Tag Archives: pictorialism

Personal Study – Art Movements and Isms

Pictorialism

Time period; 1880 – 1920’s

Key characteristics/ conventions; Reacted against mechanization and industrialization, dismayed at increasing industrial exploitation of photography through commercialisation. Championed evocative photographs and individual expression, constructed images looking for harmony of matter, mind and spirit – subjective and spiritual motive. Pictorialism is an approach to photography that emphasizes beauty of subject matter, tonality, and composition rather than the documentation of reality. Images had a foggy, mystical-type quality of fantasy that highlighted the aesthetically pleasing elements of an image.

Influences; Allegorical paintings – figurative mode of representation conveying meaning other than the literal. Communicates through symbolic figures, actions or symbolic representation – the underling meaning has moral, social, religious or political significance.

Artists associated; Alfred Stieglitz (Equivalent; clouds study), Peter Henry Emerson, Hugo Henneberg, George Davidson (Reflections 1899), Charles Job (Pulborough Bridge), Alvin Landon Coburn, Henry Peach Robinson, F. Holland Day, Robert Demachy, Edward Steichen.

Key works; Alfred Horlsey Hinton (Fleeting and Far 1903), George Davidson (Reflections 1899), Joseph Gale (Cottage Garden 1890), H P Robinson (He Never Told His Love 1884), Alfred Stieglitz (Equivalent; clouds study).

Methods/ techniques/ processes; Making photographs that resembled paintings, manipulating images in the darkroom, scratching and marking their prints to imitate the texture of the canvas, using soft focus, blurry or fuzzy imagery based on allegorical and spiritual subject matter. Photographers smeared Vaseline onto their camera lens to create a dream-like effect over their images, making them look like hand-made art.

Allegorical Paintings

An allegory is the description of a subject in the guise of another subject. An allegorical painting might include figures emblematic of different emotional states of mind – for example envy or love – or personifying other abstract concepts, such as sight, glory, beauty, Revolution, or France. These are called allegorical figures. The interpretation of an allegory therefore depends first on the identification of such figures, but even then the meaning can remain elusive. Allegorical subjects were frequently painted from the Renaissance until around 1800, although they were probably most often used in medals and engraved frontispieces to books. Single allegorical figures were also painted, sometimes in series, each figure representing, for example, one of the Liberal Arts or the Virtues.

Pictorialism Photography

Straight Photography/ Realism

Time period; Began in 1915

Key characteristics/ conventions; Photographers believed in the intrinsic qualities of the photographic medium, making use of its ability to provide accurate and descriptive records of the visual world. These photographers strove to make pictures that were ‘photographic’ rather than ‘painterly’, they did not want to treat photography as a kind of monochrome painting. They abhorred handwork and soft focus and championed crisp focus with a wide depth of field. Realism, which is closely associated with Straight Photography, has claims of having a special relationship with reality and it’s premise, that the cameras ability to record objectively the actual world as it appears in front of the lens was unquestioned. The key characteristic of this style was to reflect a person/landscape/object with complete honesty and ‘realism., without heavy editing or manipulation.

Influences; Social Reform Photography – he rural poor or the urban environment were not subjects for Pictorial photographers. But when a Danish immigrant, Jacob Riis, published his book ‘How the Other Half Lives’ about the slums of Manhattan, a new kind of realism was born with a socialist dimension. A number of photographers such as Dorothea Lange and Lewis W Hine began to document the effects of industrialisation and urbanisation on working-class Americans. This work influenced what we now call photojournalism.

Artists associated; Walker Evans (1903-1975) was often considered to be the leading American documentary photographer of the 20th century. He rejected pictorialism and wanted to establish a new photographic art based on a detached and disinterested look. His most celebrated work is his images of three Sharecropper families in the American South during the 1930’s depression. Paul Strand, Jacob Riis, Dorothea Lange.

Key works; Frederick Henry Evans; ‘A Sea of Steps’, Wells Cathedral, Steps to Chapter House (1903). Paul Strand; Bowls (1917), Ansel Adams; Monolith, the Face of Half Dome (1927), László Moholy-Nagy; Funkturm Berlin (Berlin Radio Tower, 1929), Manuel Alvarez Bravo; Ladder of Ladders (1931).

Methods/ techniques/ processes; Straight photographers visualized the image before taking the photo. Edward Weston defined this term in 1921 and stated: “Get your lighting and exposure correct at the start and both the developing and printing can be practically automatic.” The aim is to create an image which is not manipulated, either in the taking of the image or by darkroom or digital processes, but sharply depict the scene or subject as the camera sees it.

Straight Photography

Modernism

Time period; 1900-1960’s

Key characteristics/ conventions; Some things that were questioned in modernist photography, art and literature is what is the difference between wrong and right, what will America’s future be, what is truth, and what does it mean to be an American. One of the major changes in the modernist era is a break from tradition which focuses on being bold and experimenting with new style and form and the collapse of old social and behavioural norms. Practitioners of each new style were determined to develop a visual language that was both original and representative of the times.

Influences; Modernists drew inspiration from the philosophical investigations of 19th century writers, in addition to experimental forerunners in their own mediums. An investigation into the key areas of Modernism reveals influences among a variety of 19th and early 20th century thinkers and artists.  The American poet Walt Whitman revolutionized the concept of poetic form, and his “Leaves of Grass” served as a foundational text for Modernist poetry. French writer Arthur Rimbaud inspired Modernists with his symbolic poems and unconventional, obscene subject matter.

Artists associated; Alfred Stieglitz, Dora Maar, Edward Steichen, André Kertész, Man Ray, Otto Umbehr (Umbo), Walker Evans, Iwao Yamawaki, Hannes Meyer, Richard Neutra, Paul Strand, Tina Modotti.

Key works; Salvador Dali (Metamorphosis of Narcissus), Raoul Haussmann (The Art Critic), Wall Street (1915), Abstractions (Twin Lakes, Connecticut 1916), Blind (Paul Strand 1916), The Steerage (Alfred Stieglitz), Workers Parade (Tina Modotti 1926).

Methods/ techniques/ processes; Although many different styles are encompassed by the term, there are certain underlying principles that define modernist art: A rejection of history and conservative values (such as realistic depiction of subjects); innovation and experimentation with form (the shapes, colours and lines that make up the work) with a tendency to abstraction; and an emphasis on materials, techniques and processes. Modernism has also been driven by various social and political agendas. These were often utopian, and modernism was in general associated with ideal visions of human life and society and a belief in progress.

Modernism Photography

Post-Modernism

Time period; Began during 1960’s/1970’s

Key characteristics/ conventions; Postmodernism can be seen as a reaction against the ideas and values of modernism, as well as a description of the period that followed modernism’s dominance in cultural theory and practice in the early and middle decades of the twentieth century. The term is associated with scepticism, irony and philosophical critiques of the concepts of universal truths and objective reality. While modernism was based on idealism and reason, postmodernism was born of scepticism and a suspicion of reason. It challenged the notion that there are universal certainties or truths. Postmodern art drew on philosophy of the mid to late twentieth century, and advocated that individual experience and interpretation of our experience was more concrete than abstract principles. While the modernists championed clarity and simplicity; postmodernism embraced complex and often contradictory layers of meaning.

Influences; Jacques Lacan (1901–1981), was a prominent French psychoanalyst and theorist. His ideas had a huge impact on critical theory in the twentieth century and were particularly influential on post-structuralist philosophy and the development of postmodernism. Lacan re-examined the psychiatry of Sigmund Freud, giving it a contemporary intellectual significance. He questioned the conventional boundaries between the rational and irrational by suggesting that the unconscious rather than being primitive, is just as complex and sophisticated in its structure as the conscious. He proposed that the unconscious is structured like a language which allows a discourse between the unconscious and conscious and ensures that the unconscious plays a role in our experience of the world.

Artists associated; William Eggleston, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall, Guy Bourdin, Goran Sekulovski, Lee Friedlander, Andreas Gursky, Jacky Redgate, Robyn Stacey, Yasumasa Morimura.

Key works; Untitled Films Stills (Cindy Sherman), Ice (Robyn Stacey 1989), A requiem: spinning a thread between the light and the earth 1946 (Yasumasa Morimura), Campbells Tomato Juice Box (Andy Warhol).

Methods/ techniques/ processes; Its main characteristics include anti-authoritarianism, or refusal to recognize the authority of any single style or definition of what art should be; and the collapsing of the distinction between high culture and mass or popular culture, and between art and everyday life. Postmodern art can be also characterized by a deliberate use of earlier styles and conventions, and an eclectic mixing of different artistic and popular styles and mediums.

Postmodern Photography

Further Information

Difference Between Modernism and Postmodernism
Modernism & Postmodernism
William Eggleston

Personal Inversigation – Artist References

Robert Darch

Robert Darch (1979 – present) is a British artist-photographer based in the South West of England, he studied at Plymouth University and holds an MFA with distinction in Photographic Arts and a MA with distinction in Photography & the Book. He also has a BA with honours in Documentary Photography from Newport, Wales. A quote from Darch’s website about his work reads ‘His practice is motivated by the experience of place, in which the physical geography and material cultures of places merge with impressions from contemporary culture that equally influence perception. From these varied sources, both real and imagined, he constructs narratives that help contextualise a personal response to place.‘ This statement is what initially drew me to Darch’s work, his way of capturing a sense of a person’s identity within a place is something I would really like to respond to and reflect on. In 2018, Darch released his first published photobook titled ‘The Moor’ which depicts a fictionalised dystopian future situated on the bleak moorland landscapes of Dartmoor. Drawing on childhood memories of Dartmoor alongside influences from contemporary culture, the narrative references local and universal mythology to give context but suggests something altogether more unknown. I see Darch’s work as a subtle hint towards romanticism, showing the misty, idyllic and aesthetically pleasing areas of the English countryside while holding deeper meanings surrounding mental health and societal issues.

Vale – By Robert Darch

Darch’s project ‘Vale’ has been the most inspirational source for my personal investigation, at the age of 22 Darch suffered from a minor stroke, followed by a period of ill-health which would affect him for the majority of his twenties. As a coping mechanism during convalescence, he retreated into a world of fictional narratives, of indoor spaces and eventually a physical move back to his familial home of Devon. Slowly, he began to reset his narratives, his place in the world, and the expectations of his youth. An unseen enemy threatening his own body and psyche was mitigated by escapism and wish-fulfilment. They way Darch captures fantasy juxtaposed with realism in his work is something I would really like to replicate during my project. While Darch’s illness had more physical effects on his body, my project will focus on the mental effects of illness – I believe his work still relates to the mind and can be viewed in several ambiguous lights. An extract from Darch’s website on Vale reads; “The fictional worlds into which Darch escaped, exhibited characteristics which were at once benign and threatening. An interest in the English sense of the eerie had been with him since childhood, notably the writings of James Herbert, the Dartmoor of Conan Doyle and such touchstones of ‘coming-of-age’ cinema as Rob Reiner’s Stand by Me. As Darch’s period of retreat from the world lengthened, further influences were incorporated into this mix, from British standouts such as Jonathon Miller’s Whistle and I’ll Come to You (1968) to the Italian Giallo film movement of the 1970s and the atmospheric and psychological Japanese horror revival of the early 2000s. Vale is a result of this percolation and loss. It is the fictional space where Darch is able to relive and re-imagine a lost period in his life, journeys with friends both through physical spaces and through time. On one level its subjects could act as stand-ins, allowing him to explore winding rivers in late summer evenings, empty country roads and ancient English woodlands. But as the journey continues, multiple readings quickly become apparent. Despite possibly providing a positive escape from Darch’s ‘vale of despond’, it is the sense of the eerie which becomes unavoidable.”

The whole concept on Darch’s work in ‘Vale’ has inspired me to create images that follow fictional narratives, a story to escape the frantic modern world similar to ones I’d create as a child. Bringing back memories of places I would go to get away from the trivialities of life, woodland walks, rooms around the home, family gardens etc – I would like to revisit these places and create a sequence of fictional realities. The topic of anxiety in children and young people has often had simplified and quite belittling representation, in this project I aim to take inspiration from Darch to show these issues through landscapes and abstraction, provoking thoughts from the observer on the topic.

‘Vale’ Images –

Josef Sudek

Josef Sudek (1896-1976) was a Czech photographer, extremely well-known for his work on still-life photography as well as black and white images of Prague, interiors and landscapes. Prior to taking an interest in photography, Sudek worked as an apprentice bookbinder before serving in the Austro-Hungarian Army during the First World War, when he was wounded and subsequently lost his right arm to amputation. He was a member of the Prague Club for Amateur Photographers from 1920-24, and studied photography at the State School of Graphic Arts in Prague from 1922-1924. Much of Sudek’s early work was inspired by that of Clarence White, who espoused a Pictorialist approach to light and form – something I would like to experiment with during my personal investigation. Many of Sudek’s most memorable images were taken from the window of his small studio, documenting his humble courtyard during changing weather and light conditions. During the 1920s, Sudek created a series of photographs of disabled Czech soldiers; in 1927 he was one of the founding members of the renegade Czech Photographic Society, dedicated to documentary photography. His series of photographs of the renovation of the St. Vitus Cathedral in which he juxtaposed architectural details of the cathedral with the abstract forms of workers’ tools won him the title of official photographer for the city of Prague in 1928. Nevertheless, the area of Sudek’s work that intrigues me the most is his documentation of flowers, usually stood in clear vases near his studio windows. The way Sudek documented changes in weather, atmosphere and seasons in his still-life images portrays to me the idea of as the surroundings change, reality changes too. Sudek once said  “Everything around us, dead or alive, in the eyes of a crazy photographer mysteriously takes on many variations,” he explained, “so that a seemingly dead object comes to life through light or by its surroundings.”

Sudek’s Pictorialism Influences

Sudek was influenced by the concerns of Impressionism, Pictorialism, and Czech Poetism, but throughout his life, remained faithful to his own stylistic and emotional proclivities of introspection. His work holds the same dream-like, soft atmospheres that many other Pictorialist photographers captured, for example the work of Alfred Stieglitz and his study of clouds in ‘Equivalents’. Sudek’s use of windows, documenting overcast foggy days through frosted glass, additionally adds to his Pictorialist style – his use of light and aperture settings creates this soft blur around his subject flowers, almost replicating that of an oil painting. As Sudek was creating and photographing during the change of an art movement from Pictorialism to Modernism throughout the 1920’s and 1930’s, his work holds an almost vintage feel when compared to those being created during the same time period. I believe his photography has a mystery and ambiguity to it, the images can be observed and analysed in such different ways as his influences at the time were slowly leaving what was ‘in fashion’ or expected during this development in art movements. The soft blurs and focus of Sudek’s still life photography is something I would like to experiment and work with during my personal study, however I have the idea to not use the same sepia tones as Sudek, and instead try editing in a less vibrant, toned down colour to relate and link up more with the work of Robert Darch, representing escapism and realities.

Sudek’s Still Life Images –

Artist’s link to physical illness;

Both chosen artists have gone through difficult points in their lives, with Darch suffering from a stroke at a young age and Sudek losing his arm during the war. In respect to my project, both artists have used photography as a method of escapism from an illness/disorder that had impaired them throughout their life – I would like to explore how elements of their images may have deeper meanings in regards to symbolism of weakness or hope. Although Sudek’s images are not known to have been made with his impairment in mind, I can still recognise themes of optimism in a time of ill-health through his project; as if the flowers are symbols of life continuing, adapting in a new environment after being cut down from their home plant – they are still able to live in a singular glass of water, therefore hinting towards hope. Nevertheless, Darch’s work noticeably conveys a sense of escaping from reality through vibrant colours, dream-like compositions and golden hues that relay this idea of ‘the light at the end of the tunnel’. Though Darch reflects his sickness throughout his project, it is done subtly, with Darch himself stating ‘during the illness I no longer wanted to turn the camera inwards, to linger on the reality of my situation, preferring to lose myself in fictional constructs of the mind’. This fictionality in his work is honest and raw, giving the observer a glimpse into his mind where he would create narratives to escape from his own dismal one, yet still showing his optimistic outlook on life. Though these artists focus on physical illness, I would like to use their style of photography, however looking at the effects of mental illness throughout my life.

Links to further resources;

Biblioscape on ‘Vale’ by Robert Darch

Sudek’s book ‘The Window of my Studio’

An interview with Robert Darch on ‘Vale’

Personal Sudy – Art Movements and Isms

Pictorialism

Time Period

1880 to 1920

Key Characteristics/conventions

Photographs that resemble art, making photography handmade, break away from commercialism.

Artist Associated

Alfred Stieglitz, Julia Margret Cameron, Peter Emmerson, Alvin Langdon Coburn, Photo-succession, Brotherhood of the linked ring, Vienna camera club.

Key Works

Alfred Stieglitz – Equivalent (cloud studies)

John Everett Millais – Ophelia (inspiration)

George Davidson – Reflections

Methods

Vaseline on lense

Scratching the negative

Brushing prints with chemicals

Realism

Time Period

1915

Key Characteristics/Conventions

Break away from pictorialism, focus on sharp focus, shape and form.

Artists Assosiated

Paul Strand, Edward Western, Walker Evans, Cunningham

Key Works

Paul Strand – Photograph, Blind woman

Dorothea Lange – Migrant Mother

Walker Evans – Alabama Tenant Farmer Wife

Methods

Picture looks like it does in the viewfinder, emphasis on framing, abstraction and sharp focus.

Modernism

Time Period

1900 – 1940

Key Characteristics/Conventions

Reaction to the enlightenment, examine impediments holding society back. New alignment with the experience and values of modern industrial life. New imagery, materials and techniques to create artworks that they felt better reflected the realities and hopes of modern societies.

Artists Associated

Picasso, Paul Strand, Alfred Stieglitz, Dora Maar, Edward Weston, Man Ray

Key Works

Edward Weston Nude 1936

Edward Steichen A Bee on a Sunflower 1920

Dora Maar Untitled (Hand-Shell) 1934 

Herbert Bayer Humanly Impossible (Self-Portrait) 1932

Tina Modotti Bandelier, Corn and Sickle 1927

Man Ray Glass Tears 1932

Methods

False brass lens to the side of camera, abstraction and a highly defined clarity,  photomontage,  cropping and framing a single body part, distorting and accentuating its curves and angles,  solarisation and using photograms (developing directly onto photographic paper rather than onto film) 

Postmodernism

Time Period

1970 – 2000

Key Characteristics/Conventions

Reaction against the ideas and values of modernism, as well as a description of the period that followed modernism’s dominance in cultural theory and practice in the early and middle decades of the twentieth century. Scepticism, irony and philosophical critiques of the concepts of universal truths and objective reality.

Artists Associated

Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall, Sherrie Levine, Jean Baudrillard, Edward Burtynsky, Jeff Koons

Key Works

Jeff Koons – Three Ball Total Equilibrium Tank (Two Dr J Silver Series, Spalding NBA Tip-Off) 1985

Marilyn Diptych by Andy Warhol, 1962

Cut Piece by Yoko Ono, 1964

Joseph Kosuth – One And Three Chairs (1965)

Methods

artists experimented with form, technique and processes rather than focusing on subjects

interpretation of our experience was more concrete than abstract principles

Art Movementes and Isms

Pictorialism

Time Period : 1880-1920

Key Characteristics: The make it look like art, look handmade. It reacted against mechanization and industrialisation. They abhorred the

Methods/Techniques/Processes: Rub Vaseline on the camera lens to blur parts of the picture. Scratch the negative, and use chemicals to create an interesting print.

Artist Associated:
Alfred Stieglitz. He was an American photographer and modern art promoter who was instrumental over his 50-year career in making photography an accepted art form. In addition to his photography, Stieglitz was known for the New York art galleries that he ran in the early part of the 20th century, where he introduced many avant-garde European artists to the U.S. He was married to painter Georgia O’Keeffe.

Hugo Henneberg. An amateur photographer originally trained in the sciences, Henneberg came to the medium from his study of physics, chemistry, astronomy, and mathematics. His knowledge of the technical aspects of photography served his aesthetic interests particularly well, as he created gum bichromate prints that involved multiple stages of development.

Julia Margret Cameron. The bulk of Cameron’s photographs fit into two categories closely framed portraits and illustrative allegories based on religious and literary works.

Realism / Straight Photography

Time Period : 1915

Key Characteristics: Politics, Revolutions, Cubism. Straight photographers were photographers who believed in the intrinsic qualities of the photographic medium and its ability to provide accurate and descriptive records of the visual world. These photographers. Realism photography grew up with claims of having a special relationship to reality, and its premise, that the camera’s ability to record objectively the actual world as it appears in front of the lens was unquestioned. A belief in the trustworthiness of the photograph is also fostered by the news media who rely on photographs to show the truth of what took place.

Methods/Techniques/Processes: Sharp Focus, Shape, Form, To face reality. “The camera is an instrument of a new kind of vision.”

Artist Associated:
Paul Strand. He was an American photographer and filmmaker who, along with fellow modernist photographers like Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Weston, helped establish photography as an art form in the 20th century.

Walker Evans. Often considered to the leading American documentary photographer of the 20th century. He rejected Pictorialism and wanted to establish a new photographic art based on a detached and disinterested look. He most celebrated work is his pictures of three Sharecropper families in the American South during the 1930s Depression.

Modernism

Time Period : early 1900s through to the 1960s.

Key Characteristics: characterised intellectually by a belief that science could save the world and that, through reason, a foundation of universal truths could be established. The common trend was to seek answers to fundamental questions about the nature of art and human experience. Modernity imbue all aspects of society and are apparent in its cultural forms including fiction, architecture, painting, popular culture, photography.

Methods/Techniques/Processes:

Artist Associated: Joe Cornish. He is a British photographer noted for his large format landscapes. Born in Exeter, Devon, England in 1958, he graduated with a degree in Fine Art from University of Reading in 1980 and then went to America to train as a photographer’s assistant.

Ansel Adams. He was an American landscape photographer and environmentalist known for his black-and-white images of the American West. He helped found Group f/64, an association of photographers advocating “pure” photography which favoured sharp focus and the use of the full tonal range of a photograph.

Edward Weston. He was a 20th-century American photographer. He has been called “one of the most innovative and influential American photographers…” and “one of the masters of 20th century photography.”

Post-Modernism

Time Period : second half of the 20th century

Key Characteristics: Postmodernism is relativism – the belief that no society or culture is more important than any other. It explores power and the way economic and social forces exert that power by shaping the identities of individuals and entire cultures.

Methods/Techniques/Processes:

Artist Associated: Anna Gaskell. She is an American art photographer and artist from Des Moines, Iowa. She is best known for her photographic series that she calls “elliptical narratives”

David LaChapelle. Is a famous American pop photographer, moviemaker and video artist that made his name by shooting celebrities like Lady Gaga, Kanye West, Michael Jackson, etc. But unlike most “celebrity photographers” he expands his portfolio with other kinds of work and creates beautiful exhibitions. His photography often references art history and sometimes conveys social messages.