An environmental portrait is a portrait executed in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and typically illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings. The term is most frequently used of a genre of photography.
The surroundings or background is a key element in environmental portraiture, and is used to convey further information about the person being photographed. The details that convey the message from the surroundings can often be quite small and still be significant. The key seems to be in the symbolism expressed by various elements in the background; for instance, a baseball cap may not tell you much about your subject (unless he or she is a baseball player), but a chef’s hat gives you a lot more detail about who he is and what he does.
“There are many things that are very false about photography when it is accepted without question. You must recognize and interpret it as you would any other art form, and then maybe it is a little more than real.” – Arnold Newman
Arnold Newman (1918-2006) was an American photographer known for his environmental portraits or artists and politicians. He was also known for his carefully composed abstract still life photographs.
Newman is often credited with being the first photographer to use so-called environmental portraiture, in which the photographer places the subject in a carefully controlled setting to capture the essence of the individual’s life and work. Newman normally captured his subjects in their most familiar surroundings with representative visual elements showing their professions and personalities. A musician for instance might be photographed in their recording studio or on stage, a Senator or other politician in their office or a representative building. Using a large-format camera and tripod, he worked to record every detail of a scene.
The photograph below shows one of Arnold Newman’s works, we can see he has his subject clearly engaging with the camera and how they are surrounded by something that represents them and it has been clearly composed of how they are sitting and where they have been placed in the frame which is something I will aim to do in my own photoshoot with inspiration from Arnold Newman.
My Own Responses
For these photoshoots I went out and captured people in their working environments, this enabled me to have them surrounded by things that may represent their life and their work such as Arnold Newman did.
These are two contact sheet of my own experiments and photographs I have taken under the name of environmental portraits. I went out and photographed people in their work place or their environments, I had some people posed more naturally by having them carry on with what they were doing but also having them try look towards the camera slightly to engage with it there and some more unnatural by having them fully engage with the camera by getting them to look directly at the lens. Some photographs came out better than others as some are too over-exposed or under-exposed and others are not completely in focus however there were some photographs which I feel turned out successful and some which I feel would be good to experiment with with turning them black and white from being influenced by people such as Mary-Ellen Mark and Arnold Newman.
This shows how I began to sort through and pick out which photographs would work for experiments with things such as placing into black and white and as good photographs and which would not be so successful or useful.
Edits and Outcomes
For the editing of the photographs I kept it simple by only adjusting the photos into black and white or maybe adjusting the brightness to help with the transition into black and white such as Arnold Newman’s photographs were. I have chosen what I feel to be my 5 best outcomes of this photoshoot as it shows my subjects engaging with the camera and the photographs are clear and work well. Below is the edited and unedited versions of my photographs.
M:\Departments\Photography\Students\Resources\Portraiture\TO DO
TASK 1
You must introduce the new topic : PORTRAITS
Ensure your blog posts are clearly CATEGORISED
Remember… your images must include a caption…this is especially important if they belong to someone else (copyright etc), and helps clarify which images are yours for assessment.
Try adding hyperlinks to use websites / blogs / video URLs or embed relevant YOUTUBE clips to help illustrate your key points
CREATING A VISUAL MOOD-BOARD
Choose a range of portraits / self portraits to develop a grid of images to show your understanding of what a portrait can be…
You must include a range of approaches to portraits in your mood-board…
Define what Contemporary Portrait Photography is…
formal (posed) and informal / candid / natural
head-shot / half body / three quarter length / full length body shot
high angle / low angle / canted angle
colour vs black and white
high key (light and airy) vs low key (high contrast / chiarascuro)
archival imagery (past / historic)
current / contemporary approaches
futuristic approaches
3. Develop a blog post that includes your imagery and label the images accordingly
TASK 2 CREATING A MIND-MAP
We will be studying the history, theories and concepts of portrait making…their purpose and role in our day to day lives too.
Design a mind-map / brainstorm / spider-gram / flowchart of portrait based ideas
Think about the ways in which we use portraits, and what they can say about us / reveal / conceal
define what a portrait actually is
Add your mind-map to a blog post
HALF TERM HOMEWORK TASK (1)
We will begin the unit by looking at ENVIRONMENTAL PORTRAITS, which depict people in their…
working environments
environments that they are associated with
“An environmental portrait is a portrait executed in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and typically illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings. The term is most frequently used of a genre of photography”
Here are some examples…
Look at these influential photographers for more ideas…
August Sander (1876 – 1964)
Paul Strand (1890 – 1976)
Arnold Newman (1918 – 2006)
Daniel Mordzinski (1960 – )
Annie Leibovitz (1949 – )
Mary Ellen Mark (1940 – 2015)
Jimmy Nelson (1967 – )
Sara Facio (1932 – )
Key things to consider with formal / environmental portraits…
Technical= Composition / exposure / lens / light
Visual= eye contact / engagement with the camera / neutral pose and facial expression / angle / viewpoint
Conceptual= what are you intending to present? eg : social documentary? / class ? / authority ? / gender role ? / lifetsyle ?
Contextual=add info and detail regarding the back ground / story / detail / information about the character(s) / connection to the photographer eg family / insider / outsider
Take 100-200 photographs showing your understanding of ENVIRONMENTAL PORTRAITS
Remember…your subject (person) must be engaging with the camera!…you must communicate with them clearly and direct the kind of image that you want to produce!!!
Then select your best 5-10 images and create a blog post that clearly shows your process of taking and making your final outcomes
Remember to show your Photo-Shoot Planning and clearly explain :
who you are photographing
what you are photographing
when you are conducting the shoot
where you are working/ location
why you are designing the shoot in this way
how you are going to produce the images (lighting / equipment etc)
Aaron Siskind was an American photographer who was closely involved with the abstract expressionist movement.
Siskind’s early work contributed to a social documentary of Harlem, New York. This was known as the Harlem Document. Siskind also identified with the ideas and styles of the Abstract Expressionist artists in New York in the 1940s. In these later photographs he continued to emphasize the modernist concern with the flatness of the picture plane, but intensified his approach to picture making – with close-up framing, as well as emphasis on texture, line, and visual rhymes – creating abstract images of the real world.
Albert Renger-Patzsch was a German photographer associated with the New Objectivity.
Renger-Patzsch was born in Würzburg and began making photographs by age twelve. After military service in the First World War he studied chemistry at Dresden Technical College. In the early 1920s he worked as a press photographer for the Chicago Tribune before becoming a freelancer and, in 1925, publishing a book, The choir stalls of Cappenberg. He had his first museum exhibition in 1927.
A second book followed in 1928, Die Welt ist schön (The World is Beautiful). This, his best-known book, is a collection of one hundred of his photographs in which natural forms, industrial subjects and mass-produced objects are presented with the clarity of scientific illustrations. The book’s title was chosen by his publisher; Renger-Patzsch’s preferred title for the collection was Die Dinge (“Things”).
In its sharply focused and matter-of-fact style his work exemplifies the esthetic of The New Objectivity that flourished in the arts in Germany during the Weimar Republic. Like Edward Weston in the United States, Renger-Patzsch believed that the value of photography was in its ability to reproduce the texture of reality, and to represent the essence of an object.
In reponse to Renger-Patzsch, I have Taken photographs which experiment and focus on: focus, line, and the theme of object. For this I have used a school camera with a high zoom lens, and my own camera which has a regular lens.
What I most enjoy about Renger-Patzsch’s images is that they focus more on the line and aesthetic of the objects, and feature almost no other concepts. This allows the viewer to subjectively fabricate their own conclusion about the intentions behind the images.
Looking at double exposures some I feel are not real double exposures because they are not keeping with the traditional sense of double exposure because double exposures are meant to be taken on film and they would be slightly of to the side and they would be a full frame.
Examples of photos that I don’t think are double exposures:
A photographer that I think uses the correct kind of double exposures is Idris Khan. here are some of his photos
Here are my photos trying to emulate his work.
With this image, I duplicated the layer and lowered the layer opacity for the copy and changed the colour to one that would match the transformer box and the tape on it, Giving this image the effect of older 3D glasses.
In order to further explore and improve on the manual camera skills I have learnt in the past week, I have decided to take inspiration from photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard, and his projects “No Focus” and “Zen Twigs”, in which Meatyard explores the use of manual focus, and produces work to show both unfocused images that have a show a lack of context, as well as images that focus on nature with a shallow depth of field, that both help to draw the attention of the viewer, with effective use of contrasting, grey-scale colors.
The following images were taken by Meatyard during his “No Focus” project, and are the images that I took inspiration from:
Both of Meatyards projects hold some similarities as well as differences. “No Focus” is a project that focused on removing the context of the image, and presenting images as more flat and without depth, while still presenting enough contrast and shape to draw the attention of the viewer, allowing them to question the context, as the can’t see it.
In similarity, “Zen Twigs” focuses on the naturally twisted and unpredictable shapes of branches and twigs, while throwing the background completely out of focus. This draws the attention to the subject matter (the twigs), while separating the subject from it’s naturally surrounding, therefore creating a very abstract and out-of-context effect.
As a response to Meatyards work, I produced the following photo shoot, focusing mainly on the use of depth of field and manual focus:
The above photoshoot I took inspiration specifically from Meatyard’s “No Focus” project. In order to present images as having high contrast, I purposefully chose images that were naturally black or white, and placed them together to create contrast. I also used a variety of wires, boxes and stationary as subjects to show different shapes, which will help with drawing the attention of the viewer to the different shapes.
After taking the photo-shoot, I edited my images to enhance the colour contrast. I edited the images so that the colours became grayscale, which is a tactic used by Meatyard in his images to emphasise the shape and contrast of his images.
I also produced another photo-shoot, taking inspiration from Meatyard’s “Zen Twigs”. The images from this photo-shoot are seen below:
This image was taken at TATE modern in London, a space filled with abstract and modern day art. I particularly loved this exhibition as the space where the art was exhibited in was flooded with natural light. Combining this with the crisp and clean white backdrop allowed me to capture some truly beautiful images that showed of the subtleties in each image. The space was also very large and open which allowed me to maneuver my camera without the disturbance of other people or pieces of art.
This was in my opinion one of the most successful images from this photo shoot, therefore making it into my final selection. I reflected up on many different photo shoots from the last couple of months in order to make my selection, even going through images which i have previously discarded as i have learned throughout the past couple of months that almost any image can be transformed through simple editing and cropping, Image 1 i thought initially was too simplistic and quite frankly boring, yet i have discovered that minimalism is a very real and valid form of photography therefore i reconsidered the image. After reviewing the image, i found that it actually holds many different aspects and qualities, like the interesting creasing of the fabric and the contrasting textures of the wall and the floor.
CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF IMAGE 1:
TECHNICAL: For this photo shoot I approached each image in the same way, setting my focus to auto as each piece of art work was fairly big and i did not focus in on small details therefore setting it to manual would be totally useless. I kept my exposure throughout the photo shoot at 400 as each large, white hall was filled with natural light, the bright white walls added to extra light bouncing into the camera. I kept it at a stable level as i wanted to prevent the images becoming overexposed. I switched on my white auto balance setting as again the white walls created problems with the colors of the art work becoming washed out and dull. I set the shutter speed 1/60 as i wanted to create very clean and crisp images that show all aspects of the art work.
VISUAL: One of the most notable aspects of this image i find are the shadows created by the large creases in the draping fabric, the intensity of the shadow increasing the further down the fabric that the eye travels. All aspects of this image are crisp and clean, the high shutter speed to which i set my camera meant that the image is sharp. There is contrast in texture all around in the image, from the rough surface of the fabric, the smooth and matte white wall, to the glossy grey-black floor. The rule of 1/4 applies to this image as most of the subject is contains in the first 1/2 and 1/3 of the image. There is also a sense of repetition in the image through the even creases that go down the fabric sheets and the 3 sticks that mirror each other. Although the image is already bright, a lot of the light is hitting it from the top right hand corner, creating a slightly deeper shadow on the left side of the sheet. The colors in this image are very simple, consisting of a slightly blue toned white, a grey-black and caramel beige. There are many sharp lines which cut through the image such as the separation between the wall and floor, but also the 3 sticks which prop up the fabric which gives the image some geometry and symmetry.
CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF IMAGE 2:
TECHNICAL: For this photo shoot I approached each image in the same way, setting my focus to auto as each piece of art work was fairly big and i did not focus in on small details therefore setting it to manual would be totally useless. I kept my exposure throughout the photo shoot at 400 as each large, white hall was filled with natural light, the bright white walls added to extra light bouncing into the camera. I kept it at a stable level as i wanted to prevent the images becoming overexposed. I switched on my white auto balance setting as again the white walls created problems with the colors of the art work becoming washed out and dull. I set the shutter speed 1/60 as i wanted to create very clean and crisp images that show all aspects of the art work.
VISUAL: This image overall is very busy and overwhelming with the density and contrast in shape, texture and color. Firstly there is a sharp contrast with the texture in the image, with the white, glossy floor and the ragged and varying fabric of the sculptures. Although being very different, create harmony as an image. The light hitting directly above from the image creates depth and shadow which is cast onto the floor, creating a sort of subtle reflection. The larger the shape, the more dramatic and deep the shadows become. There is a lot of repetition in this image, not only through the editing and mirroring the image, but also the varying round shapes of the sculptures that fill up the image. The small white line creating a border around the sculpture in a way breaks the harmony and separates the image from the chaos of the sculpture and the smoothness of the floor.
CONCEPTUAL: Magdalena Abakanowicz began sewing three-dimensional objects with sacking, stockings, rags and rope in the 1970s.
These cocoon-like objects reflect Abakanowicz’s interest in biological systems, organic matter and regeneration, topics she discussed with scientists in her native Poland. In response to a commission to represent Poland at the Venice Biennale in 1979, she made hundreds of soft sculptures of varying shapes and sizes, ‘rounded like bellies, or elongated like mummies,’ as she described them. Abakanowicz collected old mattresses, clothing and sacks to create this ‘invented anatomy’ of forms and installed eight hundred in Venice under the title Embryology.
CONTEXTUAL: Made at a time of political tension between the Soviet Union and Poland, Abakanowicz has said the work ‘could be understood as a cry from behind the Iron Curtain’. She had come to prominence in the 1960s with a series of large woven sculptures called Abakans. At the time, the Polish state would not allow her to buy or rent a studio, so she made them on a loom in a friend’s basement, using sisal from discarded ropes. Without a large space in which to work she would often see her pieces in their entirety for the first time only when they were installed in exhibitions.
CRITICAL ANALYSIS IMAGE 3:
TECHNICAL: For this photo shoot I attempted as much as possible to recreate Meatyard’s “zen sticks” series. I particularly focused on exposure settings, focus control, and depth of field. The photograph below was taken of a dead tree, of the branches facing upwards towards the sky. Meatyard’s images are all very dark and dramatic therefore I chose to do my photo shoot during the evening, on a stormy, grey day. I increased the exposure to 800 in order to capture the branches in a dark setting yet still have some highlights and shadows. The dark night, and mid-range ISO setting meant that the image contracted a lot of motion blur, the effect which i was aiming to get.
VISUAL: It resembles the work of Meatyard in many ways. The dark evening also meant that the resolution of the images decreased and became more grainy. The branches of the tree were also quite far up meaning i had to decrease the depth of field and zoom in, again compromising the quality of the image. The grainy texture of the image I feel adds to the overall aesthetic of Meatyard’s work: old and worn. The differences in motion blur also create a focal point in the image, with the central branch being less blurred than the outermost parts of the image. The image is also quite underexposed which further adds to the dramatic and intense tone, giving it almost a Gothic aura. There is a very apparent sense of space in the photo as the lack of branches in the top left hand corner of the image freeing up space. There is also a lack of light in this image due to both the time of day the image was taken and the lack of exposure adjustments made on the image during editing as i wanted to retain the dark theme.
CONTEXTUAL: 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. Meatyard’s creative circle included mystics and poets, such as Thomas Merton and Guy Davenport, as well as the photographers Cranston Ritchie and Van Deren Coke, who were mentors and fellow members of the Lexington Camera Club. Meatyard’s work spanned many genres and experimented with new means of expression, from dreamlike portraits—often set in abandoned places—to multiple exposures, motion-blur, and other methods of photographic abstraction. He also collaborated with his friend Wendell Berry on the 1971 book The Unforeseen Wilderness, for which Meatyard contributed photographs of Kentucky’s Red River Gorge. Meatyard’s final series, The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater, are cryptic double portraits of friends and family members wearing masks and enacting symbolic dramas.
CONCEPTUAL: Meatyard stated in a lecture to the Louisville Photographic Society, he was involved in working on no fewer than 12 “methods, series, subjects.” Among them were what he called “photographs made under the influence of Zen,” shown here with the title “Zen Twigs.” While the images are very minimalist, they deal with growth and decay, is impressive, they are familiar enough to be looked over lightly. A particularly beautiful one (untitled, like much of Meatyard’s work) shows a young trunk sprouting — or seeming to sprout — a branch that curls around it in a wiry loop, the whole almost a visual haiku. The simplistic tonal range of the image is effective in portraying the theme of deterioration and degeneration. Meatyard has clearly used a very narrow field o view, with a singular branch being in focus and the rest of the backdrop is extremely blurry. The images are in a mid-range of exposure, not too overexposed or underexposed. The light grey tones from the backdrop of the photo, highlight they unsophisticated, dead branch. The upwards growth of the branches, have strong and dark lines which cut through the sea of blurriness. The image also contains various shades of white, black, and grey, all working together to create a harmonious image. The contrast between the blurry backdrop and the foreground give the image a real sense of depth and space.
“As a photographer, I draw inspiration from the island of Jersey on which I live: its sometime soft and delicate, sometime harsh and rugged coastline,
its traditional and contemporary architecture, its abundant flora and the individual characters of the locals.
Often, I interpret my subjects in a way that renders them almost abstract by focusing on details and minutiae which may otherwise pass unnoticed.
The results are images that become visual riddles which entice the viewer to explore and interpret them, while at the same time maintaining an aesthetic
quality which can be appreciated in its own right.
Conversely, many of my photographs pull back to capture the wider picture: from expansive seascapes to distant portraits and character observations, these
images seek to offer an overall view. Minimalist and sometimes stark, these photographs are often more Spartan than my abstract work through their focusing on detail contextualised within a vast setting. “
Albert Renger-Patzsch was a German photographer heavily associated with the New Objectivity.
Renger-Patzsch began taking photos at the age of twelve and after serving in the military during the First World War he studied chemistry. His style was very matter-of-fact and exemplified the aesthetic of the New Objectivity which flourished in Germany at this time during the period of the Weimar Republic.
Renger-Patzsch believed that the value of photography was in its ability to reproduce the texture of reality, and to represent the essence of an object. It meant that his images didn’t necessarily need to have a meaning, or reason behind their creation. They were purely snap shots of visually appealing things he encountered or set up. This brought a whole new era of photography on, paving the way for people to start taking photos informally, of simple things they found pleasing to the eye. This aided in the introduction of endorsement photography, especially in fashion and beauty industries where the subjects are supposed to attract the buyer’s attention whether that is through the presentation of a physical product or the appeal behind models presenting certain products or ideals.