With my first photo shoot I put them into a folder in light room under a name such as Fran ~ Tree so I know that the photographer is Francesca Woodman and the Photos are of me in the tree.
Next with the images I go through them all to either reject or flag them. Usually I go through all the photos rejecting all the ones that are blurry to then go through again to see if I have missed any.
I then put the photos into 2 groups Red and Yellow. All the photos with the Red label are all the photos that I do not want for many reasons such as my jacket was showing, the photo isn’t in full focus or maybe the camera was too close.
With the selected 33 photos I went through them again to find the photos I liked the most and changed the label colour from yellow to green. Selecting similar images and comparing to find the better image and then keep that as the green labelled one.
I then selected one of the green labelled images which I changed to be in black and white, adjusting it to make the white dress stand out while the trees are still dark. This would create an equal balance between black and white which creates the dress as the main focus of the image.
With this new edit on the photos I synced this to all the other green labelled photographs. This would make the process easier to edit all images to make them black and white. To the same balance of black and white in all images.
As I have changed all the green labelled photos to being in black and white I went through individually and adjusted each image to have the right level of a bright white dress and a dark tree within the photo.
shoot 2
With my second shoot I start the process again with flagging and rejecting the images. Deciding which images are too blurry or ones with my eyes shut.
Then I sorted the photos in labelled groups of red and yellow to discard the photos I feel isn’t right for the image I am looking for. From the green images I then went through to find the one image was good enough to use and photoshop.
With my chosen image I change the background of the image to white to see whether the image would suit a white background or with a coloured one. This was a challenge as I had to try to delete the shadow behind as I wanted the image to be animation like so having no background would make it more cartoon like.
I put the photo onto photoshop to clean up around the portrait so the image would be a more fixed imaged. This way it will be easier to add the coloured background.
I decided to add a light blue background similar to the sad side of the face. With the blue coloured background I flattened the image then cropped it to make it more focused on the face.
shoot 3
With shoot 3 I did the same as the previous shoots by flagging the photos that weren’t right then with the flagged photos I put them into 2 labelled groups of red and yellow.
Then I went through the yellow labelled ones and changed the labels of the best images to green. Narrowing down the the few I find would show the best representation of what I am trying to show in my photographs.
With one of the green images I edited it to make the black silhouette stronger and the white sheet brighter. In attempt on keeping the silhouette solid in colour by with a softer blend to the light.
As I edited one image, I then synced it up with the other 3 green labelled images. Which some didn’t come out the way I expected it to as it may have been too dark of a silhouette that it makes the sheet behind become too dark.
Opening quote (either Lillie Langtry or The Countess of Castiglione)
Paragraph 1
Introduction
– Basing my book/essay on a mixture of my personal identity and things I am interested in.
– Looking into how photography plays a part in celebrity culture in good and bad ways e.g self promotion and paparazzi.
– Comparing historical and contemporary figures ; Lillie Langtry (historical),Countess of Castiglione (historical), Kim Kardashian (historical)
Paragraph 2 – Historical
The Countess of Castiglione(Positive)
– 1837 until 1899, Italian aristocrat
– Mistress of Napoleon III of France, obsessed with her own appearance, would not look at herself in old age when she lost her attractive looks.
– Photographed over 400 times with photographer Pierre-Louis Pierson, and also images of her son and her dogs.
– Controlled the whole photographic process (lighting, pose, setting) to allow herself to create her own self-perception to the public.
– Portraits kept in Metropolitan Museum, biographies and movies made about her life.
Paragraph 3 – Historical
Lillie Langtry (Positive and negative)
– 1953 until 1929, Jersey-born socialite
– Original name : Emilie Charlotte Le Breton (relation to my family on grandfathers side – personal identity)
– Actress, socialite, mistress of Prince Albert of Wales, early example of celebrity endorsement.
– Scandal between her and Prince in newspapers, scandal forgotten, became actress with help of Oscar Wilde and opened Jersey Opera House
Paragraph 4 – Contemporary
Kim Kardashian (Negative)
– Social media and reality star
– Positive and negative ideas on the public having access to photography through phones and sharing experiences and photographs of celebrities. Photography making career easier to boost (modelling and brand deals)
– ‘Cancel Culture’ holding celebrities accountable for mistakes, threatening careers and sometimes safety of the celebrity.
– Paparazzi also threatening safety and careers of celebrities for their appearance, where they are, what they are doing. Threaten the lives of their families and friends.
– Origin of fame for Kardashian family being controversial (leaked explicit videos and photos)
Paragraph 5
Conclusion
– Comparing photography in celebrity lives throughout history (positive and negative effects)
– Photography as art vs photography as a career
– How photography being made accessible to everyone has effected the lives of celebrities
1. Write a book specification and describe in detail what your book will be about in terms of narrative, concept and design with reference to the same elements of bookmaking as above.
Narrative:What is your story? Describe in:
3 words – The role of photographyin celebrity culture
A sentence – How the role of photography has changed over time and how it depicts celebritiesfrom the past and present.
A paragraph – My photobook will be based on photography within celebrity culture and how the roles of photography have changed. My book will focus on the role of photography in the past and how it depicted the celebrity as glamorous and important through the use of excessive clothing, makeup and dramatic lighting. I will recreate images of the historical local icon Lillie Langtry as she is a distant relative from my grandads side of the family, which will link my photobook to my own identity.
Design: Consider the following
How you want your book to look and feel – I want my photobook to look sleek and sophisticated, to accentuate the role of photography as a way of showing those higher in the social and economic hierarchy in the past.
Paper and ink – undecided
Format, size and orientation – Some of my images will be landscape and some images will be portrait, but they will all be the same size to keep a uniformed appearance.
Binding and cover – I don’t want to use an image for the front cover of my book, but instead a simple cover as I feel like it connotes the idea of sophistication.
Title – undecided
Structure and architecture –I may use full page spreads for my landscape images, but all of my portrait images will be the same size to keep a uniformed structure but adding juxtaposition.
Design and layout – I may include original portraits of Lillie Langtry within my book to create a juxtaposition between photography in the past and modern photography.
Editing and sequencing – All my images will be edited using the same methods, and the landscape and portrait images will be sequenced pattern.
Images and text – I am not sure yet if my images will contain text, but I may include iconic headlines from Lillie Langtry’s features in magazines
“Real things don’t frighten me just the ones in my mind do.” – Francesca Woodman
For my personal study I will be focusing on mental health and the effects it has on photographers. I chose this topic for my personal study because mental health has brought me together with my friends and family but has also been the reason to lose family and friends. With my project I want to explore anxiety, depression, bulimia, and borderline personality disorder. Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a disorder which affects how the person’s mood and interaction with others. Symptoms of this are: emotional instability, disturbed patterns of thinking or perception, impulsive behaviour and intense but unstable relationships with others. Most conditions of BPD result from a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Bulimia is an eating disorder with episodes of binge eating and self-induced vomiting. Anxiety is a feeling of unease such as worry or fear these can range from mild to severe. Lastly depression is low mood which can last for weeks or months which can affect daily life. With this study I will be analysing Francesca Woodman and Edward Honaker. I am influenced by these photographers because they both use self-portraits but not in a traditional way. I find that both photographers take photos that hide their face as a way of showing how others view them without the use of facial expressions, the use of their body to express how they feel. I have studied Honaker in a previous topic where I displayed how life is like a jigsaw and having to piece together to find out your true personality, I used Edward as one of the corners to the jigsaw of happiness as depression is the opposite to that.
Historical Context
Francesca Woodman’s photography can be seen as being surrealist and postmodernist. Postmodernism makes references to things outside the artwork for example: political, cultural, social, historical, psychological issues. Surrealism was the longest form of photography going from the 1920s to the1960s and beyond. Surrealism is a photo that rejects the idea that something identifiable which relates back to Woodman and Honaker’s work the subject of their photographer is themselves but blurry or covered which makes them unidentifiable. Postmodernism first became popular in the late 20th century with the focus on abstract photography, which can also show themes of surrealism and expressionism. This was most popular during the war as it gave women the opportunity to create this type of photography. Francesca uses abandoned buildings; torn paper can be transformed into angel wings; antique clothing salvaged from thrift stores can turn into the folds and drapes of classical architectural forms. She goes against traditional photography and questions the degree to which these self-portraits are any longer ‘self.’ In her images she uses a blurry presence caused by movement in front of the camera this creates a camouflage of the body in relation to the objects surrounding her. Abrigail Solomon-Godeau has remarked that “Woodman’s photography has… not a lot in common with mainstream art photography of the 1970s;” as straight photography became popular between the 1960s and 1970s such as Ansel Adams and Imogen Cunningham.
Mental illnesses have been around for quite a long time where it was first thought that during 6500BC (Prehistoric era) the cause of mental illnesses was caused by possession by evil or demonic spirits, displeasure of gods, eclipses, planetary gravitation, curses, and sin. Then in 1917 Freud published the ‘Introduction to Psychoanalysis’ which outlines his theories on the unconscious mind, and his approach to therapy. He produced the theory that traumatic experiences often occurring during childhood can affect the psychosexual stages of development which are then repressed into the unconscious as a way of defending the ego (self). In Freud’s study on Little Hans, he discovered that his trauma over the Oedipus complex was caused by his mothers’ comments, this caused a castration anxiety towards his father, which he projected onto a more socially appropriate object such as a horse. The treatment of this psychoanalyst involved accessing the unconscious, through methods such as dream analysis and interpreting symbols implanted by the unconscious mind. The therapist then talked through the traumatic incident, bringing it into the conscious mind where it could be rationally considered until it was resolved. Freud’s theories focus on traumatic or stressful experiences or distorted perceptions as the cause of mental illness.
Edward Honaker
The first photographer I am analysing is Edward Honaker, he was first diagnosed with depression at the age of 19. This had a significant impact on daily life which he then used to influence his photography, to create a series of black and white images which display his self-destruction, depression, and anxiety. The concept I am using from this photographer is that “Everyone is or will be affected by them one way or another and ignoring them doesn’t make things better.” With that I want to express the struggles using simple objects found in the house showing how it is not just inside but is also around you.
In this image you can see Edward Honaker standing behind a certain with an artificial light behind him to create a silhouette. I thought this photo was highly creative as traditionally you would have the lighting in front of the person you are taking a photograph of. The use of the certain is very symbolic as it shows a barrier between him and the viewer of the photograph. The effective use of artificial lighting behind to create a strong silhouette while having it fade slightly by the shoulders. The contrast of black and white exaggerates the head and hand making them the clear focus of the photo. As this photo is in black and white, it gives a stronger view on what the photo is meant to be because having colour in the photo would probably take away the focus of the photograph and draw away the attention to the simple details such as the hand.
Francesca Woodman
The second photographer I am analysing is Francesca Woodman. I chose this photographer because the use of landscape portraits is very fascinating because she contrasts Edward Honaker as he takes photos inside whereas she explores the outdoors and other buildings which link back to her. “Am I in the Picture? Am I getting in or out of it? I could be a ghost, an animal or a dead body, not just this girl standing on the corner?” I find this quote interesting as she is saying how you should not assume what she is doing in the photo which creates a sense of mystery to what is happening and really question the photo.
In this image Francesca uses a white sheet to hide behind while standing behind a tree. She is wearing a white dress which contrasts with the dark background as though she is trying to hide the white behind the darkness or even be as though she is coming out from behind the darkness. This photo is similar to Edward Honakewr as he doesn’t use colour which I find very effective in their work as colour would take away the purpose of the photo. The white dress and sheet stands out towards the audience and draws their eyes to it as it is so bright and yet the background is very dull and monochrome.
Alexander Khokhlov
Another photographer I chose was Alexander Khokhlov. I chose him because I wanted a contrast in my project by having a print inspired by this artist and photographer. As the photographer and artist wanted to show how “Mental problems cover the true face.” Which is now among the most important reasons why employees are being on sick leave so this becomes a particularly critical issue in people’s lives today.
In this image Alexander Khokhlov uses paint to create different mental health disorders onto their faces. With this image he paints bipolar and the different emotions they express with this disorder. The use of contrasting colours on the two different sides of the face are interesting as they correspond on the colour wheel and are the stereotypical colours to represent happiness and sadness.
Conclusion
In conclusion, mental health has a big impact on photographers and the work they produce. So, with my mental health photobook I want to show the effects mental health has on my photography influenced by Francesca Woodman and Edward Honaker with the prints influenced by Alexander Khokhlov. The exploration of these photographers helped understand the expression of mental health and how they coped and spread awareness of it in such a creative and beautiful way. Honaker and Woodman show how you can create effective photos in black and white and the lack of face expressions to exaggerate how mental health is hiding in the person in the darkness. Yet in Khokhlov’s photos he shows how you can express the inside by presenting it on the face using paint and how it is easier to show people how they feel in a simple but expressive way.
How can technical elements in Doug Dubois’ and Jeff Walls approaches to photography be used to analyse the identity of their subjects?
Identity/ʌɪˈdɛntɪti/noun 1.the fact of being who or what a person or thing is. (Oxford dictionary)
It is often stated that one does not have a true identity and that identity is something constructed by individual experiences. Ralph Waldo Emerson once said “To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment” (A Word To The Wise, January 13, 2014). My study will be exploring convoluted themes surrounding the idea of identity. These themes will be developed through the medium of photography and my own responses more specifically through the operation and style of insider documentary photography. Growing up as a young male in South Africa, I was taught lessons many young men are taught. A lot of these lessons where taught through a sport that has been a been a part of my weekly life since a young age. Weather it was running around barefoot on the dry, frost covered pitch at the local rugby club on a South African winters evening, or gathering in numbers with friends over a braai to watch a big fixture on the summer weekends, rugby has always been a part of who I am and a segment of my identity. Rugby has always been a sport that carries with it many stereotypical notions of identity. I believe rugby carries pride, patriotism, brotherhood and endurance within it. It was always a measure of toughness and strength. Two elements that are held in high value. However, these notions can loose their value when seen from the wrong perspective. Often these ideas associated with rugby can mutate into very toxic pressures placed on individual players. Hypermasculinity can have quite a negative effect when talking about identity. These pressures are ones that I have felt growing up under a traditionalist, rugby loving roof. The idea that ‘big boys don’t cry’ is something that has been planted in mine and many of my peers heads growing up. These discourses are what I want to explore when undertaking this study, overall proving they have a major affect on a young mans identity and how they present themselves amongst a community. I have chosen to analyse the work of Doug Dubois along with the efforts of Jeff Wall to gain inspiration and footing for this project. I have chosen these artists due to their narrative focused approach to photography as well as the straight aesthetic quality and ability to capture subjects exact emotions. For historical and contextual references and I will be studying pictorialism and straight photography. My own photographic responses will include an insider documentary style of a sequential narrative exploring the identity of an individual sportsman in his personal life as well as responses showing the scene of these individuals in action and in a team environment.
Historical and Theoretical Contexts The premise of my hypothesis will require an understanding of the theoretical and historical contexts associated with the medium of photography. Realism is a photographic and artistic movement that emerged in the photographic world in the 1910s. The approach to my study concentrates on the genre of documentary photography which is a form of straight photography, categorized as realism. Realism was a break-away from pictorialism which included more tableaux methods apposed to straight documentary works. Pictorialism focused on the establishing photography as an art form rather than a way of documentation. It focused on migrating away from commercialism and making photography a handmade process overall aspiring to achieve an aesthetic which made photographs look like art pieces, such as paintings and drawings using a variety of way to manipulate photographs from smudging lenses, scratching negatives and using chemicals in the darkroom. Unlike pictorialism, realism was associated with making imagery that looked the same as what the photographer saw in the viewfinder of the camera. Realism took on an emphasis on geometric framing and a focus on shape and form taking on an almost abstract aesthetic which was noticeable in two early photographers of the realism movement, Alexander Rodchenko and Jaromir Funke. These two images give insight into how realism was introduced into the medium of photography. I have chosen these images, more to begin the analysis of the technical elements of an image relating to form and shape, which realism focused on, rather than typical straight photography that emerged from this movement, for example Blind Woman, 1916 by Paul Strand.
Alexander Rodchenko’s image on the left contains harsh natural light to create the intense shadows bordering each of the subjects. He used a narrow aperture to create a deep depth which is supported by the leading lines running parallel through the image. His image has been infused with sharp highlights and deep blacks to accentuate the shadows and the images tonal range. Rodchenko’s image also includes repetition, this is seen through all the duplicating steps. This image also has a sinister essence with the baby’s face emerged in a shadow it almost juxtaposes that an innocent being could be portrayed as having an evil soul. Jaromir Funke’s image contains abstract light experimentation that plays tricks on the mind. He uses a harsh fluorescent looking light to draw out shadows and create the images contrasting tones. The image contains a lot of sharp geometrical features which frame certain streams of light and let through others. His image is slightly under exposed to add depth to the shadows. A high ISO has been used to add sensitivity to the film which has created a slight grain and given the image texture. The space in the image is quite populated with little negative space. He has also shot the shapes at an angle instead of straight on which gives a unique perspective to how the shadows elope and given the image more depth. In order to further analyse how this realism can be used through a documentative eye and begin developing a narratology viewpoint in order to answer my hypothesis I looked at the work of Jeff Wall.
Jeff Wall
Jeff Wall is best known for constructing and photographing elaborate mise-en-scènes, which he displays in wall-mounted light boxes as large-scale colour images. He takes his cues from the neorealism of Italian cinema, working with nonprofessional actors to stage scenes of everyday life. The above is Jeff Wall’s image titled, ‘Passer-by’ (1996). It is a street photography image where Jeff has captured a naturally occurring event. An event that he has encountered almost by accident that portrays a scene and can be interpreted beyond the frame by using intuition. This encapsulates one of Wall’s strong views of what makes an intriguing and meaningful image. “I think the pictorial problems emerge from the accidental encounter that reveals the subject” (Quote from David Company’s So Present, so invisible)
The image is of a sidewalk in what seems like an urban American suburb. Framed in the centre of the image is a tree, and on either side of the tree we see two men. The man in the foreground is wearing denim jeans and a denim jacket, we cannot see his face as he is looking over his shoulder at the other man while continuing to walk. The other man in the background is running towards a stop sign in the distance in the opposite to the man in the foreground. Overall the image has an overwhelming feeling with a low exposure and abundance of shadows the image has a sober emotion throughout. The image has a wide tonal range with the man in the foreground being well lit, along with an illuminated white wall which possesses the images highlights. In the background where the man is running is very dark and underexposed giving the images its pure black’s and therefore this wide tonal range. This tonal range connotes a sense of innocence for the well exposed man in the foreground who can be seen looking over his shoulder into what can seem like a world of darkness he is leaving behind. The man in the background is presented as a more corrupt character in the scene as he can be seen to run towards the theoretical ‘ dark side’. This lighting looks as if it has been achieved using an artificial source of lighting during the night time to achieve the vast contrast between the foreground and background. The lighting casts long shadows from the subjects and the tree in the centre of the image. These shadows aid in making the image significantly more dramatic as it adds more to the dark, ominous aesthetic while introducing a sense of depth. These shadows also connote to the theme of innocence and corruption, almost insinuating the man in the foreground is leaving his dark side behind him. The lighting also adds a shiny highlight to the leaves of the tree in the middle of the image. This gives it a glistening texture adding to the innocence of the foreground, while the background remains without light and therefore keeps a grainy texture adding to the theme of corruption. Analysing the method Wall used to create this theme of corruption in his image can be recognised as a fundamental ingredient to the way in which I will be studying the tenets of identity in a way where discourses of masculinity can corrupt and battle a young rugby player’s sense of themselves. Returning to the notion of Jeff’s use of an aesthetic created by photographic methods, I think this method of casting shadows shouldn’t be overlooked. It can bring more meaning to how photography is interpreted. The development of modern photography has preached a certain aesthetic to be correct, I think Jeff’s work challenges this. Having these drooping shadows can be undesirable by the modern photographer seeking to achieve this ‘correct’ aesthetic with a lot of photographers using fill-lighting to cancel out shadows in the background. Jeff challenged this view and believe in a balance between aesthetics and narrative. He used the shadows to add to the narrative of this image. “it’s not about some divide between the documentary mode or documentary style and cinematography – photography lives, I think, by means of the infinitely nuanced interplay between those modes.” (David Company’s So Present, so invisible)
Jeff used a narrow aperture to achieve the depth of field in the image and get everything in focus which allows him to tell relay the narrative of innocence and corruption between the foreground and background. Shooting with a closed aperture also aids in underexposing the image and making it appear darker. The way the image is framed where the tree separates the two men and the man who represents corruption is hiding behind the tree almost representing hiding from his true identity. “I don’t agree about the weak or strong claim dichotomy. I don’t think there’s a better or best way to make any art that can be known in advance and turned into a guidance or criterion.” (David Company’s So Present, so invisible). Jeff Wall’s perspective of photography presents the importance to investigate pictorialism and how imagery can create art. He talks about how photography is like poetry where all elements of a photos narrative and aesthetic qualities evoke emotion and relay purpose like a poem does. This aligns with the above Quotes from David Company’s So Present, so invisible where Jeff discusses the relationship between the vernacular and the pictorial and how there is no one way to create art. I believe that the strongest pictorial images originate from a documentation of accidental circumstances that outline a subject. I believe art can be interpreted in all images that relay a narrative and also the importance of imagery in accurately documenting in an artistic fashion. I therefore wholly agree with Jeff’s view on photography. Another photographer who explores narrative through documentary photography is Doug Dubois.
Doug Dubois
Doug DuBois (born 1960) is an American photographer living in Syracuse, New York.
Most of DuBois’s photographs are portraits, and he is best known for his intimate family shots. He is part of a group of contemporary American photographers, including Philip Lorca diCorcia, Laurie Simmons, Cindy Sherman and Tina Barney, who have depicted domestic spaces predicting transformations of family life in a “tide wave of individualism and late capitalist aspirations”. (Knelman, Sara (Spring 2020). “Domestic Comfort”. Aperture.)
During Doug’s tertiary education studying a Bachelor of Arts, his father experienced a near fatal accident and spent several years recuperating at home. Dubois noted the process as a “Kind of emotional protection” (All the Days and Nights, 2009). His mother was the primary caregiver of his father and during this time Doug experienced the decent of his mother into a deep depression resulting in subsequent decay of his parents marriage as well as the maturation of his siblings. Family portraits formed the basis for a group of works around his family that would continue for twenty-four years and eventually be published by Aperture as a picture book titled All the Days and Nights. DuBois’ concern for his family, both himself and others, was also evident in a later set of photographs, “Avella”, which presented life in the mining town Avella, where his father grew up. Themes of economic turmoil and provincial life are also central to a recent series of photographs by DuBois, published under the title My Last Day at Seventeen. This is the project I want will be taking inspiration from for my study. This is because Doug is able to unveil the true identity of the subjects in this project. He does this by capturing the scene in which they live and their personal styles that give us great personal insight into the subjects he shoots. His work forces the viewer to interrogate the subject by his use of central framing and and neutrally arranged compositions. His images are usually taken with a 4 x 5 large format camera which allow his to capture great amounts of crisp detail while laying down a blanket of warm hues used to accentuate gestural echoes, emotion and plays of light and texture.
The above image is part of Doug’s collection; “My Last Day at Seventeen”. This collection was published in 2015 and was a project to highlight themes of economic turmoil and provincial life as well as the idea of teenagers coming of age in these conditions. “Doug DuBois was first introduced to a group of teenagers from the Russell Heights housing estate while he was an artist-in-residence at the Sirius Arts Centre in Cobh, on the southwest coast of Ireland. He was fascinated by the insular neighbourhood, in which “everyone seems to be someone’s cousin, former girlfriend, or spouse.” Little can happen there that isn’t seen, discussed, distorted beyond all reason, and fiercely defended against any disapprobation from the outside. DuBois gained entry when Kevin and Eirn (two participants of a workshop he taught) took him to a local hangout spot, opening his eyes to a world of not-quite-adults struggling — publicly and privately — through the last days of their childhood. Over the course of five years, DuBois returned to Russell Heights. People came and left, relationships formed and dissolved, and babies were born. Combining portraits, spontaneous encounters, and collaborative performances, the images in My Last Day at Seventeen exist in a delicate balance between documentary and fiction. A powerful follow-up to DuBois’ acclaimed first book, All the Days and Nights, this volume provides an incisive examination of the uncertainties of growing up in Ireland today, while highlighting the unique relationship sustained between artist and subject” (Aperture Foundation, 2015).
The image features a natural lighting scheme which brings authenticity to the idea of capturing the true nature of the location as well as the subject. This allows the image to be consistently exposed with no artistic efforts to create a darker mood but rather to capture detail from the scene. The image has a warm hue which accentuates a homely mood and the orange hair and warm skin of the Irish teenager. This hue helps achieve a smooth glow over the whole image.
Doug uses a narrow aperture to ensure both the Irish boy as well as the whole kitchen is in focus, this allows the viewer to see the coffee cups and the curtains and the syrup which gives insight into the subject and the themes of economic turmoil and provincial life.
The subject is positioned slightly left of centre frame, this allows focus to be placed equally on the subject and the scene around him to place focus on the aesthetic of provincial housing. It also gives the image a structure adherent to the rule of thirds.
The subject is seen to have his head resting on his hand with his facial expressions signalling he is unimpressed or bored. This presents ideas of the turmoil’s associated with growing up in an impoverished neighbourhood as an Irish teenager that Dubois was trying to capture. This emotion that Doug captures is part of an arranged tableaux encounter, however it is stated that the image in terms of its whereabouts and aesthetic formal elements are planned yet the emotion captured from the subject is not ‘staged’ for the most part. This complex, yet naturally occurring conversation between the photographer, the subject and the viewer is how the narrative of the subjects experiences and identity is captured. This relates back to the theories of Jeff Wall. Jeff states that “pictorial problems emerge from the accidental encounter that reveals the subject” (David Company’s So Present, so invisible). This approach of documentary photography will be the direction my personal investigation will follow in order to answer my hypothesis. This direction will allow the identity of a sportsman to be stripped and analysed through imagery, overall attacking the notion of identity .
This being said, it is evident that the photographic medium is effective in investigating, as well as portraying the identity and narrative of an individual. The combination of photorealism supplemented by a more tableaux approach allows for an insider viewpoint and a thorough narrative to be formed. By studying the technical elements of works from these photographers it is clear that certain photographic visual elements can be used to analyse the identity of their subjects. Overall showing that these approaches to imagery can be applied to my response to prove the adopted identity of young men in sports.
For my essay I want to answer the question “How does mental health influence photographers?” With this question I will add a couple artist references (with an image analysis included with each photographer) such as Edward Honaker, Francesca Woodman and Alexander Khokhlov. In the essay I will explain what my photobook inspired by Woodman and Honaker will show and how I would want my prints to look like for Khokhlov.
Paragraph 1: Introduction
Understanding of different mental illnesses https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/conditions/borderline-personality-disorder/overview/
Paragraph 4: Francesca Woodman and analyse key images/ works
Towsend, C. (2006) Francesca Woodman: Scattered in Space and Time. London: Phaidon Press Limited. > Go to folder with pdf Francesca Woodman essays here: M:\Departments\Photography\Students\LOVE & REBELLION\Contextual Studies\reading
I used my phone camera to get a few wide angle photos of buildings whilst I was walking and when I didn’t have my camera out. Then used a 100-300mm telephoto lens to focus on parts of buildings and, whilst shooting off rooftops such as, The Garden at 120 and, Sky Garden in the city of London. And I also used a 18-55mm lens on my camera to get sharper photos of the skyline and individual buildings. Using my camera I took a total of 319 photos.
Sky Garden
I was a video online showcasing spots around London, and Sky Garden was one of them. You had to book a free ticket to access the rooftop, and there was a long queue of about 20-30 people. Most of the night/sunset time slots were fully booked. It is located here:
Once you come out the lift there is a café and access to the outside part where you can take photos. There is great opportunities to shoot down such as, the streets, and at the different bridges. However the main two subjects are the Shard, and Tower Bridge, and maybe St. Pauls Cathedral. I also focused on the Skyline over at Canary Wharf.
Garden at 120
I saw people online showcasing this location in the same video as the one that mentioned Sky Garden. Its was really easy to access and there was no queue, so security was very quick. It is located here:
There is a full 360 degree view when your on top of the building, which allows you to get amazing shots of the Gherkin building and the Walkie Talkie building (where sky garden is located). There’s good opportunities to shot up into the surrounding buildings as it isn’t as elevated as Sky Garden. On the roof top there is a small water fountain which let me get some reflection shots of the Walkie Talkie building.
General London
The photos were taken over 2 days, the first evening I shot during sunset which gave the vibrant pink and orange atmosphere. Later that evening I got all of the night shots around St.Pauls, Tower Bridge, and near the Scoop, which was great for leading lines.
Overall, I’m very happy with all the outcomes and it has produced 15 crazy images. The different lighting helped my take a wide range of photos and the different locations were interesting to shoot from.
The project title suggests a theme of images that when we look back at them we will think that it was unusual but familiar. I took upon myself to photograph COVID-19 testing kits, as I thought it fitted the theme well. It fits the theme well as COVID-19 came out of nowhere and we all got used to it and regularly testing ourselves. Most people are required to take daily tests for work or eduction, therefore it is “strangely familiar”.
I planned to collate a set of 5 images that shows the process in chronological order, showing how the lateral flow tests are used.
Image 1: The Setup. I setup the objects that are in the lateral flow boxes, and placed the two main elements in the centre, the solution and the test strip. I created a focus in the centre of the image by using a shallow depth of field, doing this allowed me to have the information on the bottle label and test strip in focus and sharp. I used a 1 point light setup with a white light on the right to cast shadow which makes the image more dynamic.
Image 2: Droplet. I used a macro lens to capture a droplet at the end of the the pipit. Originally, I was going to try and capture the droplet mid-air, which demonstrates motion. However, I wasn’t able to capture it as clear as I wanted to, as the shutter speed was too slow, otherwise there would have been a lot of noise. I shot on a black background, which I made from a black piece of card. It contrasts the shape of the droplet, and makes it stand out when it’s under the light. I also used a 1 point light setup, however I positioned it on the left this time, as the person holding the pipit was on the right.
Image 3: “Apply 2 Drops”. I used the same techniques and setup as image 2, although I changed the composition, as I wanted to include the test strip in the photo. It shows the part where you add two drops of the testing solution to the test strip. This is my favourite image from the project. The white on a black background works well as it creates a contrast, the black background can be seen in the water droplet, which helps define the shape of it and makes it more noticeable.
Image 4: Wait. This stage happens after you apply the solution to the test strip, and have to wait 15 minutes to see the result. I used one light source in this photo, and it was positioned low to the desk, as it created an outline on the edges of the phone, which adds depth and define the basic shape of the phone. However, the test strip is still well lit, and visible. The black and orange colour scheme, which dominates most of the image works well as it adds a “punch” of colour to the image and contrasts the white test strip.
Image 5: The Result. I collected used test strips and created a frame around one of the negative results. I think this composition works really well as it has a lot of geometric shapes. Firstly, there’s an oval shape where you read the result that is being framed by a triangle, which is contained in the images rectangular aspect ratio. The shallow depth of field really helps shift the focus to the middle of the image where the result is, which is the important part of the whole testing process.
Evaluation: Overall I think this project really fits the title, “strangely familiar” and it has produced some strong images, which shows the unusual process that has became a daily requirement for some people, to protect them and others against COVID-19.
For my first photoshoot I chose to focus on coloured objects rather than colour within the community, as well as creating my own colourful things to photoshoot. I used a lightbox to create a white background and placed colourful objects onto it and captured images from above. I started with coloured crayons and then placed ink into petri dishes and placed them on top of the lightbox. I also took images of the art on the walls in town as I felt it showed colour and represents the community well.
Essay question: How has Vogue changed and influenced the development of fashion and social identities?
Opening quote:“Sensitive people faced with the prospect of a camera portrait put on a face they think is one they would like to show the world. Very often what lies behind the façade is rare and more wonderful than the subject knows and dares to believe.” Penn, I. (1986). Irving Penn’s Cranium Architecture
Introduction : Discuss how fashion impacts us as individuals and our social identities, how it can be used as a tool for self expression, I aim to explore how Vogue fashion photographers Guy Bourdin, Irving Penn and Global Editorial Director of Vogue, Anna Wintour, impact the fashion industry and how they help people use fashion to explore and present who they really are, without caring about the judgement of others.
Pg 1:Historical context of Vogue and how its changes the fashion industry and who helped impact that, e.g. Anna Wintour.
Pg 2: Analyse Anna Wintour
Pg 3: Analyse Irving Penn
Pg 4: Analyse Guy Bourdin
Conclusion: Draw parallels, explore differences/ similarities between Bourdin, Penn and Wintour and that of your own work that you have produced.