photoshoot 2: rural

plan:

rural photography contains elements of the countryside, and typically it captures the presence of nature. It focuses on the light and exposure of an image adding depth and a range of different tones to them. I am going to focus on fields and large spaces of empty land trying to capture the countryside, as well as any little lanes or paths.

mood board:

contract sheet:

Firstly I flagged all of my images with the ones I wished to use and the ones that were not so good.
I then used develop mode on Lightroom classic to edit and adjust my images. Image sure that the images were clear and had the correct exposure and highlights to contrast.

new topogaphics

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

Many of the photographers associated with new topographics including Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Nicholas Nixon and Berdand Hiller Becher, were inspired by the man-made, selecting subject matter that was matter-of-fact. Parking lots, suburban housing and warehouses were all depicted with a beautiful stark austerity, almost in the way early photographers documented the natural landscape. An exhibition at the International Museum of Photography in Rochester, New York featuring these photographers also revealed the growing unease about how the natural landscape was being eroded by industrial development.

What was the new topographics a reaction to?

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

Robert adams:

“I think if you placed me almost anywhere and gave me a camera you could return the next day to find me photographing. It helps me, more than anything I know, to find home.”

-ROBERT ADAMS

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

Lewis Baltz:

Lewis Baltz produces photographs in series focused on a particular theme or geographic area and usually publishes them in book form, as in The New Industrial Parks Near Irvine, California (1975), Nevada (1978) and Park City (1981). His work, like that of others associated with the New Topographics, challenges the nineteenth century tradition of western landscape photography represented by Timothy O’Sullivan, Carleton Watkins, and William Henry Jackson by presenting a less innocent view of the landscape. Baltz’s perception of the landscape necessarily reveals the effects of twentieth-century culture and suburban development on the nation’s topography. 

Nicholas Nixon:

Nixon’s career began in the 1970s when he was a student of photography. Following his first photos of Alburquerque, he shot his first major series, City views. These photographs, taken in Boston and New York, formed part of one of the most influential exhibitions in the history of photography, organized in 1975 by George Eastman House entitled New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape. This is one of the main themes dealt with by Nixon throughout the whole of his career. From the very start he has worked on series that touch on fundamental aspects of human life.

This image interests me the most:

The low angle to give a realistic perspective and view of the ‘man made’ world we are living in. With the buildings towering over and almost enclosing us, its intimidating.

Bernd and Hiller Becher:

New Topographics | Exhibitions | MutualArt

ROBERT ADAMS

“I think if you placed me almost anywhere and gave me a camera you could return the next day to find me photographing. It helps me, more than anything I know, to find home.”

Robert Adams

In this quote Robert Adams says that photography gave him a camera he could do it for as long as he wanted without getting bored if it . I think this quotes shows that you don’t need to be good a photography as everyone has their own view of the environment around them; making photography limitless and unique for everyone.

ROBERT ADAMS:

Robert Adams was an English sculptor and designer. Whilst not widely known outside of artistic circles, he was nonetheless regarded as one of the foremost sculptors of his generation. His work first came to prominence in the mid-1970s through his book The New West and his participation in the exhibition New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape in 1975.

MOODBOARD

Robert Adams, Mobile Homes, Jefferson County, Colorado

IMAGE ANALYSIS:

Robert Adams: The New West | AnOther
Colorado Springs, 1974, Robert Adams

This is one of Robert Adams’ most famous photographs he had taken. This image is taken in black and white, which shows the varying shades of greys in the image, perhaps when taking this image Adams was trying to reinforce the connotation of balance that grey signifies while also showing the negative connotation of loss and loneliness. In this image there a many rectangular shapes like the windows, doors, windows within the doors and the bricks this gives a sense of a frame in frame image further connoting the idea of the woman being isolated and trapped. Furthermore even due to all the many windows and doors shown in this house they are all shut which creates an idea that the lady is shut inside and cannot escape the house.

NEW TOPOGRAPHICS

WHAT IS NEW TOPOGRAPHICS?

New topographics was a term coined by William Jenkins in 1975 to describe a group of American photographers, whose pictures had a similar banal aesthetic, in that they were formal, mostly black and white prints of the urban landscape.

The new topographics was a reaction to the growing unease about how the natural landscape was being eroded by industrial development, it revealed that some of the people where getting uneasy about the environmental issues this could cause.

The new topographics were to have a decisive influence on later photographers including those artists who became known as the Düsseldorf School of Photography.

Unlike their predecessors, these new “topographic” photographers (such as Robert Adams, no relation to Ansel) were less concerned with portraying an ideal image of nature and were more interested in showing plainly how man has altered it.

NEW TOPOGRAPHIC MOODBOARD:

Post-war America struggled with:

Inflation and labour unrest. The country’s main economic concern in the immediate post-war years was inflation; the baby boom and suburbia. Making up for lost time, millions of returning veterans soon married and started families; isolation and splitting of the family unit, pharmaceuticals and mental health problems, and vast distances, road networks and mobility

IMAGE ANALYSIS:

Is New Topographics still relevant in 2020? — Andy Feltham Photography
Stephen Shore

This image was taken by Stephen Shore. This was a historical image about Americas oil revolution. Due to America being such a huge continent, therefore lots of people own cars, oil and gas station are not unusual thing to find on the side of the road. Chevron oil station in 2003 had a class action lawsuit a in Ecuadorian court for $28 billion by indigenous residents. This is because accusations of Texaco of making residents ill and damaging forests and rivers by discharging 18 billion US gallons (68,000,000 m3) of formation water into the Amazon rainforest. This image shows the evolution of man kind and how we have affected the environment by building and producing unnatural objects. I believe that Adams was trying to shows this by including the oil station in the photograph whereas in the background showing the mountains and showing the disruption we have had to the environment. The image is centred and the focal pint of the image would be the “TEXACO” and the “CHEVRON” signs this is due to the bright red colour of the sign. In this image it uses 3 primary colours of red, blue and white which symbolises the colours of the American Flag.

New topographics

New Topographics (article) | Khan Academy
Tract House, Boulder County, Colorado – Robert Adams (1973), gelatin silver print

The new topographics aim to show humanity’s effect on the natural world, in a more-or-less neutral perspective, in a format that is up to the viewer to determine. First conceptualised during the mid-1970s, the exhibitions featured various photographers connecting man-made structures to the world it was before – making use of various visual elements to create a thought-provoking, ground-breaking composition that displays both beauty in the fine geometric shapes of our structures, and the destruction that comes with it.

Installation view, New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-altered Landscape, 1975, George Eastman Museum
The New Topographics – Installed at the George Eastman Museum (1975)

The new topographics were spearheaded by photographers such as Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Joe Deal, Frank Gohlke, Nicholas Nixon, John Schott, Stephen Shore, and Henry Wessel Jr., each artist creating 10 prints of their own.

THe Sublime – AndaLUCÍA -Best images

In my opinion, out of all of the images I took in Andalucía, these six came out the best after editing for this task, focusing more on the natural environment and the feeling of awe I felt while looking across these scenes myself, watching the combination between man-made structures and the vast landscapes they rested in.

With my monochrome photographs, I attempted to replicate Ansel Adams’ style with the dramatic dark tones, while still capturing the gorgeous vistas in front of me. The roads in these images however, act as leading lines in the same fashion that the rivers do within Adams’ work, building a stronger link between mine and his photos. I could’ve improved these by leaving the roads and climbing up a more natural trail, finding a spot almost completely untouched by civilisation, but I wanted to be cautious of the wildlife and of trespassing on someone else’s property, as I’ve learned over the years of visiting there that the locals don’t like uninvited guests on their land.

With this photo, I liked the way that the trees and foliage covered up the end of the bridge from where I was stood, as I feel it creates a sense of nature’s domination over mankind, despite our collaborative destruction of the environment as a species. Furthermore, the range of biodiversity present within the composition, evident in the range of colour within the colour palette, brings more life to the image itself, causing it to feel more 3-dimensional and eye-catching. I went more with my own instincts on this piece, as opposed to following the conventions of another artist, and I think the final product is better for it, as the exposure within the image is not low enough to create a similar piece to any of the photographers I have studied.

URBAN AND INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPES

The raise of urban landscapes had a major link between the new topographics. New topographics which is a term coined by William Jenkins in 1975 to describe a group of American photographers, such as Robert Adams and Lewis Baltz who would photograph urban landscapes. New topographics is similar to new objectivity, as it is a movement of a reaction to romanticism. Romanticism was born as a reaction to an opposing idea, realism, however new topographics was a reaction and opposing romanticism and showing realism through photography.

New topographics mean photographs of a man-altered landscape, like buildings, roads or vehicles. some examples of this are:

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is For-Sean-OHagan-on-Photog-003.jpg
Untitled from the series Route 66 Motels (1973) Photograph: John Schott/George Eastman House collections
Robert Adams, Tract house, Boulder County, Colorado, 1973, gelatin silver print (George Eastman Museum, © Robert Adams)
Robert Adams, Tract house, Boulder County, Colorado, 1973, gelatin silver print (George Eastman Museum, © Robert Adams)
Frank Gohlke, Landscape, Los Angeles, 1974 (George Eastman House, © Frank Gohlke)
Frank Gohlke, Landscape, Los Angeles, 1974 (George Eastman House, © Frank Gohlke)
John Schott, Untitled (from Route 66 Motels), 1973, gelatin silver print, 19.3 x 23.9 cm (George Eastman Museum, © John Schott)
John Schott, Untitled (from Route 66 Motels), 1973, gelatin silver print, 19.3 x 23.9 cm (George Eastman Museum, © John Schott)

A lot of key figures of new topographics were: Robert Adams, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Lewis Baltz, Joe Deal, Frank Gohlke, Nicholas Nixon, John Schott, Stephen Shore, and Henry Wessel Jr.

Beginning in the 1920s, Ansel Adams cultivated an approach to landscape photography that posited nature as separate from human presence. Adams photographed scenery in a manner intended to provoke feelings of awe and pleasure in the viewer. Adams wanted his pictures’ viewers to feel as uplifted as he had when looking at the scenery in person. The environmental approach in his photography seeks to preserve exceptional landscapes and protect them from human intervention. By contrast, when visitors walked into New Topographics, they encountered subject matter that was all too commonplace, represented in an unfamiliar manner. What was both novel and challenging about New Topographics was not only the photographs’ content, but how they made viewers feel. By foregrounding, rather than erasing human presence, the photographs placed people into a stance of responsibility towards the landscape’s future. In conclusion new topographics was both a reflection of the increasingly suburbanised world around them, and a reaction to the tyranny of idealised landscape photography that elevated the natural and the elemental, it made people think about the reality of the urbanization and it’s effects on the natural world.

A lot of photographs include both “natural” landscape e.g. natural forms like hills, mountains, trees etc. and combining these with arcitectual, or man-made subjects like cars, buildings and so on.

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Robert Adams, Mobile Homes, Jefferson County, Colorado, 1973. Gelatin silver print, 20 x 25cm.

Robert Adams is an American photographer who was focused on changing landscape photography, and he did this by his book called The New West as well as his exhibition New Topographics , this is what he got well-known and recognised for. He is a key artist that changed the landscape photography.

Urban landscape photography

Mood Board, Definition and Introduction

To create urban/ industrial landscape photography you can use buildings and other man-made structures compositionally in the same way other landscape photographers use trees and rolling hills. Wind farms, harbours, cement works, power stations, quarries, pylons and building sites are just a few of the industrial landscapes you can photograph.

 Landscape photographs typically captures the presence of nature but can also focus on man-made features or disturbances of landscapes. Landscape photography is done for a variety of reasons. Perhaps the most common is to recall a personal observation or experience while in the outdoors, especially when traveling. Others pursue it particularly as an outdoor lifestyle, to be involved with nature and the elements, some as an escape from the artificial world.

During this project, I will photograph multiple different industrial landscapes, creating links to some of the famous artists I researched. I will try to create an desolate or isolated mood throughout my photoshoots, to make the photos more interesting.

The New Topographics

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

New topographics focuses on landscape photos of man made buildings, it can be seen as documenting the change and expansion of things, it was in relation to the tyranny of idealised landscape photography that elevated the natural and the elemental, it questioned the supposed distinction between cultural and natural landscapes, the goal for American topographics was to show the tension between natural and man made structures post WorldWar 2.

Post WorldWar 2 America struggled with inflation and labour unrest, it affected Americans due to the rise in price of goods going up astronomically people were no longer able to afford the cost of living in the city so they had to move it made lots of people isolated and caused lots of mental heath problems.

what was the new topographics a reaction to?

It revealed the growing unease about how the natural landscape was being eroded by industrial development.

LEWIS BALTZ

New Industrial Parks #20 from New Industrial Parks near Irvine, California
Park City, interior, 35

Lewis Baltz was an American Photographer, he was known for his involvement in New Topographic. Like his contemporaries Robert AdamsStephen Shore, and Bernd and Hilla Becher, Baltz focused his camera on the unassuming green spaces and architecture of tract housing, office parking lots, and industrial parks. He believed the man made landscapes wasn’t which anyone wanted to look at he changed that by making these photos and making people view our man-made landscapes.

Lewis Baltz took photos of beautiful black-and-white images of parking lots, office parks, industrial garage doors and the backs of anonymous warehouses helped forge a new tradition of American landscape photography in an age of urban sprawl.

Baltz was mainly inspired by modern minimalist artistic movements and the effects of industrial civilization on landscapes. He shot in black and white with a wide depth of field (meaning that the entire image is in focus). His photographs are very minimalist and rely on geometric shapes and sharp contrast to add visual interest.  

Lewis Baltz work

rule without exception, from the series generic night cities (and others), 1988–2000 by lewis baltz
This photograph captured my eye due to the lighting although he typically photographed in black and white the blurred effect given off in the image captures the busyness of the ever expanding city’s, the tall straight lines of the buildings show the element of urban and the trees and the night sky show the natural forms which were there before city’s.
piazza pugliese #2, from the series ”generic night cities (and others)”, 1988–2000 by lewis baltz
gilroy by lewis baltz
uniontown, pa by lewis baltz
For me this image is eye-catching as what would have once been natural land has now been re-claimed and built onto, you can still just about see on the horizon some land which hasn’t been claimed yet. You are still able to see the natural form of the land as there are some buildings higher up than others as there is no flat ground due to land not being created in that way.

Image result for lewis baltz

industrial landscapes