Keld Helmer-Petersen stayed at the art school, institute of Design, in Chicago. He was both a student and a guest teacher and his future work was influenced immensely by what he learned at school. He developed a graphic black and white aesthetic.
He grew increasingly experimental, engaging in abstract studies of light in urban spaces as well as in the darkroom. He turned silhouettes and fragments of wires and steel constructions into rhythmic, dynamic patterns. Upon his return to Copenhagen, he continued in his graphic style, finding the steel world of Chicago reflected in harbour areas and railways.
for my first photo shoot I will go down to St. Helier and try to photograph new buildings and old buildings in the back lanes of the town and try capture aspects of different peoples lives and how they use the town. then ill go down old trinity hill and photograph the old fashioned buildings.
I used the star rating sytems to decide the good from the bad images.
Then I am left with my 5 star images which best relate to new topographics.
I took this image from the top of MT Bingham of the flats on green street I chose my position carefully to get a higher perspective of and over the surrounding buildings. i positioned the skyscraper slightly of centre of the image to provide juxtaposition to the the rest of the smaller residential buildings. I then used the vertical straightening tool to correct the image and changed the image into black and white to relate to the original photographers of the new topographical movement.
this image shows the contrast between the two different building designs, the contrast between the point triangular design and the curves of the the adjacent building. there is beauty in the straight and the organic cloud shapes which I increased the contrast to bring out. this photo is taken from a lower angle to provide a better perspective to the image. the contrast between the natural and the unnatural link to the movement because it is about the beauty that can be found in the everyday urban environment however i believe there is also beauty to be found in the average day, the pattern made by the clouds showing a unsymmetrical, un even, un predictable motif.
this really like this image because of the contrasting brick work and lighter window frames reinforcing the idea of the beauty in the mundane. this image is of the older wing of the hospital with its ‘boring’ square shapes so i decide to photograph this i would need to find a good angle to show of the best angle to create a god image from a seemingly boring building. i liked that this wall wasn’t flat and it had some depth, i also liked the pipes coming from the building back into the building. i converted this image into black and white to better match the original artists of the the new topographical movement.
i like this iage becasue a construction site is in the transition between natural
For these photoshoots I went to two locations next to each other to try and get ariel views of abandoned and disused places. One set was taken during early evening and the second was taken during sunset hence the different lighting.
These are my final selections after I had gone through and chosen photos which I had framed well, adjusted focus correctly and which I feel have reflected the idea of urban landscape.
Below I have gone through and selected the best of my images, I have demonstrated all three of my photoshoots through these separate contact sheets, I have also included the plans above the contact sheets so the layout is clear.
Photoshoot 1: was based around the harbour and along the avenue, the aim of doing this photoshoot at night was so that I could change the shutter speed to create interesting lines of light throughout my photos, and so that industrial buildings could be contrasted with their light sources.
Photoshoot 2: My second photoshoot was based in the fields around my house, these potato fields made for good places to photoshoot as theres is a contrast between natural landscape and manmade housing. I took these photographs during the late afternoon in an attempt to get more golden lighting.
Photoshoot 3: This photoshoot was based in and around La Mare flats in St Clement, I think that this gave me a good opportunity to photograph industrial landscapes and this links in very well with The New Topographic project. All of the straight lines and symmetry in these images make them more aesthetic.
Final Collection
Here I have created a quick collection of some of my best images from my photoshoots, I think i will add to this when editing and picking my final images but these have the most potential.
Editing
Below I have edited some of the best images from my created collection, and I have screen shotted parts of Lightroom to show how the images have been edited. In the develop section I have shown the before and after editing so the process I have gone through to change these images is clear. I have decided despite sticking to the romanticism theme I am not going to edit all my images to monochromatic, as I think that the colour and lighting in some of these photographs only needs to be enhanced.
More Images
Here I have included some more of my good images, as I think that they should be shown on my blog but they do not need editing unless they are changed to black and white as one of my final images. This gallery is to show more of my work from all three of my photoshoots.
Lewis Baltz (September 12, 1945 – November 22, 2014) was a visual artist and photographer who became an important figure in the New Topographic movement of the late 1970s. 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.
Born in Newport Beach, California, Baltz graduated with a BFA in Fine Arts from San Francisco Art Institute in 1969 and held a Master of Fine Arts degree from Claremont Graduate School. He received several scholarships and awards including a scholarship from the National Endowment For the Arts (1973, 1977), the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship (1977).
Lewis Baltz
His work
His books and exhibitions, his “topographic work”, such as The New Industrial Parks, Nevada, San Quentin Point, Candlestick Point (84 photographs documenting a public space near Candlestick Park, ruined by natural detritus and human intervention), expose the crisis of technology and define both objectivity and the role of the artist in photographs.
His work is focused on searching for beauty in desolation and destruction. Baltz’s images describe the architecture of the human landscape: offices, factories and parking lots. His pictures are the reflection of control, power, and influenced by and over human beings. His minimalistic photographs in the trilogy Ronde de Nuit, Docile Bodies, and Politics of Bacteria, picture the void of the other.
What I like about his work: I think that the simpleness of his work makes him more memorable and along with the monochromatic photography, this makes more unique pieces. I also like that for this time this type of photography was to demonstrate the affects of mankind on the natural environment and his work demonstrates this well as the builders are the main focal point of the images.
Image Analysis
I have selected this image to analyse as I think the overall composition of the image is one of its main strengths, as it means that the silhouette of the mountain is the background of the image and that the main houses in the front create a focal point for the image. Furthermore, I think the lighting of this image brings and all of its features and makes it more cohesive as the lighting from under the roof trim of the house means that strong shadows are created, as the brightness of the lighting in the sky creates contrast between it and the outline of the mountains.
Additionally, I think that the clarity of the image makes it stand out more as the details in the brickwork of the building and even the blinds in the windows creates contrast. This is shown as theres lots of details within the foreground of the photograph and this lack in the background, however this is not a negative as it demonstrates the rule of thirds, as the pavement, housing and mountains/ skyline and very clearly separated in this piece. It’s also important to note how important the different shapes and lines are within this image, as the vertical lines contradicts with the horizon created but the mountain, and the squares and rectangles contrast with the smooth natural landscape. This is a good example of The New Topographic’s work as their is a manmade contrast created with the lighting in this image, as a somewhat natural contrast between the housing and landscape further away in the image.
For my first photo shoot, I went down to the harbours and the block of flats near there. I went around 5:30 so that there was still good lighting.
Photoshoot 2
For my second photoshoot, it was the photography walk around Havre de pas and La Collette also near the harbour, this was from 2:20 – 3:20 with good lighting.
Contact Sheets
Photoshoot 1
The day I went to the harbour it was sunny, with a bright blue sky which made a nice background to the photos. There are a few repeated photos as the sun was slowly starting to set so I kept having to change different settings on the camera to get the right lighting.
Photoshoot 2
For this photoshoot, it was also a sunny day, with little clouding so there are no shadows in the photos and they also have a bright blue background from the sun. I tried to get a lot of different photos as I did not need to adjust the settings a lot as the lighting stayed the same a lot of the time.
Editing
Harbour and flats (photoshoot 1)
For my black and white edit, I have increased the contrast and only slightly increased the exposure to give the structure a darker look and have the background give an ombre type effect going from a dark grey into a lighter one. As I wanted it to be a darker image I have also decreased highlights, shadows, whites and blacks to get this edit. For the photo of the flats, I have increased the contrast up to 100 to get a brighter orange and extenuate the brick beneath it. I have increased the shadows and blacks also to try and help this as I really like the brighter orange against the white wall next to it.
Havre de pas and La Collette (photoshoot2)
Similar to the black and white edit I did above I have increased the contrast but in this one, I did touch the exposure as I felt that if I decreased it the photo would be too dark and if I increased it the photo would be overexposed. I also didn’t adjust the highlights of shadows and I felt that only the white and black needed to be adjusted the get the effect that in I wanted. For the photo on the left, I wanted to keep it in colour to show the bright blue of the sky. For this edit, I increased the exposure to 58 to give the photo a more vibrant look and make the blue pop. I also decreased the highlights because I wanted the harsh line between the shadowed side and the lit side to be obvious and easily noticeable.
Final Images
I chose the top left photo as one of my final images as I think that the colours all go together as the cream building sits nicely with the brighter blue of the sky. I also like the contrast between the two sides of the building and the harsh line going down the middle. I also like how there are small elements of blue in the different windows which I think helps the photo look more put together. I also think that it looks better having a little bit of the top cut off as there is not as much sky distracting from the building. I chose this to be one of my final images for the middle photo because I really like the contrast between the darker parts of the image and the brighter whites on the balconies.
Urban landscape photography involves capturing photos of cities and towns. Generally speaking, an urban landscape shot has a wide focus. Urban landscapes are complex structures which is a result of the interaction between human and their environment. It can also involve social, cultural and economic dimensions. They are also mainly formed and shaped under the influence of human activities. The main places which get photographed for Urban Landscapes are Industrial centres, Building sites, Flat blocks, Derelict buildings, Carparks and Harbours/dockyards.
Thomas Struth
Thomas Struth is a German photographer who is best known for his Museum Photographs series, family portraits and black and white photographs of the streets of Dusseldorf and New York taken in the 1970s. In 1976, as part of a student exhibition at the Academy Struth attended he first showed a grid composed of 49 photographs taken from a centralized perspective on Düsseldorf’s deserted streets. In 1977, Struth and Hütte travelled to England for two months and teamed up to photograph different aspects of housing in the urban context of East London.
“[When] I am taking a photograph, I am conscious that I am constructing images rather than taking snapshots,”
Thomas Struth travelled to many different counties and cities to take photos with many of his fellow photographers. Struth photographed Rome (1984), Edinburgh (1985) and Tokyo (1986) for his project that largely consisted of black-and-white shots of streets and skyscrapers. These played a big part in his work, as many of his photographs were attempting to show the relationship people have with their modern-day environment.
“Since I do not take rapid photographs it is in this respect like a painting which takes a long time where you are very aware of what you are doing in the process.”
Thomas Struth studied under Bernd and Hilla Becher, they influenced Struth’s methodology towards photography, while his other professor, Gerhard Richter, inspired his interest in painterly images. His photographs are held in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate Gallery in London, and the Museum Kunst Palast in Düsseldorf.
Typologies
A typology is a single photograph or more commonly a body of photographic work, that shares a high level of consistency. This consistency is usually found within the subjects, environment, photographic process, and presentation or direction of the subject.
The art of photographic typologies started with August Sanders in his 1929 series of portraits titled “Face of our time” which is a collection of works documenting German society between the two world wars. The term ‘typology’ wasn’t actually used to describe this type of photography till 1959 when Bernd and Hilla Becher began documenting dilapidated German industrial architecture. The art of typologies has had a renewed interest in recent years which is due to recognition from different galleries including the Tate Modern which hosted a Typologies retrospective in London in 2011.
August Sanders
August Sanders
August Sanders
Bernd and Hilla Becher
Hilla Becher was a German artist born in 1931 in Siegen, Germany. She was one half of a photography duo with her husband Bernd Becher. For forty years, they photographed disappearing industrial architecture around Europe and North America. They began collaborating together in 1959 after meeting at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in 1957. Bernd originally studied painting and then typography, whereas Hilla had trained as a commercial photographer. After two years of collaborating together, they married.
The couple described their subjects as ‘buildings where anonymity is accepted to be the style’
They photographed Industrial structures including water towers, coal bunkers, gas tanks and factories. Their work had a documentary style as their images were always taken in black and white. Their photographs never included people. The Bechers work has also been referred to as sculpture. The Bechers called the subjects of their photographs ‘anonymous sculptures’, and they produced a successful photobook of the same title in 1970.
After selecting my images in lightroom and organising them with colour coding, I edited them.
Havres Des Pas and Housing Images
I edited most of these images in Black and White, with high contrast and grain added – this was to emulate the style of my chosen artist, John Myers. I edited a few images in both colour and black and white, as I wanted to create two versions to see which I liked better.
Here I edited my image in colour and black and white, as I wasn’t sure which I liked best. I think that black and white help to show the different shapes in the building, as well as highlight shadows. However, I think that the version in colour helps to show contrast between the different tones, as well as highlighting the overall shape of the building in contrast to the bright blue in the sky.
Machinery and Abstract Images
Again, for these images, I edited in black and white with strong contrast, adding blacks and decreasing highlights.
Here I have produced two different edits -In the one on the left, I have used “B and W landscape” preset on lightroom, and on the right I had used my own editing. I prefer the edit on the left because the higher levels of contrast, and my use of cropping which improves the composition.
In this edit, I used dramatic editing to accentuate the use of shadow and line – I used high contrast, slightly decreased the exposure and highlights, increased the blacks in the image, and added grain.
Here I have produced two different editing styles – with presets on lightroom – the left is “landscape B and W” and the right is “Sepia toned B and W”
Typology Images
After selecting the images to use for my typologies in the style of Berndt and Hilla becher, I edited them in black and white with high contrast. I then imported them into photoshop, where I created a new A3 document for each piece. I then sized all my images the same, and placed them with equal borders in my desired layout.
Final typologies
I think my typologies were partly successful, but I found that I didn’t have as many images that would work well in the style of typologies as I thought. If I was to do this shoot again, I would make sure to capture more fronts of buildings with straight-on angles with the same amount of zoom, so the pictures fit together more cohesively in my final edits.
John Myers’ remarkable, yet little-known, photographs present a tableau of life in the West Midlands of the 1970s as it has never been seen before. In line with renewed interest in American landscape photography of the 70s, The New Topographics, Myers’ black-and-white portrait and landscape photography is attracting significant critical attention after going almost unnoticed for over 20 years.
A mood board of John Myers’ images.
Working in Britain’s post-industrial Midlands from 1973-1981, Myers created an archive of the unspectacular that attracted attention at the time but then lay undisturbed for 30 years until a chance meeting with a curator. A solo show at Birmingham’s Ikon Gallery followed in 2011, kick-starting a comprehensive reappraisal at his work that’s resulted in more solo shows and several publications.
‘Landscape’ in its broadest sense can be used to describe Myers’ documentation of suburban life in his native West Midlands – the housing estates, blocks of flats, cul-de-sacs, garages, electricity substations and unsmiling portraits of the people that populated his local area. Myers evokes the streetscapes and uncomplicated certainties of Britain in the 1970s and the profound economic dislocation that took hold at the beginning of the 1980s.
His new book, Looking at the Overlooked, is a glorious compendium of “the claustrophobia of the suburban landscape in the 1970s”. Focusing on substations, shops, houses, televisions, and so-called “landscapes without incident” – or as Myers puts it, “boring photographs” – the images are all recorded with a deadpan aesthetic that’s won Myers comparisons to the celebrated New Topographics movement in the USA.
His representations of mundane features of the urban environment are quite similar to work made in the States (Adams, Gohlke, Baltz). He was a typologist (television sets, electricity substations) before the Bechers made the term their own. Furthermore, his environmental portraits of ordinary Stourbridge residents owe something to Sander and Arbus but in their static, deadpan qualities also look forward to much work made in the 1990s and beyond (Dijkstra, Hunter, Struth).
“Heath Lane” – part of John Myers’ collection named “Boring Photos”
This is one of John Myers’ images from his collection of 1970s images named “Boring Photos”, taken in black and white. The tones in this image are quite soft, with little contrast and a dull, flat sky. There is slight contrast in the tree and bush to the right and left of the image, which creates a little depth in the image. The use of line in this image is clear – all leading lines take the eye to the outside or edge of the image. For example, in the foreground, the horizontal line of the pavement splits the foreground and background up, which demonstrates the use of the rule of thirds in this image. Furthermore, the other obvious leading line in this image is the vanishing point in the background. The line of the field or hill in the background creates a solid contrast between the sky and the darker tones of the field. The uneventful composition and quiet mood of the image could suggest the lack of prospects in the area in which the image was taken or a “boring” town to live in. This would have been part of the reason Myers would have photographed this scene, as his interest in the developing face of middle-class Britain and the mundane link closely to this image.
Photoshoot plan
Shot types
Genre
Equipment
Lighting
Camera settings
Photoshoot 1 – La Collette
Wide-angle, landscape, and portrait, Straight on in the same way for Typologies
Industrial landscapes, Typologies
Camera
Natural – bright and sunny
Landscape, Manual
Photoshoot 2 –
Wide-angle, portrait, and landscape, abstract, birds eye
The New Topographics, Urban Landscapes
Camera, tripod
Natural, bright
Landscape, manual
Photoshoot Plan
I am planning to do 2 shoots – one at and around La Collette, on our guided photoshoot, and another around St Helier, and possibly St Brelade. In my first shoot, I will focus on industrial landscapes, and I’m planning to take typology like images, to emulate the work of the Bechers. In my second shoot, I am planning to capture housing blocks, roads and estates to try and capture images like John Myers. I’m planning to then edit my images in black and white, and a few in colour.