her own complex visions of sexuality, gender, and intimacy.” https://www.theartstory.org/artist/goldin-nan/

Image Analysis:

Image result for nan goldin
Nan Goldin

Technical:

This image looks like it was taken with natural light to capture the raw moment. This image has quite a high contrast and saturation which give it a ominous vibe. The aperture for this photo is very quite high and the depth of field is quite sharp. Also, the ISO will be around 400 and the white balance looks to be either daylight or shade.

Visual:

The colour of this photo is very saturated and is quite dark to give it a ominous and mysterious look to it. Also the cropping of this photo leads the eye to the people sitting on the bed. Also, the people being the main focus in the photo makes it stand out a lot.

Contextual:

This photo was taken to show one of the arguments Nan Goldin had with her partner and she wanted to portray a pejorative feel to the photo. Also, the context behind abuse and unhealthy relationships are prevalent in her work.

Conceptual:

Her work portrays gritty, intimate, often chaotic images of friends, lovers, and herself in the Boston queer and party scenes of the time. Also, she expands her interest in desire, violence, and looking to encompass the Western history of art and image-making, and shows viewers that these interests have always been important to us, whilst also unsettling the languages of desire in paintings by male artists, through her own complex visions of sexuality, gender, and intimacy.

Essay Questions

For my essay I have a few key ideas that I am looking at:

Love:

One idea that I am looking at is the idea of love and relationships. I want to look at my relationship with my boyfriend and also the relationships of my friends. I want to portray the idea of vulnerability in relationships and young love.

Inner Emotions:

Another idea I am looking at is inner emotions such as anxiety, fear and isolation in different relationships. I would like to photography different types of relationships, good and bad.

Possible essay questions:

How Can Photography Reflect Inner Emotions Such As Fear and Isolation?

How do Nan Goldin and David Kirscher photographs represent the concept of Love?

Photography Decoded

Bibliography; Bright, S. and van Erp, H. (2019), Photography Decoded. London; Octopus Publishing House

“Photography emerged into a 19th-century world that was undergoing rapid transformation in almost every aspect.” (Bright and van Erp 2019:17)

“If manipulation is the first thing someone thinks of in connection to photography, what does that say about the value of the photograph as a reflection of reality?” (Bright and van Erp 2019:17)

“What does a ‘real photograph’ even look like: Is it something you can hold? Is it something you can see on a screen and alter?” (Bright and van Erp 2019:17)

“Mirror can serve as a metaphor to reality, whereas the red velvet evokes theatre curtains. (Bright and van Erp 2019:17) (Bright and van Erp 2019:17)

“The daguerreotype had aspirations to both realistic and theatrical, as well as to the commercial.” (Bright and van Erp 2019:17)

“It is not just photography that is complicated, but the concepts of realism and reality, too.” (Bright and van Erp 2019:18)

“What are the differences between reality and witness and points of view?” (Bright and van Erp 2019:18)

“From Daguerre’s age to ours, photography has undergone a transformation, not only technologically but conceptually.” (Bright and van Erp 2019:18)

“Initially described as a means of capturing or freezing ‘real life’, it has gradually taken on an ever more ambiguous, complicated and fraught character as our ability to modify and share images has exponentially increased.” (Bright and van Erp 2019:18)

“The process of manipulation starts as soon as we frame a person, a landscape, an object, or a scene with our cameras: we choose a portrait or landscape format” (Bright and van Erp 2019:18)

Narrative and Sequencing For My Zine

Mood Board:

All Images from Google Images

Narrative:

For this zine, I wanted to portray the relations towards the people and objects. I wanted to show how the objects could’ve been used and who could’ve been using them. To show this I paired images of people from archival sources (Société Jersiaise and the Jersey Archives) and images I took of WW2 objects. I wanted to show the occupation and liberation of the people of Jersey through the relationship of the people and objects, and I wanted to pair the images together such as an old radio with a archival image of German soldiers using a radio. I will show this narrative and context with the layout of my zine, also I will show the narrative between the person and object with my layout design.

Sequencing:

For this zine, I want to match the colours of the background of my WW2 object images with the back and front page of my zine. I also want to keep the theme of my zine quite simple as I want the images to stand out and have an impact on the person viewing my zine. One section of my zine will be the black and white images from the Jersey Archives mixed with the black and white images of the WW2 objects and the other section with be the photos of the WW2 objects with the coloured background. I want the title of the zine to be translated into German to link with the German occupation. I want to coordinate the colours with the images to create an aesthetic for my zine.

Personal Study: Initial Research and Ideas

Mood Board:

Mind Map:

For personal study I want to show the pejorative and ameliorative sides of a romantic relationship. I am going to investigate what a ‘healthy relationship’ and a ‘unhealthy relationship’ is as I want to show the contrast of the two. The key photographers I initially researched were, Larry Sultan, David Kirscher, Nan Goldin, Lin Zhipeng and Yael Malka.

Academic Sources

Lin Zhipeng

https://www.m97gallery.com/lin-zhipeng-223

www.linzhipeng223.com › info › biography

Dorothée Smith

http://www.femininemoments.dk/blog/loyly-a-new-photography-book-by-dorothee-smith/

David Kirscher

https://www.c-heads.com › 2018/09/01 › love-is-what-we-are-here-for

https://www.arismoskov.com/index.php/event-experience/310-david-kirscher

https://beloved-stories.com/david-kirscher-exploring-intimacy-through-photography/?fbclid=IwAR2LoYfRQmJJskTWK5AG_JS9A_-aqKixJt6TT_489jcDEoPHv1FTK45zUhA

Bibliography;

Howgate, S. (2017) Gillian Wearing and Claude Cahun; Behind the mask, another mask. London; Natural Portrait Gallery.

Critic Sarah Howgate said; ‘Self Portrait (against granite wall) (1916, cat.14) is one of the first examples of Cahun’s transformation into gender-neutral figure.’ (Howgate 2017:23)

Pictorialism vs Realism

PICTORIALISM

Time period : From 1880s-1920s

Key characteristics/ conventions : In 1839, photography was first created in order to objectively present subjects scientifically.Photography was not considered as art until pictorialism was presented. Photography was considered too easy to be considered a form of art.

Photographers from the pictorialism era wanted to make photographs look like paintings and drawings to be like the art world, which juxtaposes original purpose for photographs. Male photographers emphasised erotic aspects of the female subjects. Women were made to look weak and sensual.

Artists associated: Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879), Peter Henry Emerson (1856-1936), The Vienna Camera Club (Austria), The Brotherhood of the Linked Ring (London), Photo-Secession (New York)


Key works:

Methods/ techniques/ processes: makes photographs look like paintings, experimented with chemicals in the dark room, placed Vaseline on lens.

REALISM / STRAIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY

Time period: Mid-19th century, first appearance was in 1826

Key characteristics/ conventions : Creating photographs which retaliate with pictorialism, and shows real life. Moving away from trying to make photographs look like paintings and focusing on detail, shapes and images. Realism captures real life society and brings up issues of society.

Realism was made with intent to impact and change the lives of the subject. This then influenced the movement of photo journalism and documentary photography among the genre.

Artists associated: Paul Strand, Alfred Stieglitz, Walker Evans, Social Reform Photography


Key works:

Image result for paul strand

Methods/ techniques/ processes:

Using photography as its original purpose, to capture things in focused sand clearly.

Capturing society and the world.

First Photo Shoot

For my first photo shoot I will photographing myself and my boyfriend lounging around in his house as I want to capture pure moments of love, vulnerability and intimacy. I will be using natural lighting as I think its the best way to capture the moment naturally.

Final Photos (Unedited):

Final Photos:

How I edited these images:

First I went on the basic setting in light room and pressed the auto button to put the auto editing on.

I then scrolled down and adjusted the settings to get the image to what I wanted it to look like.

After, I scrolled down and went to the lens correction option and clicked on the ‘enable profile corrections’, then clicked ‘make’ and selected Canon.

I then went on the transform section and clicked the auto option.

Next, I went onto the grain setting and selected medium and high settings depending on what look I wanted.

Lastly, I went onto the creative setting and clicked the vintage instant setting to get the desired look for my images.

Conclusion:

To conclude, I am really happy with how this photo shot came out as I was able to capture the ideas that I had. I wish I took a few more photos to capture more raw emotions, but overall I am satisfied with the outcome of this photo shoot. I am really happy with how I edited these photos and will use this technique in future photo shoot.

Dorothée Smith: Artist reference

Mood Board:

ALL PHOTOS USED ARE BY DOROTHÉE SMITH

A 2010 graduate of the École nationale supérieure de la photographie d’Arles (ENSP), Dorothée Smith was the breakout star of the Rencontres d’Arles 2012. This 27-year old photographer surprised and charmed viewers with her portraits of teenagers coming to terms with their own sexuality, diaphanous beings inhabiting changing bodies, pushing the boundaries of the masculine and the feminine towards a new gender defying the laws of nature. Smith works around the notion of gender which she tries to deconstruct in her work.

Her work can be seen as an observation of constructions, deconstructions, displacements, and transformations of identity. Photography here rubs shoulders with video, hybrid art and the use of new technologies, and has led to collaboration with a research team from the CNRS/IRCICA (French National Center for Scientific Research) in 2012.

A lot of her photos feature the LGBTQ+ community which shows her diversity of different communities in her work. Her photos are also very personal as the models are usually topless or in underwear, showing the vulnerability of the models and LGBTQ+ community. Also in her work, you can see a lot of intimate scenes, which is what I also want to show in my work.

Photo Analysis:

DOROTHÉE SMITH

Technical:

This image looks like it was taken with natural light to capture the raw moment. This image is quite under exposed to give a more saturated feel to it. The aperture for this photo is very quite high and the depth of field is quite sharp. Also, the ISO will be around 400 and the white balance looks to be either daylight or shade.

Visual:

The colour of this photo is very saturated and is quite dark to give it a ominous and mysterious look to it. Also the cropping of this photo leads the eye to the person sitting on the bed. Also, the person being the main thing in the photo makes it stand out a lot, putting the person next to a white wall also helped them stand out.

Contextual:

The historical context of gender is very taboo and Smith tries to go against general stereotypes of gender and the law of nature. Also, all her models are in the LGBTQ+ community, which shows the diversity of different people in that community which again challenges gender.

Conceptual:

Her work portrays teenagers coming to terms with their own sexuality, diaphanous beings inhabiting changing bodies and pushing the boundaries of the masculine and the feminine towards a new gender defying the laws of nature. Her work is around the notion of gender which she tries to deconstruct in her photos.