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6. Tableaux and Staged Reality | Portraits

What is Tableaux Vivants?

Image result for tableaux vivants
Stage Performance after Caravaggio (Italian Renaissance painter / dramatic use of chiarascuro lighting)
Image result for caravaggio re-enacted
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

Image result for edward hopper
Edward hopper, Nighthawks, 1942

 

Image result for yinka shonibare photography
Yinka Shonibare,Diary of a Victorian Dandy, 1992
yinka Shonibare, Fake Death Picture (The Suicide – after Manet), 2011
Image result for lottie davies photography
Lottie Davies
Image result for jeff wall
Jeff Wall
Snow White, 1938, Disney Productions
Image result for paul m smith photographer
Paul M Smith, Lads Night Out
Image result for cindy sherman
Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still, 2003
Image result for alex prager
Alex Prager, Staged Reality
Image result for ryan schude
Ryan Schude
Image result for greg crewdson
Gregory Crewdson, Staged Reality
Image result for philip lorca dicorcia
Phillip Lorca Di Corcia, Cruise, 2015
Image result for Martha Rosler
Martha Rosler, Bringing The War Home, 1967-72—Tableau / Conceptual
Image result for hannah starkey
Hannah Starkey, Untitled, 1999—Women in everyday urban setting, from a woman’s perspective
Image result for tom hunter photographer
Tom Hunter, Woman Reading a possession order, 2012 (after Vermeer)
Image result for liberty leading the people
Liberty Leading The people, Eugene Delacroix, 1830
Image result for gerard rancinan
Gerard Rancinan, Raft of Illusions, 2005
Image result for french tableaux photographer raft of medusa
Gerard Rancinan, Raft of Illusions, 2005
Image result for the raft of the medusa
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

Picture

Studio Lighting

Contact sheets

Here are my contact sheets to help me cut down to my final images. These are all the unedited photos compiled side by side in order to pick out the best of the lot.

From these images I was able to isolate and identify the photos I wanted to work with

Final edits

Here are all my final images some edited, some left unedited due to achieving the perfect lighting effect I was after.

 

Desaturated with a heavy exposure drop

Just a drop in exposure with a crop of the background

Desaturated with lowered exposure and raised contrast to highlight the shadows on the subjects face

A close up of the subjects eyes, desaturated and exposure dropped slightly

Desaturated with contrast dropped slightly

Desaturated

Lowered exposure and vibrance toned slightly down to give faded pink effect

Unedited, I really like the shadow created by the lighting falling on the subjects hand gesture and face.

Studio Lighting

What Is Studio Lighting?

Control over lighting offers the photographer control over the final image.

Often photographers work with available light — the sun, ambient light, firelight or available artificial lights. Our knowledge of varied exposure tactics offer us many options for making use of available lighting, but, there are, admittedly, times when we want to control illumination as well as subject as well as the camera and exposure settings.
Studio lighting — strobes, reflectors, diffusers and so forth — offers us that control. https://www.harding.edu/gclayton/photography/topics/010_studio_lighting.html

Three Point Lighting

A common general lighting setup involves a key light, a fill light and a backlight.

The key light provides the main illumination of the subject.

The fill light offers illumination to surfaces turned away from the keylight, providing a better ratio of light and dark tones.

The back light either illuminates the background (or backdrop), or is used on the back of the subject (hair light or rim light) — often aiming to creating rim lighting.

The Three Point Lighting Technique is a standard method used in visual media such as video, film, still photography and computer-generated imagery. It is a simple but versatile system which forms the basis of most lighting.

Experimentation

The aim of this shoot was to experiment with different white-balance, ISO, shutter speed and studio lighting.

The final ISO, shutter speed, and white-balance to execute a well lit studio photo shoot is ISO: 800,  Shutter-speed: 60, and white balance for tungsten light.

Favourite Outcomes from the Experimentation

Studio Lighting; Low Key, Chiaroscuro

Chiaroscuro lighting is an artistic term dating back to the Renaissance that is noted by the contrast between dark and light. It is often times used in a bold manner so that it has a noticeable and dramatic effect on the entire composition of a work

Examples of Chiaroscuro lighting

Giovanni Baglione. Sacred and Profane Love. 1602–1603, showing dramatic compositional chiaroscuro

Peter Paul Rubens’s The Elevation of the Cross (1610–1611) is modelled with dynamic chiaroscuro.

Chiaroscuro Shoot

Favourite Outcomes for Chiaroscuro/Low Key lighting

Studio Lighting

Final Piece

In this particular photo I used the white background in order to capture the pink to its fullest. I got a friend to hold the pink infront of  the white spotlight and angle it directly towards the two girls. I chose Marli and Kristy as I thought their height differnce would make from and intersting picture and it expressed a feeling of individuality as we are all the same age and from the same place yet we are all so different. No one person is the same, whether it me in height or race or brains, I wanted to express a sense of unity by putting to very different people so close to each other, a tall Lativian and a small South African. I purposely had Marli’s shadow fall onto Kristy as a symbol of solidarity and harmony between the countries there represent and the values they express and how no matter what we all stand as one.

In this photo i had the black curtain drawn and had the softbox on and no flash was used as I wanted to display chiaroscuro and any naturally occuring shadowing from the soft box. Yet I didn’t want the spotlight on because I felt it would have been to harsh and I wanted it to feel as subtle as possible. I wanted the tall at the back inorder to capture everyones faces clearly and also to create a clear foreground and background, as well as a reptive structure which is created by the pairs they are standing in. I purposly avoiding having a leading eye as I wanted all persons to be the focal point which symbolies equality, everyone has there chane to be in the spotlight and recieve attention. I put this photo into black and white to resemble the idea of ‘yin and yang’ and how opposites attract in harmony, this filter also creates a cool temperature and tone.

In this photo I had a pink filter over the white spotlight and the white background again. No flash photography was used as I wanted to capture the naturalistic  I wanted Kristy to get down to Marli’s height to show a sense of integration between us and how we should all respect each other and we should always put ourselves in the other persons shoes before making a judgement, it’s all about us being on a level playing field. Also I specifically asked Marli to wear black and Kristy to wear white to symbolise ‘yin and yang’ which describes how seemingly opposite or contrary forces may actually be complementary, interconnected, and interdependent in the natural world, and how they may give rise to each other as they interrelate to one another.

studio portraits- studio light

For this blog post, I photographed some models in the studio again. This time instead of focusing on the chiaroscuro technique I wanted to experiment more creatively with the lighting.  I used different backdrops, reflectors and experimented with different techniques like fanning the model in order to get their hair to below back.

My aim for this photoshoot was to get some more creative and artistic pictures.

Below is a mood board of some creative portraits that inspired my photo shoot:

Mood board

not my images.

Contact sheets

Best outcomes

Analysing

Technical

For this image my camera shutter speed was 1/160 seconds, and the ISO was set on 400. These two camera settings helped me to get the image perfectly exposed. In this image, I used one spot light which was placed on the right side of the model. I then asked her to slightly turn her face towards the light in order to get the shadowed side of her face in the picture.

Visual

I think this image is very successful. The model is centred in the frame so that there is no unnecessary background showing in the image. Because I wanted to capture the shadowing in her face, I used a black backdrop so that the shadowing would blend into the background. I also really like hoe the front of her face is lit up, and how her eyes are shining due to the spotlight.

 

 

 

Natural Lighting Photography

In contrast to studio photography, where there is artificial lighting used, we can used a natural source of lighting to light up the subject of the photograph. In this case we used windows around the school to light up the model. Instead of using three point lighting, we used reflectors which help to light up the opposite side of the model which is darker, to eliminate a contrast in tonal regions. For this photo shoot I used a quick shutter speed, a low ISO to reduce the noise found in the photograph, a large aperture and had a large depth of field. With regard to editing I am going to focus on leveling the images and adjusting the curves, making the edits simple like the idea and aim of this photo shoot.

  • Intensity of the light – An intense lighting source is very harsh, and allows the subject of the photograph to be illuminated. If using a one point lighting rig with intense lighting, we are able to choose what parts of the subject to light up.
  • Direction of the light – Changing the direction of the light helps to illuminate different areas of the subject. Having the light at the back creates a silhouette surrounding the subject, making them stand out from the background. The light at the front will usually light up the whole of the subject. A light source from the side of the subject will only light up one side of the subject creating a chiarascuro effect. Finally we can position the light up towards the ceiling which will diffuse the light and scatter the light back down on the subject
  • Temperature of the light and white balance – The temperature of the light is used to help create an emotional response between the viewer and the subject. A cold light is usually more of a white light, the white balance to be used is likely to be cloudy which warms up the photograph but you can change this if you want to stay with the cold effect. and a warm light is a more of a yellow light. The white balance to go with this is likely to be florescent
  • Using reflectors  – A reflector is used to reflect the light source onto a part of the subject. With regards to natural lighting we use reflectors to make the subject equally lit.
  • Using diffusers – Diffuses are used to make a harsh light much softer.  To diffuse the lights we can use tracing paper, colored gels or purchasing a diffuse.
  • High Key / low key lighting – High key lighting is essentially trying to over expose things. The ISO is likely to be higher and the white balance is altered in order to make everything lighter. To achieve this the lighting is usually harsh and cold.This works well on a white background. In contrast, low key lighting consists of a lot of contrasts and shadows. and its usually dark. The lighting is usually softer and use diffuses, typically this works well using a black background.

Contact Sheets

Edits

These three photographs I would consider to be the top images from this photoshoot. I have been able to use a natural light source in order to capture these images. I have also be able to use a reflector to help light up the other side of my models face.

This photograph was taken at a window, where the most light was found within the school. The main focus point of the photograph is the model who is located on the right side of the frame. The left side of the frame is slightly out of focus meaning the depth of field is smaller and and aperture was low when taking the photograph. I wanted the viewers to still be able to see the background as I felt that it added context towards my image. In this image a reflector was not used which means the left side of her face is lit up and the right side is slightly darker, creating a contrast in tonal areas. The formal elements which are clearly presented are texture, found on the models clothes and hair, and space as negative space is found in the background of the image. The model is looking directly at the lens with a neutral facial expression, her right hand is supporting her face. This creates an emotional response, it shows that she is bored or trapped and that she is next to the outside world that she potentially can not get to. This photograph I would say is my most successful image as it allows the viewers to make their own opinion about why the model is the way she is, making them involved with the image. Moreover I believe it clearly illustrates my skills of natural lighting photography and provides a contrast between studio and natural photography.

Studio Photography

An important aspect of studio photography is the artificial lighting that is used. The lighting used helps to present an emotional responses by the viewers of the audience, it also allows the focal point of the image much clearer. Another reason why artificial lighting is important is the fact it adds temperature to the photograph, the harsher the light the warmer the atmosphere of the image, making it seem more cheerful. In studio photography there are four different types of studio lighting:

  • Flat Light – This is when the light source is facing directly at the subject of the image, meaning the subject is well lit, and all emphasis is on the whole subject. This light source creates a full shadow of the subject in the image.
  • Split Light – A light source which is provided at the side of the subject, which makes half of the subject lit up and the rest fading into darkness, this is where the photographer can clearly show their main focal point
  • Back Light – The light source is found at the back of the subject which helps to create a semi-silhouttes creating a contrast in like and dark in the frame of the image.
  • Flash – Producing a flash of artificial light (typically 1/1000 to 1/200 of a second) at a color temperature of about 5500 K to help illuminate a scene.
  • One Point Lighting – This is when the photographer will only use one light, which is considered to be the ‘key light’. This singular light is used to emphasis certain aspects of the subject. Usually this light is likely to be a soft box as it turns a powerful light source into a more diffused light.
  • Two Point Lighting – This is also known as the cross lighting technique and is mainly used in interviews. The first light is used to show highlights and shadows. The secondary light is known as the fill-light which is used to eliminate the shadows and allow the whole subject to be lit up. This light source is found directly opposite the key light source.
  • Three Point Lighting – This is the black light, which is placed behind the subject. Its purpose is to provide definition and subtle highlights around the subject’s outlines. This helps separate the subject from the background and provide a three-dimensional look.
  • Chiaroscuro Tehnique – This technique is used to create contrast between the lighting on the subject. Normally, the light source is used to illuminate one side of the face leaving the other side in darkness. To create this affect the key light is place next to the subject, on the side and a black background is used.

John Rankin

Rankin is a British photographer who is well known for capturing images of celebrities in a studio. During his careers he and his friend created a magazine where they would be able to promote their photography. Not only has his work appeared in his own magazine but also in Vogue and GQ, making his images reach out towards the younger generation.

Rankin’s Photograph

This photograph is apart of Rankin’s destroy series, where he would capture photographs of celebrities attempting to show their emotions and personality through costume, props and makeup. He would then print out the images and hand them to the celebrities to make it their own. It was then the celebrity job to destroy, colour stitch, do whatever they wanted to the image to express their personality. Conceptually, Rankin wanted to outline the importance that no one is perfect, even if we are famous we are not perfect, which outlines issues in todays society. When first viewing this photograph I am drawn to the fact that the model has her eyes closed and has her head facing downwards, which could present her emotional state at this time as negative. The use of the plain red background is also used to help support this idea. The necklace found around her neck could be considered as something trapping her, thus she attempts to try and take away her life. The lighting used to capture the photograph seems to be three point lighting as all of the model is well lit up, having no shadows or contrast in tones. I would consider texture and  line to be the formal elements within the image, these can be found through the stitching of the image and through the different materials of clothing. The ISO in this image is likely to be low as there is no noise found within the image. Moreover, the image is not completely bright meaning the shutter speed is likely to be fast. Moreover, the whole frame of the image is in focus, suggesting that the aperture is likely to be high and informs us that the image has a large depth of field. In this example of Rankin’s work we can see the celebrity has ripped up the photograph and sown it back together using black thread, making this element clearly  visible. This could show that at this time her life is being ripped apart but slowly and surely she is sowing it back together to gain a better life. This photograph is presented in colour which eliminates a high contrast in tonal regions, allowing the three point lighting to clearly be shown. The image is taken at a straight on angle with the subject located in the foreground of the image, making her the main focus point. I believe Rankin’s work clearly shows elements of studio photography but with his own twist, making his work successful. I enjoy looking at his destroy series as I found them visually stimulating and makes you grasp an understanding of what life is truly like for the celebrity.

Plan

I will be conducting this photoshoot inside of the schools photography studio. I will be using the white infinite wall and the black curtain as the backgrounds. The lights being used will mainly be a soft box and a normal harsh light. With regards to camera settings I will be having my ISO roughly around 400-800 and my shutter speed will be around 1/100. The white balance will be put onto tungsten and I will be using a manual focus. I will be looking at using the different techniques listed above to put the theory of studio photography into practice. Moreover, I will be keeping the editing simple I will be levelling the images and adjusting the curves to make the image to be sharper.

Contact Sheets 

Edits

This outcomes are very successful considering it is my first attempt at studio photography. Due to the success of this first photoshoot, in studio photography, I decided to conduct another photoshoot where I would look at different aspects of studio photography. I will be using filters and props within this new photoshoot in order to gain more meaningful outcomes. I will be redoing my Chiaroscuro technique images as the original images where not as sharp as I would have liked them to be.

Contact Sheets

Edits

I am very pleased with the way these outcomes have turned out from this new photoshoot. I have been able to successfully show the chiaroscuro technique. I have also been able to use props and light filters in order to create an emotion for the models

Studio Photography

Lots of photographers use studio lighting. Studio lighting is used to manipulate and add extra lighting that wouldn’t be there naturally to a shot. Having more light in a shot could be very useful as the photo without it could appear very dark and not how you want it to appear.

In my images you may see some use of chiaroscuro and Rembrandt lighting. This type of lighting occurs when one side of the face is lit up and the shadow from the nose and the cheek on the other side connect leaving a small triangle of light in between the cheek and the nose.

There are different types of studio lighting you can add to create different images. For example you can use one, two or three point lighting. One point lighting requires using one light, usually placed at an angle which will illuminate half of a persons face, creating contrast between the shadow and the infinity curve behind. Two point lighting uses two different lights. In portraiture this is normally used to remove shadows from the face completely. Though I have only really used one and two point lighting in my photo shoot there is also three point lighting which uses a third light. Often placed somewhere behind the person facing the back of their head to create a glow around their head to make it stand out more. Overall, the more points you have light coming from the less shadows will be cast on the person, allowing you to almost remove them completely or create different amounts of shadows in different parts of their face.

These are a selection of the images I have taken using one and two point studio lighting. A lot of the images turned out slightly out of focus due to me not focusing completely or they were over-exposed due to excessive light being used for the images.

The images below are the best images I took using one and two point lighting. I have edited each image to crop, add exposure or add some more contrast between the bright and the dark parts in the images.

The images above and below used one point lighting. I have selected these images as some of the best taken due to the dark shadows that have been created due to using the artificial light on one side of their bodies.

 

The image above uses two point lighting. In this image I have used gels and placed them in front of a spot light while keeping the soft box light appearing from the right. The use of a blue gel creates a dark blue shadow that illuminates his face and body. Without using the gel to make the the light darker on one side, his body would not appear to have many shadows.

 

Studio Photography Lighting (Double)

What is dual point lighting:

Two point lighting setups can be very beneficial. By adopting two separate positions, the photographer can illuminate the key subject (such as a person) however desired, while also controlling (or eliminating entirely) the shading and shadows produced by direct lighting.

The key light, targets the key subject of the photo and serves as the primary illuminator source. The Photographer can experiment with the strength of the video lighting, colour and angle.  The key light will determine the shot’s overall lighting design.

Then a fill light can be used to balance out the shadows appearing on your subject. The fill light will typically not be as strong as the key light. If your lights are all the same strength you can look into using diffusers to help soften a light source along with colour gels. A colour of lighting gel is a transparent coloured material placed over a light source for colour correction and video lighting effects.

Diagram:

Two Point Video Lighting - Basic Online Video Light Setup

Examples:

Image result for what is dual point lighting photography

Related image

My own aim, action plan and technical features:

Use two separate lights in different angles facing the model to capture a series of images that highlight/concentrate on key features of the photograph.

Therefore is se up two lights one facing towards the model from the left and one light facing towards the from the front. This helped to keep the focal point in the part of the photo where those lights cross over, which illuminates the key areas I want to show. I then set my camera to a high ISO so the colour differences were distinct in the harsh light, whilst using a shutter speed of around 1/8 second and a slightly lower aperture so not as much of the light could enter the camera.

Contact sheet:

Final image outcome:

Visual elements of this image include:

The lighting in this was in two locations with one light at the front of the model and there was another lamp to the right side. A fairly plain colour range of primarily whites, greys, browns and black can be seen with a range of light and dark tones across the photography which contact each other. The depth of field and 3D-ness of the photograph is created by where the bottle in the foreground is not in focus, but the model is. The texture is quite smooth and there is a slight lead in line using the sides of the bottom.

Many portraits have contextual and conceptual meanings but this one does not and is designed to showcase a camera technique.

Studio Portraits

My photography class went to the studio room to capture images of people under different lighting. We experimented with the different studio lights as well as the colour filters available. The studio had a key light which highlights the form and dimension of the subject, and a soft box light which diffuses the light into a pleasing soft, even light. When used properly, it reduces harsh shadows. The problems I faced were that some of my images were either over exposed, under exposed or completely blurry. I often had to change my camera settings to get high quality images. Although it was difficult to mange the exposure and focus on the subject I did manage to capture over 100 images. I have selected the best from the contact sheet and edited them on photoshop.

In this image you can see that I have applied the Chiaroscuro technique. Chiaroscuro is the use of strong of contrast between light and dark. It is a bold contrast affecting the entire composition. To create this affect I pulled out the black curtain to have a dark background. I told my subject to wear all black for the photo shoot so the results of the photographs would have her blended in with the black background. To create light areas in the image I used a soft box light and situated it to the right hand side so it emits a soft pleasing, even light onto one side of the subject’s face.