Category Archives: Unit 2 Portrait

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Response to TOM HUNTER

The Image we were Imitating

Contextual Reasons: Tom and his neighbours were receiving letters addressed to “Persons Unknown” saying they are non longer welcome to live in semi-derelict squats from the local council. Tom therefore wanted to capture “the dignity of squatter life” in order to show the council that these were real people they were putting in danger and that they would be greatly impacting their lives.

In the end his famous image ” Woman Reading a Possession Order,”  got a dialogue going with the council – and they infact managed to save the houses.

References:

The book we found the image we were studying and re-enacting is called “Tom Hunter”. It is a collection of images from different projects of his which includes work from, Tom Hunter and the modern world, Persons Unknown, Traveller Series and Life and Death in Hackney.

Here is a link to an article written about Tom and his Persons Unknown project which gives deeper contextual reasons and some background behind the photos.

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/nov/04/photography-tom-hunter-best-shot

Action Plan

We first gathered props such as the headphones, water bottle, chairs, table and cloth and bottle cap. These props were all intended to give our image the likened look to the real picture captured by Hunter.

We then sat each other in the correct positions in order to have each of the three people sat in exactly the same position as the models in the photograph and they posed with similar facial expressions.

Technical Features – We then set the camera to an ISO of 800 and made the shutter speed faster to 1/10 second. There was a slightly higher shutter speed so the image was sharp incase any of the models moved slightly.

Contact Sheet

Final Image Response:


Visual Features – These include a fairly plain range of colours being mostly greys, whites and creams with a lighter tone due to the side lighting and a strong contrast between the shaded and non-shaded areas . There is quite a large depth of field and 3D effect created due to the fact that the 3 models in the photo are all sat at different distances from the camera, meaning that their shadows create a visual element of distance when the shadows are overlapped.

Street Photography- Bruce Gilden and Robert Frank

About Bruce Gilden: 

Bruce Gilden was born in 1946 in Brooklyn, America. In 1968  during his early stages of work life he began studying sociology at Penn State, he went and watched one of Michelangelo Antonioni’s film coming out of the film extremely inspired and bought his first camera and started to take photography classes during the evening at the School of Visual Arts of New York City. This is where Gilden turned his career in to a photography career. Gilden originally worked with flash photography and initially used only black and white colors soon to be introduced to he world of color when he had his first look at the Leica S camera as part of Magnum’s Postcards From America project. Gilden has now been a member of the Magnum Photos since 1998.

Bruce Gilden’s first major job with photography was of people at Coney Islands. This is where he found his true love for photography  and the type of photography he most enjoys. He was assigned to take photos of normal people walking down the streets of New York City for example, homeless people, gang members anyone really who was there at the time.

Robert Frank

Robert Frank born on 9th November 1924 in Switzerland. His mother called Rose Franks and Father called Hermann Franks. Robert Franks started photography in 1941, and followed this up with spending the next several years working for  commercial photography and graphic design studio in Zurich, Geneva and Basel. After returning back to Switzerland he headed straight off to America in 1947, where he was spotted by a man called  Alexey Brodovitch who offered him a job as a fashion photographer at Harper’s Bazaar. In 1949, the new editor of camera magazine, Walter Laubli , published a substantial portfolio of Jakob Tuggener pictures made at upper-class entertainments and in factories, alongside the work of much younger Frank who had just returned to  Switzerland after two years abroad, with pages including some of his first pictures from New York. He soon left to travel in South America and Europe. He created another hand-made book of photographs that he shot in Peru, and returned to the U.S. in the 1950s. In 1953, he returned to New York and continued to work as a freelance photojournalist for magazines including McCall’s, Vogue and Fortune. Associating with other photographers like Saul Leiter and Diane Arbus. During the 1940s and 1950s he helped form what Jane Livingston has termed The New York School of photographers.

Some of Robert Franks work:

 

 

 

 

 

Natural Lighting Contact Sheets

We had a task to go and find natural lighting around the school. we decided to go and find some light by a window as we thought it would bring more natural lighting here are some examples of what our come is :

 

Best Outcomes:

I like these outcomes because I found that they showed the light bouncing off the face. As you can see from the bottom photo I found that one the best we took as we have managed to capture the light bouncing off the glasses into the eye, also I found that if we used somewhere dark the photos would come out under exposed however to stop this we changed the white balance.

 

Tableaux Vivants

What is tableaux vivants?

The phrase itself is a French phrase which translates to ‘living picture’. A tableaux vivant is a static scene where there is a singular or multiple models telling some sort of story. These paintings and images are usually well thought out, not only in terms of lighting and camera settings but also in terms of costume, positioning, background as all these factors contribute to the message being sent across to the receiver of the image. This type of imagery combines aspects of theatre and photography to create a staged reality.

The Entombment of Christ (Deposizione) (1601-3)

In this Tableaux we can see these two men lifting up another man, who seems to be dead. You then have two woman who are in the background, almost caring for the man. The woman in the top right corner seems like she is praying or calling for god in order to make sure the dead man is safe. The other woman seems as if she is taking in the fact the man is dead and is morning over his death. The clothes worn by the models tell us that the scene is set in the olden day. The background is completely black which allows the viewers attention to be solely focused on the scene being portrayed in the foreground. It also portrays the idea that the dead man is in an empty void, as that is the general consent with death now a days. The most lit up area of the tableaux is the dead man who is located in the center of the frame, the other people then get less lit the further away they are from the man. This lighting technique implies that the man is the main focus point, and that he was someone who may have been considered important at that time. The lighting also seems to be creating a chiaroscuro effect on some of the models allowing a contrast of tonal regions to be presented in the image. The prominent formal elements found in this image is tone, shape and texture which is shown throughout the bodies found in the foreground in the image. Due to this being a painting no photography techniques have been applied. However, analysis it as if it was a photograph the ISO is low as there is no intended  noise within the image. Moreover, the shutter speed is likely to be quick and the aperture is small as not much light is being let into the image. Finally, the depth of field is large as it is all in focus. Contextually, the image was painted for a church not long after the death of Saint Peter. Saint Peter was said to be cruicified Moreover, the people surrounding him are religious people who are lowering him into his tomb.

The traditional feast days of Saint Peter are:

  • January 18, Feast of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome
  • March 19, Feast of the Chair of St. Peter at Antioch
  • June 29, Feast of Saints Peter and Paul
  • August 1, St. Peter in Chains
  • November 18, Feast of the Dedication of the Basilicas of Saints Peter and Paul

Taken from: http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Saint_Peter

I can now see an emotional attachment and story which is being presented within this oil painting. Viewers who are more religious may find this image more meaningful and empowering than I do. However, after researching this image I understand that a successful Tableaux needs to tell a story and create an emotional attachment with the receiver of the image

As a class we decided to do a group photo shoot based on ‘Entombment of Christ (Deposizione) (1601-3) ‘. This allowed me to understand the thought process that I need to use when going on to create my Tableaux image. I learnt that all aspects play a massive role within making the image. The photographs where taken in the studio with artificial lighting.

Contact Sheets

Final Outcome

This final outcome was successful as it looks very similar to the original painting. The lighting is similar as well as the poses and postures. However, the costumes used are not the same which sort of ruins the old day effect. To edit these images I decided the level the images and adjust to make the image darker allowing the background of this image like the painting

 

 

Eugene Delecroix ‘Leading the people’

We also decided to re create Eugene Delecroix ‘Leading the people’ as another example of Tableaux photography. This is another painting taken from what seems to be the french accomplishing something, almost like the war which is suggested by the guns and dead people. The reason for doing another tableaux with the class was to ensure that I knew exactly what I was doing for my own tableaux.

Contact Sheets

Final Outcome

This was the best outcome taken from this photo shoot. There is a clear spotlight on the model in the center to ensure she is the main focus point, like she is in the original painting. I ensured the background was black, as we did not have the background of the original image. The main difference between the original and my image is that the props and clothes are different which somewhat ruins the overall effect. To edit these images I just adjusted the levels and curves to ensure the sharpness was accurate.

Window photography – natural light

As a task in one of our lessons we had to go out, find a window with a good source of light and take pictures with the natural light.

Contact sheet:

 

Chosen images:

These pictures reflect the use of natural light perfectly I believe. It shows the subtle yet effective use of the natural outside light on the subject’s face, lighting up her features but not in a way which over does it and makes it become too dramatic.

Hannah Starkey

Hannah Starkey is a contemporary British photographer who is best known for her images of women in staged settings. Starkey says that her own photographs are 'explorations of everyday experiences and observations of inner city life from a female perspective'. The women featured in them are either actresses or anonymous strangers who she asks to pose. Hannah Starkey's photographs reconstruct scenes from everyday life with the concentrated stylisation of film. Her images picture women engaged in regular routines such as loitering the streets, sitting in cafes or shopping. She captures in between moments of daily life with a sense of relational detachment. Starkey often uses composition to intensify this sense of personal and emotional disconnection, with arrangements of lone figures.
My Response

To respond to Hannah Starkey's photography style, I decided to recreate some of  her tableaux photographs. Before capturing an image, I would show the subject the photo I wanted to recreate so she could pose in a similar way. To replicate her style and create a sense of relational detachment through the image, I (as the photographer) captured the subject from a distance to create a disconnection.
Photo shoot #1

 
Photo Shoot #2

  
Photo Shoot #3

Tableaux Vivants Recreation

THE RAFT OF MEDUSA: 

WORK STRATEGY: 

WHO – for this  photo shoot, there were multiple models in order to recreate the raft of medusa.

WHAT – the main objective of this photo shoot was to try and stage the raft of medusa, adopting similar mannerisms as the people depicted in the painting.

WHEN – the images were taken during school time, indoors where artificial lighting as used ti light the room.

WHERE -the images were captured inside a classroom.

WHY – to understand the ways in which to direct people and think about aspects such as mannerisms, lighting, facial expressions and positioning.

HOW – I used my regular DSLR camera for this photo shoot, using the artificial lighting provided.

IMAGE ANALYSIS:

VISUAL: 

The recreation of our image includes a lot of similar aspects as the original, trying to recreate similar facial expressions and positions as the subjects in the painting. Central in the image is main subject, holding up and waving a cloth to try and get attention, it is the first thing that the eye is drawn to due to the height at which the subject is at, towering above almost everyone else in the image. There is a sort of power play going on in the image, with two of the subjects being above everyone. This positioning is trying to convey the different states of the people on the raft, some healthier than others, whilst some are on the brink of death. We used a few extra props and stood on the table to symbolize the raft, and used a coat to symbolize the sail.

TECHNICAL: 

The classroom environment we were in made it difficult to capture a similar lighting as in the image. There were direct lights which were pointing from up above, to try and correct this and create chiaroscuro lighting, we only kept one light in the room on .In order to have a very crisp and sharp image, a tripod was used to stabilize the camera whilst the image was being taken. The limited lighting in the room meant that the ISO had to be fairly high, being set to 6400 to avoid being under exposed, furthermore the f/stop used for this shoot was also quite large at f/3.4.

CONCEPTUAL: The Raft of the Medusa (French: Le Radeau de la Méduse) is an oil painting of 1818–19 by the French Romantic painter and lithographer Théodore Géricault (1791–1824). Completed when the artist was 27, the work has become an icon of French Romanticism. At 491 cm × 716 cm it is an over-life-size painting that depicts a moment from the aftermath of the wreck of the French naval frigate Méduse, which ran aground off the coast of today’s Mauritania on 2 July 1816. On 5 July 1816, at least 147 people were set adrift on a hurriedly constructed raft; all but 15 died in the 13 days before their rescue, and those who survived endured starvation and dehydration and practised cannibalism. The event became an international scandal, in part because its cause was widely attributed to the incompetence of the French captain.

CONTEXTUAL:

Géricault chose to depict this event in order to launch his career with a large-scale uncommissioned work on a subject that had already generated great public interest. The event fascinated him, and before he began work on the final painting, he undertook extensive research and produced many preparatory sketches. He interviewed two of the survivors and constructed a detailed scale model of the raft. He visited hospitals and morgues where he could view, first-hand, the colour and texture of the flesh of the dying and dead. As he had anticipated, the painting proved highly controversial at its first appearance in the 1819 Paris Salon, attracting passionate praise and condemnation in equal measure. However, it established his international reputation, and today is widely seen as seminal in the early history of the Romantic movement in French painting.

TOM HUNTER: 

IMAGE ANALYSIS: 

VISUAL:

The image below holds a lot of emotional attachment. The baby on the bottom left corner is only noticed after really looking at the image for an extended period of time as the mother is the focal point of the image. The eye is first drawn to her rather than the surroundings. The color in this image is also very bright and saturated. The overall feeling of the image is bright and colorful with the light coming in from the window and the bright lemon colored wall in the background of the image. There is a lot of natural light hitting the front of the model’s face, giving the image a very natural and organic look, as if somebody was simply documenting the woman’s day. The baby in the bottom left corner of the image adds a lot of emotion, yet at the same time blends in with the environment, almost as if it has been forgotten. The subject in the image is not making eye contact with the camera and does not have any clear facial expression suggesting that possibly a sense of shock has hit her, and she is frozen in time. The image almost feels like an invasion of privacy from the angle from which it is taken and the lack of contact made with the camera.

TECHNICAL: 

 The exposure of this image is very balanced, with the highlights and shadows working together to create a very harmonious image. The way in which the natural lighting hits the subject from the left hand side of the image suggests that no additional lighting equipment has been used in this photo shoot. Again making this type of photography seem more documentary style. The colors in this image are also well balanced, possibly being more on the over saturated side as the orange clothing on the baby is very visible and bright. There is a clear foreground, mid-ground and background, with the baby being in the foreground, the woman reading the letter in the mid-ground and the shelf and wall in the background.

CONCEPTUAL: 

Filipa had just had her first baby. We spent the whole day trying things out: we had a bowl of fruit, then we tried some curtains, then incorporated the baby. The light was perfect, a late winter sun coming through the window, really low, like the northern European light.

I used a large-format camera, which really captures that light. And I used the Supachrome process to print it – old-fashioned even then. The exposure was about a second, so it was like sitting for a painting: she had to stand still. I was waiting for the light to pour into the lens, rather than snapping at something.

I phoned her up last week and she’s still happy with the picture. It’s a record of her, her child and her home at the time. The great thing is, the picture got a dialogue going with the council – and we managed to save the houses.

CONTEXTUAL:  

was living in Hackney in London, in a whole street of squats, having spent two years travelling around Europe in a doubledecker bus. Everyone got a letter addressed to “persons unknown”. The council wanted to knock down the street and build warehouses. The Tories had brought in the Criminal Justice Act, which was designed to stop parties. Every time you saw a picture of a squatter or a traveler, it was to go with a story about how antisocial they were. I just wanted to take a picture showing the dignity of squatter life – a piece of propaganda to save my neighborhood.

I took this in 1997, for my master’s degree show at the Royal College of Art. The 17th-century golden age of Dutch painting had had a massive impact on me: the way they dealt with ordinary people, not kings, queens and generals. I thought if I could borrow their style for squatters and travellers, it would elevate their status. In this shot, inspired by Vermeer’s Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window, my next-door neighbour is reading the possession order.

RULE OF 3RD’S:  

This image follows the rule of 3rd s, as can be seen when we divide the image into blocks. The woman is sectioned mostly in the last third of the image, yet the letter she is holding positions itself in the very center of the image, becoming a very clear focal point of the image.

Snow White tableaux

Snow White, 1937, Walt Disney Productions

Snow White is a 19th century German fairy tale which is today known widely across the Western world. My photography class decided to recreate a scene from this fairy tale to create a  tableaux image. The apple in Snow White that represents poison is also a religious symbol. It represents a comparable story to that of Adam and Eve, where Eve is tempted by the forbidden fruit and is corrupted by her acceptance of the fruit. Jut like the Bible, Snow White is tempted by the poison apple and ultimately suffers for it. Just as Eve was warned against accepting the fruit, Snow White knows that she should not be talking to and accepting gifts from strangers. Her weakness for the apple results in a sleeping death, whereas for Eve, her acceptance of the fruit results in spiritual death. Instead of the apple, we decided to swap the fruit with an apple iphone. Phones can also represent temptation since our current society is constable on them.

Studio Practical (Chiaroscuro)

Image result for Jusepe de Ribera

The Italian Term Chiaroscuro, meaning light and dark, is used throughout renaissance paintings and and continues in modern photography today.  One of the most notable artists to come out of the renaissance was Giorgione, an Italian painter, who focused on using Chiaroscuro and Rembrandt lighting, inspired the likes of Jusepe de Ribera, who used more contrasting colours and kept more of their subject’s face covered in shadow.

The use of this technique is still being replicated today, with Photographers such as Ralph Gibson using a very high contrast between the subject and their shadows. Gibson uses lighting and shadows to create create an artificial atmosphere in which the photograph has much more depth.

Ralph redefines the concept of simplicity with this photograph from the ‘Infanta’ series, which explores the human figure. Photograph/Ralph Gibson

For my images i wanted to use a similar style of photography as this picture from Gibson’s ‘Infanta’ series. I wanted to create a clear line between light and dark in the photo, and try to recreate the dramatic feeling given off by the lighting used in this image.

As you can see from my contact sheet below, I also wanted to play around with lighting the subjects with fill lights as well as front facing flash and light bouncing. While this technique worked to some extent, i feel as though my lower key photographs looked much nicer and more professional.

 

 

Contact Sheet:

 

Final Images/Edits:

Fill Lighting:

Edited in: Lightroom

 

Chiaroscuro Lighting:

Edited in: Lightroom