The New Topographics: Lewis Baltz

Introduction

New Topographics are photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape, more buildings as opposed to the natural environment. New topographics was a term made up by William Jenkins in 1975 for a group of American photographers (such as Robert Adams and Lewis Baltz) whose pictures had a similar basic/structural aesthetic which were mostly black and white prints of the urban landscapes such as parking lots, suburban housing and warehouses. It has been influential in contemporary photography, both for architecture and its cerebral style. 

What was the new topographics a reaction to?

Topography was both an insight into the increasingly suburbanized world around us, and a reaction to the idealized landscape photography about the natural and the elemental, contrasting both ideas, making the opposite stand out more.

Examples Of New Topographics:

New Topographics | Frieze
Presentation “New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape” |  Luminous Eye
Robert Adams : Pionnier de la photographie de paysages modifiés par l'homme

Lewis Baltz

Lewis Baltz documents the changing American landscape in the 1970s in his series, “New Industrial Parks Near Irvine, California.”

In this series he photographed industrial pictures focusing on parking lots, offices and industrial parks creating a contrast with the structure. He often displayed his images in a grid format meaning that the images must be able to be seen collectively as a group or series.

He takes care to title his pieces with specific information on each site’s location, so that viewers could return to the same exact place.

Examples Of His Work:

Museum of Contemporary Photography
#45, from the “New Industrial Parks Near Irvine, California” portfolio 1975
2001_3 copy.jpg
#10, from the “New Industrial Parks Near Irvine, California” portfolio1974
2001_5.jpg
from the “New Industrial Parks Near Irvine, California” portfolio 1974
The New Industrial Parks by Lewis Baltz (577PH) — Atlas of Places
The New Industrial Parks by Lewis Baltz (577PH) — Atlas of Places
The New Industrial Parks by Lewis Baltz (577PH) — Atlas of Places

Shot with a 35mm lens on a 35mm camera (usually at eye level), and aiming for maximum depth of field, Baltz does this for clarity and precision.

Image Analysis

Lewis Baltz « The Albertina Museum Vienna
Southeast Corner, Semicoa, 333 McCormick, Costa Mesa, from the series The New Industrial Parks Near Irvine, California 1974

Content – A picture of a warehouse corner with trees and grass around it. It is taken from eye level like the topographic genre. The image has no title only a title inculudng the address so that people can go to the places he went to. There is not a single point of focus, It has been framed as a scene, rather than bringing attention to any particular element.

Formal Elements – The image is in black and white which creates a high tonal range. This highlights the solid contrast between light and dark and the structural elements in the warehouse, which gives the image an interesting composition. The sky being clear also emphasises this contrast as it creates a clear, strong line. Baltz used natural light from the sky to get a bright image. The sunlight has also changed this image as there is a faint shadow of the tree on the left which appears on the warehouse, this also makes the right side more exposed then the right creating further juxtapositions. the lines in the warehouse start from the centre of the image and go down to either side giving the image a large depth of field and making the warehouse look 3D.

Mood – The image is strong and impactful. this creates an intiidating feel to the image as the warehouse is very bold and sharp. The plain sky and warehouse also gives a sense of isolation.

Photo Shoot Plan

Who I will be taking the photos and do not need any models as I will be focusing on the landscape.
Whatwarehouses, industrial buildings.
WhyThis represents the new topographics the best as it shows industrial buildings as man made things.  
WhereLa Collette warehouses.
WhenI’ll go on a day where it is not sunny so the sky is grey and contrasts better with the buildings. 
HowFrom eye level.

Contact Sheet

When taking these images I focused on the eye level aspect of industrial photography, and get a lot in the shot because I need to edit the images so they are angled correctly and wanted more of a scene in some images. I think the structural aspects are well executed, the lines of the building structure give them a man made feel which best represents New Topographics and Industrial Landscapes.

School Photo Shoot

Urban and INDUSTRIAL Landscapes

Urban and industrial landscapes are known to be photographs that capture the depth of man made qualities. These are some popular locations of what industrial and urban landscape photos may be such as factory’s, power sites and rubbish sites. Urban landscapes on the other hand may include street photography such as alley ways and rundown or abandoned buildings and houses. Some examples of urban and industrial landscape photography can be seen below….

Industrial Photography…

These images above are examples of the more industrial side of photography and broken down housing. It shows and explores man kind in a way that we simply seem to be destroying the beauty around us. They all seem to be gloomy and unwanted places which makes this type of photography a good genre to analyse.

Urban Photography…

Urban photography is often referred to in the same context as street photography but its a much wider genre that can include anything within a built-up, urban environment. People are not always included in the images, unlike in street photography it seems to have to capture a person.

Urban Photography is more to do with the culture of city and town life. Modern urban photography seems to capture the colorful side of the cities and how humans make the cities lively and happy. These photos that are titled as (Urban Photography) do not have to capture a human in the image. This is what makes Urban photography more exiting in my mind that street photography.

Photographers I Will Be Looking and Referring My Work To…

Rut Blees Luxemburg… Urban

Rut Blees Luxemburg born 1967 | Tate
Rut Blees Luxemburg - Sell & Buy Works, prices, biography

Thomas Struth… Urban

Schlosstrasse, Wittenberg 1991', Thomas Struth, 1991 | Tate
Thomas Struth - ArtReview

In my opinion, these two photographers will be good to refer my work to as jersey is not the best place for city landscapes and big buildings with motorways etc.. therefore trying my best to capture images in town that relate to these urban photographers will help me get some good quality images to analyse.

Hilla Becher… Industrial

Gallery of Three Defining Movements in Architectural Photography - 1
Phillips | Bernd and Hilla Becher - Grain Elevators, 1986 | The Odyssey of  Collecting: Photographs from Joy of Giving Something Foundation, Part 1 New  York Monday, April 3, 2017, Lot 34

Rural Landscape Intro

A landscape is the visible features of an area of land, its landforms, and how they integrate with natural or man-made features.

Landscape photography is a broad genre of photography, it focuses on the capturing of a this landscape scene and brings the viewers to this scene. These scenes can range from broad and vast landscapes to more microscopic focused landscapes.

They can be rural or urban. Rural Landscapes are subjectively delusive of anything manmade and they focus on the sublime and nature. Urban landscapes highlight mans disturbances on these natural scenes.

Rural Landscapes Mood board

Task 2 ~ Case Studies

Lewis Baltz was born in Newport Beach, California, on 12th September 1945. He studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, and received an MFA from the Claremont Graduate School in 1971 which he then worked as a freelance photographer in California to then he taught photography at various institutions such as the California Institute of the Arts, the University of California, Yale, the École Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris, and the Art Academy of Helsinki. Baltz was a visual artist and photographer who became an important figure in the New Topographics movement during the late 1970s. He wrote for many journals, and contributed regularly to L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui, his work has been published in a number of books, presented in numerous exhibitions, and appeared in museums such as the Museum of Modern Art, Paris, Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. In 1973 and 1977 Lewis Baltz received National Endowment for the Arts grants and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Baltz has produced many projects on commission, among them The Nation’s Capital in Photographs for the Corcoran Gallery of Art and Near Reno for the Nevada State Arts Commission. Since the mid 1980s he has been based in Europe and travels extensively.

Image Analysis

The New Industrial Parks by Lewis Baltz (577PH) — Atlas of Places

In this image it shows a shallow tonal range as it focuses on the white tones rather than the black tones of the image except for the ground as it shows a black tone that is lightened.

The New Topographics – intro

New topographics was a term coined by William Jenkins in 1975 to describe a group of American photographers (such as Robert Adams and Lewis Baltz) whose pictures had a similar banal aesthetic, in that they were formal, mostly black and white prints of the urban landscape. Simply, new topographic images where known to be photographs of a man-altered landscape/urban landscapes. Examples below show some popular areas where these type of images can be found and where photo-shoots take place to capture urban landscapes…

More examples of New topographic images

The New Topographics

New topographics was a term coined by William Jenkins in 1975 to describe a group of American photographers (such as Robert Adams and Lewis Baltz) whose pictures had a similar banal aesthetic, in that they were formal, mostly black and white prints of the urban landscape. – Tate.org

SOME KEY NEW TOPOGRAPHIC PHOTOGRAPHERS

What was the new topographics a reaction to?

Their stark, beautifully printed images of this mundane but oddly fascinating topography was both a reflection of the increasingly suburbanised world around them, and a reaction to the tyranny of idealised landscape photography that elevated the natural and the elemental. – The Guardian

This means that the New Topographics was a reaction to the urbanization of the natural landscape. Many images display the juxtaposition between the newly built towns and buildings and the untouched nature in the background that has not yet been built on or changed.

Using Photo Archives

Here I have found a photograph from Jersey’s photograph archive, taken by Albert Smith, of people planting potatoes in the ploughed fields at L’Etacq. I will edit this image together with my own photograph taken from my rural landscape photoshoot, which displays the same setting of L’Etacq.

Case study; ROBERT ADAMS

Robert Adams is an American photographer whos mainly focused on the changing landscape of the American West. His work first started to get noticed in the mid-1970s through his own book The New West.

He has documented the extent and the limits of our damage to the American West, recording there, in over fifty books of pictures, both reasons to despair and to hope.

some examples of his photography;

my favourite image and analysis;

Robert Adams on Working at Home and Photography as Metaphor (2009) –  AMERICAN SUBURB X
robert adams 2009- name unknown

technical- This image has a range of different lighting, as it’s been taken in the night time this would mean there is no natural lighting. However a lamp and the moon are being over exposed in order to create warmer and lighter tones in the image overall. They’re the two brightest sections of the image therefore grab your attention right away. I assume flash has been used in this photo as it would need some sort of help brightening the image up. The contrast between the white house and extremely dark sky works very well together as it’s very sharp. However this image could have in fact been taken during the day time and that could be the sun peaking through the trees and Robert Adams has just turned the image into black and white. The image is very focused and has been taken from far away or maybe through a wider/longer lens.

Visual- This image is clearly taken in black and white or has been edited afterwards. There’s a variety of different tones, from extremely bright and white areas such as the moon and lamp on the house to dark, black/navy areas such as the sky and trees surrounding the house. This image doesn’t focus on shape or texture as it’s a landscape photograph. The house has been centered to the left of the image and the lamp and moon light are in line with each other but in a slanted upwards direction. The viewpoint of this image is straight on in order to capture more at once on a more flat level.

Contextual- there isn’t much history behind this image that Robert Adams took other than simply wanting to photograph the ‘beauty and insight’ of simple landscapes. This a famous quote of his when he talks about why he takes the photographs he does,” To want to make pictures is fundamentally to want to share something that you have seen of value, and that you suspect maybe people haven’t paid enough attention to. The American West has been my primary subject, particularly the landscape. They are frightening landscapes and the only way I can get over my own anxiety about them is to go and keep working.” – Robert Adams

Conceptual- I think there isn’t a deep meaning behind this image that Robert Adams took however I think he wanted people to appreciate the simple details in landscape photography. For example this small little white house that looks like it’s located in the middle of the woods, most people probably wouldn’t think much of it but in the night time when the moonlight shines over it , it makes you see it from a different side. The way Robert Adams edits his images also makes them more interesting to look at due to all the different tones in the image that make certain areas stand out a lot more.

THE NEW TOPOGRAPHICS

New topographics was a term coined by William Jenkins in 1975 to describe a group of American photographers. It was was an exhibition that symbolized a key moment in American landscape photography.

 The new topographics reactions were a reaction to the tyranny of the idealised landscape photography which emphasised the natural and the elemental.

New Topographics

New Topographics

“Mobile Homes, Jefferson County, Colorado” – Robert Adams (1973)

‘New Topographics’ are also widely known as photographs of a ‘Man-made landscape’, as they display the contrast of industrialisation into nature. This exhibition was curated by William Jenkins in the October of 1975. Jenkins recruited a group of landscape photographers including Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Joe Deal, Frank Gholke, Nicholas Nixon, John Schott, Stephen Shore and Henry Wessel Jr. He also later invited the German couple, Bernd and Hilla Becher. The New Topographics movement projects the beauty of industrialism incorporating into the natural world, the exhibition had very mixed reviews by the public and some saw the art as a juxtaposing, pleasant view on landscapes with the mixing of industrialism and nature, whereas others believed it proved that industrialisation is ruining the natural beauty of the planet.

Examples of New Topographics

Bernd Becher and Hilla Becher, ‘Pitheads’ 1974
‘Pitheads’ – Bernd Becher and Hilla Becher (1974)
‘The New West’ – Robert Adams (1974)
‘Untitled View (Boulder City)’ – Joe Deal (1974)

The movement of New Topographics was created almost in retaliation to the romanticism movement, that was popularised by artists such as Ansel Adams. The group of photographers wanted to photograph against the tradition of landscape of photography, that romanticism made unrealistic to the modern human eye.