Category Archives: Uncategorised

Filters

Author:
Category:

2024 PHOTOGRAPHY EXAM PLANNER

Final Deadline for improving Coursework: MON 11 MARCH – Whole School!

Examination dates: 15 hrs controlled test over 3 days
Group 13A: 22. 25 & 26 April
Group 13B: 23, 29 & 30 April.

The Theme: ‘OBSERVE, SEEK, CHALLENGE

Assessment Objectives

Definition in dictionary:

You should provide evidence that fulfils the four Assessment Objectives:

AO1 Develop
 ideas through sustained and focused investigations informed by contextual and other sources, demonstrating analytical and critical understanding
AO2 Explore and select appropriate resources, media, materials, techniques and processes, reviewing and refining ideas as work develops
AO3 Record ideas, observations and insights relevant to intentions, reflecting critically on work and progress
AO4 Present a personal and meaningful response that realises intentions and, where appropriate, makes connections between visual and other elements.

OBSERVE

VERB

  1. a person who watches or notices something.”to a casual observer, he was at peace.
  2. a person who follows events closely and comments publicly on them.”some observers expect interest rates to rise”
  3. a person posted in an official capacity to an area to monitor political or military events.”elections scrutinized by international observers”

SYNONYMS: spectator, onlooker, watcher, voyeur, looker-on, fly on the wall, viewer, witness, eyewitness, bystander, sightseer, commentator, onlooker, reporter, blogger, monitor.

SEEK

VERB

  1. attempt to find (something):“they came here to seek shelter from biting winter winds”
    SIMILAR: look for, be on the lookout for, search for, try to find, look about for.
  2. attempt or desire to obtain or achieve (something):“the new regime sought his extradition” · “her parents had never sought to interfere with her freedom”
    SIMILAR: pursue, go after, go for, try, attempt, endeavour, strive
  3. ask for (something) from someone:“he sought help from the police”
    SIMILAR: ask for, request solicit, call on, invite, entre, beg for
  4. (SEEK SOMEONE/SOMETHING OUT)search for and find someone or something:“it’s his job to seek out new customers”
    SIMILAR: discover, detect find (out), unearth, uncover, disinte

CHALLENGE

NOUN

  1. a call to someone to participate in a competitive situation or fight to decide who is superior in terms of ability or strength:“he accepted the challenge”
    SIMILAR: dare, provocation, summons
  2. a call to prove or justify something:“a challenge to the legality of the banning order”
    SIMILAR: opposition, defiance, ultimatum, confrontation with.

VERB

  1. invite (someone) to engage in a contest:“he challenged one of my men to a duel” · “organizations challenged the government in by-elections”
    SIMILAR: dare, summon, invite,bid, throw down the gauntlet, to defy someone to do something
  2. dispute the truth or validity of:“it is possible to challenge the report’s assumptions”
    SIMILAR: question, take exception to, confront, dispute, take issue with

Binary opposition

Binary opposition – a pair of related terms or concepts that are opposite in meaning.

Binary opposition originated in Saussurean structuralist theory in Linquistics (scientific study of language) According to Ferdinand de Saussure, binary opposition is the system by which, in language and thought, two theoretical opposites are strictly defined and set off against one another. Using binary opposites can often be very helpful in generating ideas for a photographic project as it provides a framework – a set of boundaries to work within.

How to start

  1. Read the Exam Paper and Exam Planner thoroughly, especially pages pages 4-5 and page 25-28 which details specific starting points and approaches to the exam theme – make notes! Look up the word in the dictionary, synonyms and etymology (the study of the origin of words and the way in which their meanings have changed throughout history.)
  2. Brainstorm your idea and research artists listed – look also at starting points in other disciplines e.g. Fine Art and Graphic Communication etc.
  3. Begin to gather information, collect images, make a mood-board and mind-map,
  4. Make plans for photoshoots and write a specification.
  5. Produce at least ONE PHOTO-SHOOT over H-Term as a response to tasks listed below and initial research and ideas.
  6. You must show evidence of the above on your blog– complete at least 4-5 blog posts.

Each week you are required to make a photographic response (still-images and/or moving image) that relates to the research and work that you explored in that week. Sustained investigations means taking a lot of time and effort to produce the best you can possibly do – reviewing, modifying and refining your idea and taking more pictures to build up a strong body of work with a clear sense of purpose and direction

Preparatory Supporting Studies (Blog posts) – 7 weeks of lessons + 2 weeks Easter Break:

Prior to the timed examination you must produce and submit preparatory supporting studies which show why and how the supervised and timed work takes the form it does. You must produce a number of blog posts 15-30 that charts the development of your final piece from conception to completion and must show evidence of:

  • Development of your thoughts, decisions, research and ideas based on the theme
  • Record your experiences and observations
  • Analysis and interpretation of things seen, imagined or remembered
  • Investigations showing engagement with appropriate primary and secondary sources
  • Experimentation with materials, processes and techniques
  • Select, evaluate and develop images/ media further through sustained investigation
  • Show connections between your work and that of other artists/ photographers
  • Critical review and reflection

Controlled Exam 15 hrs over three days: (Final Outcome)

This time is for you to fine tune and adjust your final images for print using creative tools in Lightroom/Photoshop and/or complete a final edit of your photobook, film or video in Premiere. Your final outcome(s) must be presented in a thoughtful, careful and professional manner demonstrating skills in presenting work in either window mounts, picture frames, foam-board, and/ or submit pdf of photobook, or embed (from Youtube upload) moving image and video based production to the blog.

IDEAS > INTERPRETATIONS > ARTIST EXAMPLES
from pages 4 & 5 in exam booklet

Caves of Altamira

After having visited the caves of Altamira, Picasso famously said:

In 15,000 years we have invented nothing.

Banksy, Cave Painting Removal

Read more about Banksy’s mural here

Pollock, Jackson (1912-1956): Number 34, 1949, 1949

Read about why Jackson Pollock gave up painting here

Painter Jackson Pollock, cigarette in mouth, dropping paint onto canvas. (Photo by Martha Holmes/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)
Richard Diebenkorn

The Definitive History of the Soviet Propaganda Poster. Read more here

The Russian avant-garde
A large, influential wave of avant-gardemodern art that flourished in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union, approximately from 1890 to 1930—although some have placed its beginning as early as 1850 and its end as late as 1960. The term covers many separate, but inextricably related, art movements that flourished at the time; namely SuprematismConstructivismRussian FuturismCubo-FuturismZaum and Neo-primitivism. Given that many avant-garde artists involved were born or grew up in what is present day Belarus and Ukraine (including Kazimir MalevichAleksandra EksterVladimir TatlinWassily KandinskyDavid BurliukAlexander Archipenko), some sources also talk about Ukrainian avant-garde, etc.

The Russian avant-garde reached its creative and popular height in the period between the Russian Revolution of 1917 and 1932, at which point the ideas of the avant-garde clashed with the newly emerged state-sponsored direction of Socialist Realism.

Exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art (MOMA)
Covering the period of artistic innovation between 1912 and 1935, A Revolutionary Impulse: The Rise of the Russian Avant-Garde traces the arc of the pioneering avant-garde forms  after Socialist Realism was decreed the sole sanctioned style of art.  The exhibition examines key developments and new modes of abstraction, including Suprematism and Constructivism, as well as avant-garde poetry, film, and photomontage.

Read article here in the New York Times

Russian avant-garde and photomontage

Alexander Rodchenko
Varvara Stepanova, The Results of the First Five-Year Plan, 1932 (State Museum of Contemporary Russian History, Moscow)
Ai Weiwei

Ai Weiwei’s colored vases: Clever artwork or vandalism? read article here

51 ancient Chinese vases covered with brightly colored paint

Exhibition visitors have expressed feelings of uneasiness or even pain and nostalgia when seeing Colored Vases by Ai Weiwei1. The 51 vases that make up the artwork are originally treasures from the Neolithic Age (5000–3000 BCE) and the artist has dunked them in common industrial paint.

Why did Ai Weiwei do it?

By doing this, he commented on the devastation caused by the Chinese Cultural Revolution2 and the disregard for centuries-old craftsmanship3. By covering the surfaces, the history of the vases is no longer visible but still there, beneath the dried layer of industrial color. Some viewers have felt provoked by this audacious act, in their eyes destroying something rare and precious instead of safeguarding and worshipping it.

Conclusion

Like many other works by Ai Weiwei, he uses irony to challenge viewers’ assumptions and perspectives. As China’s most notorious artist, he finds himself in constant confrontation with the Chinese authorities, and Colored Vases is an essential piece in his rebellious oeuvre.

Ai Weiwei, Study of Perspective

Study of Perspective is a photographic series produced by Ai Weiwei between 1995 and 2017. Throughout the series, viewers see Ai’s left arm extended forward with the middle finger raised to significant institutions, landmarks and monuments from around the world. These pictures mimic tourists’ photos and encourage people to question their adherence and acceptance towards governments, institutions and establishments. This series speaks out about Ai’s beliefs regarding freedom of speech, empowerment of the people, and democratic values and showcases his activist side in true colors.

Sunflower Seeds 2010 consists of millions of individually handcrafted porcelain sunflower seeds. The work has a volume of nearly ten cubic metres, weighing approximately ten tonnes. The artist has stipulated two different configurations for the work. In the first, the seeds are arranged in a continuous rectangular or square field to a depth of ten centimetres. This ‘bed’ of seeds conforms to the dimensions of the display space, with walls confining the work on three sides. Alternatively, the work is presented as a conical sculptural form, approximately five metres in diameter. In this second configuration, there is no containing structure or support for the conical form, which is installed by carefully pouring the seeds from above to form the shape. Any uneven edges can be adjusted by hand at the time of installation.

This work is derived from the Eleventh Unilever Series commission for Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall for which Ai created 1-125,000,000 2010, a bed of ceramic sunflower seeds installed across the floor of the space. The Unilever Series commission was the first time Ai Weiwei presented this multitude of sunflower seeds as a continuous rectangular field to create a ‘unique surface’, and the first time he proposed an interactive element, in which the public was invited to walk on the seeds. In the event, after the initial days of the exhibition, it was not possible for viewers to interact with the work by walking on it due to the health risks posed by the resulting dust.

The fabrication of the seeds was carried out in the city of Jingdezhen in northern Jiangxi, a region of China south of Beijing. Historically famous for its kilns and for the production of imperial porcelain, this region is still known for its high quality porcelain production. The sunflower seeds were made by individual craftspeople in a ‘cottage-industry’ setting, rather than in a large-scale factory, using a special kind of stone from a particular mountain in Jingdezhen.

The symbol of the sunflower was ubiquitous during the Cultural Revolution in China in the 1960s and 1970s, and was often used as a visual metaphor for the country’s Communist leader Chairman Mao (1893–1976) and, more importantly perhaps, the whole population. In Sunflower Seeds Ai examines the complex exchanges between the one and the many, the individual and the masses, self and society. Far from being industrially produced, the sunflower seeds are intricately and individually handcrafted, prompting a closer look at the ‘Made in China’ phenomenon commonly associated with cheap mass-produced goods. The myriad sunflower seeds – each unique yet apparently the same – can be seen toevoke the quest for individuality in a rapidly transforming society.

In his proposal for the Unilever Series Commission, Ai commented on the significance of the sunflower seeds:

[In] the times I grew up, it was a common place symbol for The People, the sunflower faces the trajectory of the red sun, so must the masses feel towards their leadership. Handfuls were carried in pockets, to be consumed on all occasions both casual and formal. So much more than a snack, it was the minimal ingredient that constituted the most essential needs and desires. Their empty shells were the ephemeral traces of social activity. The least common denominator for human satisfaction. I wonder what would have happened without them?
(Ai Weiwei, unpublished proposal for Tate Modern Unilever Series, March 2010.)

Ai’s practice is increasingly driven by issues facing contemporary China, such as the exercise of autocratic power, the disappearance of Chinese cultural and material history, and concerns about human rights, hard labour and poverty. Sunflower Seeds explores the complexity of the Chinese individual’s relationship with society, the authorities and tradition.

Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei holds some seeds from his Unilever Installation ‘Sunflower Seeds’ at The Tate Modern on October 11, 2010 in London, England. The sculptural installation comprises 100 million handmade porcelain replica sunflower seeds.

Photoshoot Plan 6

The last section of my typology is to photograph the megalithic remains at La Blanche Banque which includes a burial ground, a ritual ground and three menhirs or standing stones.

Photoshoot Info

  • DAY: Friday 12th April
  • TIME: 20:30
  • PLACE: La Blanche Banque
  • WEATHER:
  • STYLE: Typology

Camera Settings

  • Shutter Speed: 1/125
  • Aperture: F18
  • ISO: 100
  • White Balance: Custom White Balance
  • Format: RAW

Photoshoot Plan 5

The castle being a prison would have seen many deaths and all witches in Jersey were imprisoned here. Therefore, I want to stage a photoshoot where an actor would have their face hidden, but they would be taking on the role of a witch. I want to shoot this scene at night so that any spookiness around the outcome will be enhanced.​

Photoshoot Info

  • DAY: Saturday 16th March
  • TIME: 20:00
  • PLACE: Mont Orgueil Castle
  • STYLE: Portraiture

Camera Settings

  • Shutter Speed: 2″5
  • Aperture: F9
  • ISO: 1600
  • White Balance: Custom White Balance
  • Format: RAW

Photoshoot Plan 4

The royal square is the site of all witch executions in the island. Being the market square at the time, it provided a large area where many could watch the accused being hung and their body burnt. The images from this photoshoot would conclude the story that I want to put together.

Photoshoot Info

  • DAY: Friday 12th April
  • TIME: 11:30
  • PLACE: Royal Square
  • WEATHER CONDITIONS:
  • STYLE: Landscape

Camera Settings

  • Shutter Speed: 1/125
  • Aperture: F18
  • ISO: 100
  • White Balance: Custom White Balance
  • Format: RAW

Photoshoot Plan 3

With this shoot, I want to look at the rituals and the actions of witches in Jersey, with a a clear focus on the goings on at the dolmen at La Pouquelaye de Faldouet. In my research I have found that witches were active at the dolmen in the 1980s, as evidence was found suggesting satanic rituals and sacrifice. I want to produce images commenting on this idea with actors portraying the modern witches dancing around the dolmen. As the evidence was found by a priest who came to exorcise the dolmen for a third time after the first two attempts at an exorcism failed. I want to explore ways to display this failure and the power that the ‘dark’ arts supposedly have over this site.

In the 16th and 17th Century, ways of cursing individuals and cattle was very physical and took more than a few words and incantations. Spells came in the forms of little hempen bundles twisted with feathers and moulded with clay; these were kept placed close to the victim – often under their mattress or pillow. I want to create a series of these little bundles to scatter around the dolmen as a way to comment on this aspect of witchcraft that led to the accusations and convictions of so many people within the island.

The other link to witchcraft that I want to explore with this photoshoot is the pagan history of the toad. Jersey people have always been referred to as Crapauds (jerriais for ‘toad’) The toad has been linked to both good and evil in the history, as a vessel to ward off evil spirits but also as vessel for the Devil himself to communicate with his servants on Earth. A quote from ‘The Gods and Goddesses of Old Europe, 7000-3500 BC’ by Marija Gimbutas illustrates the significance of the crapaud:

“Toad’s meat was eaten until recently to invoke labour pains, toad’s blood was used as an aphrodisiac and dry toads were hung up to protect the house from all evil. Such beliefs suggest a benevolent goddess, but the toad as a nocturnal and mysterious creature can cause madness, can take away the milk and suck the blood from humans while they sleep.”

I want to photograph a simple figure of a toad at the dolmen using a macro lens to get a clear close up image. I would also include the crapaud figurine throughout all of my photoshoots as a way of linking the series together, similar to Alfonso Calero’s ‘Remnants of Abandonment’ where a discarded stuffed toy is shown in every image of an abandoned orphanage.

Photoshoot Info

  • Day: Thursday 11th March
  • Place: La Pouquelaye de Faldouet
  • Time: 20:30 – after sunset
  • Weather Conditions:
  • Style: Macro and Tableau

Camera Settings

  • Shutter Speed: 1″
  • Aperture: F4.5
  • ISO: 1600
  • White Balance: Custom White Balance
  • Format: RAW

Photoshoot Plan 2

Witches were imprisoned at Mont Orgueil where it is speculated that they were tortured and interrogated into confessions before trial. Therefore, this is a prominent location to photograph and research for this project.

In continuation with the key-line research, I also plan on going to La Hougue Bie, a neolithic area run by Jersey Heritage that houses a buried dolmen that we can enter and photograph.

  • DAY: Sunday 3rd March
  • PLACES: Mont Orgueil Castle, La Hougue Bie
  • TIME: Afternoon
  • WEATHER CONDITIONS:
  • STYLE: Typology (techniques used for photoshoot 1) and using images created by Andrea Eichenberger as a basis of prison imagery.

Camera Settings

  • SHUTTER SPEED: 1/80
  • APERTURE: F5.6
  • ISO: 1600
  • WHITE BALANCE: Custom White Balance
  • Format: RAW

Photoshoot Plan 1

Understanding the works of witchcraft in the island begins by finding an understanding its ancient heritage – looking at evidence from nearly 4,000 years ago. In Jersey, we have a rich neolithic and megalithic past with ancient burial grounds (dolmens) and large standing stones (menhirs) possible used for to establish a spiritual connection.

When conducting research into this part of history, I read Chris Lake’s “These Haunted Islands” (Jersey, 1986); in which Lake displays a map of the island displaying ley-lines running across it. These spiritual passageways have been proven to connect all megalithic remains on the island, with the most prominent being at La Pouquelaye de Faldouet. Therefore, I want to make a series of images of this dolmen and others in the East of the island that are connected by these ley-lines.

Photoshoot Info

  • DAY: Saturday 2nd March
  • PLACES:

La Mont Ube, Blanche Pierre, Highfield, La Pouquelaye de Faldouet

  • TIME: Afternoon/Evening (13:30-18:30)
  • WEATHER CONDITIONS:
  • STYLE: Typology Techniques used by Bernd and Hiller Becher – tripod

Camera Settings

  • SHUTTER SPEED: 1/250
  • APERTURE: F9.0
  • ISO: 200
  • WHITE BALANCE: Custom White Balance
  • Format: RAW

Research Notes – ‘Glimpses of Jersey: A Collection of Interesting Stories and Traditions’, John Manning

2 Stories revolving around La Rocqueberg (Witch’s Rock)

Story 1

A young girl’s fiancé walked alone past the rock one night and witnessed a witches Sabbath. He was invited to join these beautiful maidens the following night, to dance and have fun. Out of fear, the young girl sought advice from the parish priest who gave a crucifix with instructions to follow her fiancé and use the crucifix against the forces of evil.

She did so and found him surrounded by haggard old witches that held her fiancé under a spell that forced him to regard them as beautiful young women. The young girl could see them for what they truly were because she held the crucifix. She threw at the witches and broke the spell on her fiancé who now saw the hags running away out of fear of God. The couple never saw them again.

Story 2

It was believed that witches would conjure great storms from the rock as fisherman sailed by on their way home with their catch. The fisherman were forced to give the witches every 13th fish or else be swarmed by the storm and their ship wrecked and all on board drowned.

However, one man refused to comply and upon apporaching the rock and into the storm, where the witches began to sing. He held a five rayed starfish and cut off one of its rays. He threw this into the midst of the witches shouting, ” The cross is my passport”. The fish landed amongst the witches and they were never seen on the rock again.

Research Notes – ‘These Haunted Islands’, Chris Lake

LEY-LINES

“Neolithic monuments are spiritual generators linked to each other by psychic energy radiating across the countryside in a network of invisible rays … lines of kinetic force, emanating from the forgotten extra-sensory powers of a prehistoric people.”

Megalithic Remains connected by Ley-Lines

  • Table des Marthes
  • Blanche Banque
  • Tumulus
  • La Mont Ube
  • La Blanche Pierre
  • Highfield
  • La Hougue Bie
  • La Pouquelaye de Faldouet
  • Moulin de Bas
  • Pierre de la Fetelle
  • Les Mont Grantez
  • Green Island
  • La Pouquelaye de Pas

Faldouet Dolmen

1981+82 – complaints to local clergyman around the area detailed feelings of something evil coming from the dolmen.

Clergyman was also the diocesian exorcist – performed two previous full-scale exorcisms at the dolmen that did not seem to work.

He found evidence of a witches black mass involving sacrifice and an inverted crucifix – there is the possibility that these witches harnessed the power of one of three ley-lines that run into the dolmen.

Proof that witches still work today and there is some kind of connection between them and the pagan history revolving around these ancient burial sites.

Rhyme detailing the legend of sacrifice

Significance of the Crapaud (Toad)

The toad was used in many ways as their shapes resmble that of a woman in labour. Small statues were carried by women as a form of protection from miscarriage or as a way for the beholder to remain fertile.

“Toad’s meat was eaten until recently to invoke labour pains, toad’s blood was used as an aphrodisiac and dry toads were hung up to protect the house from all evil. Such beliefs suggest a benevolent goddess, but the toad as a nocturnal and mysterious creature can cause madness, can take away the milk and suck the blood from humans while they sleep.” ~ Marija Gimbutas in: The Gods and Goddesses of Old Europe, 7000 – 3500 BC (1974)

Grimoires – the Devil Books

Le P’tit Albaert + Le Grand Albaert

The content of these books themselves are not evil but it is how you try to use them. Information within them included ways of understanding human reproduction, and cures for plague or flu. But they also contained advice on conjuring spirits, and reaching out and using the dark powers of the Unknown.

Clavicula Salomonia (Key of Solomon)

Contains the formula for raising spirits with full detail and elaborate diagrams, as well as warnings as to what should happen if anything went wrong. If a single word or symbol was out of place, the conjuror will allow himself to be controlled. It is also likely that if this happens, their mind could be ripped to pieces by the untamed spirit.

Malleus Maleficarum (Hammer of the Witches)

A DIY guide to witch hunting written in 1484 by Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger. Backed up by an anti-heretic and anti-witch Bull issued by Pope Innocent VIII, and used by Martin Luther and John Calvin.

4 Essential Points of Witchcraft

  • The renunciation of the Catholic Faith
  • The devotion of the body and soul to the services of evil
  • The offering of unbaptised children to the Devil
  • Engaging in orgies (including intercourse with Satan)

Witches were believed to have the ability to change shape and fly across the skies – making them almost impossible to discover.

The book advocated the torture of accused witches until they confess. Forced confessions however did not stop the torture until the names of fellow satanists were revealed.

Torture

Letter written by Burgomaster Junius of Bamberg to his daughter dated July 24 1628

Extract from court records of the confession of Isabel Becquet who was burned as a witch on July 4 1617

Methods of Interrogation

QUESTIONS: all leading questions

  • How old were you when the Devil first appeared to you?
  • Why did you choose to become a witch?
  • Who are the children on whom you have cast a spell?
  • When did you first attend the Sabbat?
  • Which demon did you choose to be your lover?

The Devil’s Mark

The accused were pricked by a long pin all across there body until a point was found that did not bleed or seem to cause the victim any pain. The court was then told that the ‘mark’ had been found.

The Devil’s Pap

A third teat found on the accused’s body thought to be used to suck a Devil’s familiar (appearing commonly in the form of a cat, toad or crow)

The Witch Trials

Jean Morant and Pasquette Le Vesconte – both imprisoned in Mont Orgueil Castle and confessed to be witches

Si tais si maychante, j’enviethai cherche Marie Tourgis (If you’re such a bad girl, I’ll send for Marie Tourgis)

Phrase used by mother’s to scare their children into behaving

Spells

Objects made of hempen thread, twisted with feathers and bound together by clay. – the objects were cursed and placed close to the victim, often in the bed chambers and under their pillows/mattresses.

Reports of 44 spells being placed in a child’s room and found by his mother.

Court Proclamation against the seeking of help from sorcerers

Court Records from Simon Vauldin’s Trial – 10/10/1591

Artist References

Andrea Eichenberger

“I was born in Florianópolis, southern Brazil. I live in Paris and work between Brazil and France. After finishing my studies in Visual Arts, I completed a PhD in Visual Anthropology. Photography, the experience of the encounter, collaboration and participation are at the heart of my artistic practices and research.”

~ Andrea Eichenberger

Eichenberger’s series titled “Les Mille Briques” (The Thousand Bricks) is an attempt to show the inner workings of a prison, specifically Beauvais Penitentiary Centre in France. With my idea of revolving my project around witchcraft in Jersey, a key aspect of this topic is the prison of Mont Orgeuil Castle, in which many accused witches were imprisoned and tortured awaiting trial. Her exhibition on this prison allows to explore ideas of how to photograph the castel in such a way to encompass the stories of those held there. The information below was presented at her exhibition in 2016 as part of the Photaumnales festival.

The series displays a series of walls with no people within the images. This almost displays a story of solitary confinement and isolation from the outside world. Images that have people within never have more than one person photographed at a time and you never see their faces; hiding their identities. This is a concept that I believe would work perfectly with my project as a way of isolating the accused from the world, commenting on the actions of society at the time that witchcraft was widely feared. The fact that accused witches were held and hidden from the world then convictions could range from execution to banishment further enhances this them of seclusion that I want to use as part of my project.

Image Analysis – Andrea Eichenberger

Unknown ~ Andrea Eichenberger

This is the only colourised image that I have decided to analyse as it is interesting how the colours within a prison are so dull that they reflect the stereotypical life of a prisoner. In the centre of the image, a window with iron bars covering the outside, and in front of that a solitary prisoner smoking and looking out the window. You will notice that throughout the entire series, every time a human being is photographed there face is hidden from the camera; be it from the subject turning their back or having something cover their face. This is an interesting concept that could prove very useful within my project as it could suggest that many witches are unknown to the history books. The subject is looking out the window, suggesting a longing for freedom or a sense of boredom as there is not much else to do within the prison walls. The tungsten lighting that is used in prisons seems to be the only light used for this image, it’s obvious that there is only one light used as the image seems very flat which in itself represents the idea that this is a very linear image with no hidden meaning – it shows the loneliness and boredom that comes with being a prisoner.

This image makes me think of how witches would have felt, imprisoned in Mont Orgueil Castle, held in the darkness and tortured until they confessed their fabricated crimes and revealed the names of ‘other’ witches in their Coven. If they were truly witches or not didn’t matter as they would then be arrested and the process repeated. This image allows me to think about how to photograph this part of my project and use ares of the castle perhaps with windows or have the actors in chains.

Ideas for Images:

  • Inside the prison walls of Mont Orgeuil
  • Solitary Prisoners
  • Prisoners asleep or bored
  • Guards of the castle
  • Use the darkness of the prison and never show the prisoners faces

Bernd and Hilla Becher

“The question ‘is this a work of art or not?’ is not very interesting for us.”

~ Bernd and Hilla Becher

These German artists changed the course of late 20th Century photography. They explored the disappearing industrial infrastructure that shaped the modern world, describing their photographic approach as ‘typologies’. By photographing each structure in the same way (same camera settings, same lighting conditions, same angles) they established an interesting way of comparing these images when presented together.

The outcomes that the couple create often focus around abandoned industrial structures but the series that appealed to me was the one shown below titled ‘Framework House’. the shapes created within the walls are interesting and almost create a pattern that connects each image of a different house with the way that they were built. It links directly to my project as being a display of historical housing, perhaps similar to those found in Jersey during the centuries of the witch trials and therefore perhaps similar to what was lived in by convicted sorcerers.

Image Analysis – Framework House (Bernd and Hilla Becher)

Framework House, Hagener Straße 37 ~ Bernd and Hilla Becher

Upon first sight, the lines within the image are a series of horizontal, vertical and diagonal beams that produce the framework of the house. There is a clear use of depth of field that blurs the areas behind the house but brings the house itself and what is in the foreground into focus; making the house the main part of the image and the first thing that the audience sees. The image displays a very monochrome colour palette but using fairly light tones so that the plain background is only separated from the house by the deeply contrasting beams framing the building. The building is centred in the image and the natural lighting used allows the dulling of the final outcome in post production.

Like I said earlier, the image has some historical importance and makes me imagine the complexity that it possibly took to build. These traditional buildings are scattered across Germany and are not as common as the used to be, allowing a beautiful contrast when looking upon a landscape. it is for this reasoning that I believe the Becher’s created this typology study of this type of building. An aspect of history that has not yet been lost and so they surely wanted to preserve these monuments to the past in their photographic images.

Ideas for Images

  • Typology of dolmens – looking down the main passageway of the burial chambers
  • Focusing on the side chambers of each dolmen
  • Typology of all megalithic remains that are connected by ley-lines
  • Typology of haunted areas/houses in the island
  • Typology of the parish churches – exploring the effect of the Church on 15th-17th Century society

Sesh Sareday

“Clearly I am searching for something . This is why I have been chasing light and all the visuals it creates with the help of its of opposite, the dark.”

~ Sesh Sareday

 Sesh is a world explorer based in the San Francisco area. Having evolved with the photography industry, he experimented with various media including art, film, and animation, before settling on digital photography. From the young age of 14, Sesh has used his keen sense of observation to showcase spectacular moments in nature, capture exotic visuals from his native India, and uncover hidden mystique in emotions and people around him. As a passionate hobby Sesh believes that photography allows him to honestly showcase what he sees and the way he sees it, without any external influences.

Body Snatchers

“Fear is a primal instinct that exists in all of us … This photo series, “Body Snatchers”, explores the images of something between light and darkness. In other words, shadows. They exist for only moments of time but through them, myriad forms of art are created through the movement of light.”

~ Sesh Sareday

Sareday’s series of shadow imagery alludes to the idea of a hidden world and by using shaped shadows, dark and perhaps fearful messages can be conveyed. The names of each image not only describes what is being shown in the image but each of them alone has a profound spookiness about them. The names sound like things you might see or hear within a horror story or film: (floater, roamer, biter, lurker). It directly links to my photographic ideas in exploring Jersey’s connection with witchcraft; an exploration into the “dark” arts and the hidden world of magic and pagan history.

Image Analysis – Dead Ones (Sesh Sareday)

DEAD ONES ~ Sesh Sareday

Sareday has framed the image with an obvious border surrounding harsh white areas, most likely created by daylight seeping through windows. There is an obvious distance between the actors and the light source as the shadows created are clear and sharp, whereas the framed light is blurred around the edges establishing a distance between the window frames and the surface that the light is being projected onto. Multiple shadows take the central focus of the image and draw an audience to a cross shape, making connotations of religion and perhaps the rise of evil. Coupled with the body shapes, this idea of ‘the undead’ is clearly shown and clarified by the title: ‘DEAD ONES’. An audience can immediately picture zombies or corpses within their mind, colourising this monochrome photograph and establish a deeper connection with what they are seeing.

In my own mind, this image forces me to think about demonic presences and present evils within modern society, be it mystical like paranormal activity or unhidden acts of cruelty like the war in Ukraine and the threat of Russian nuclear attacks on the Western World. The artist has used the very simple concept of shadows and created this horrifying effect that perhaps comments on humanity. The darkness that we as a society fabricate and how fear and speculation can affect the motives of the human mind.

Ideas for Images

The use of shadows can be used to convey a visual aspect of spirits of witches (both innocent and guilty of ‘diabolical crimes’) and demonic figures that haunt the world we live in. By establishing key areas of the island like places of torture, execution or sacrifice; these shadows have a story that might not be evident if simply photographed in a studio.

  • Shadows of actors imprisoned in Mont Orgeuil Castle
  • Witches shadows at dolmens
  • Shadowy figures at the place of execution
  • Shadows looming over people asleep at night

Mayah

“The word Mayah ( ma-yah) is an ancient Indian concept which, in its simplest meaning, is illusions created by our minds through our five senses . Depending on what state of mind we are in these can be illusions or constructed reality and not necessarily what is there or what they really mean.”

~ Sesh Sareday

I chose to look at the series by Sareday as it links to a possible branch off point of paranormal and ghost photography. The images each convey an idea of solitude. By using photomontage techniques and experimenting with shutter speeds, these ghostly outcomes provide a dark and horrifying aspect to the different areas that were photographed.

Some of these images, make me think of traditional Jersey ghost stories that I have read or heard; for example the first image (below) of a single boat in the water with a murky backdrop is the perfect image to accompany “The Lake”. The fourth image shows a person moving across the frame while the camera uses a slow shutter speed to blur the figure on a relatively still background. This use of shutter speed creates the typical ghostly look of photographs that are said to be of a ghost or paranormal entity.

Image Analysis – Sesh Sareday

Unknown ~ Sesh Sareday

This monochrome image clearly shows two photographs layered on top of eachother. The base image has dull-white horizontal lines going across it, seemingly pipes or rods of some sort. The top image in my opinion contains the main story behind the outcome. Two silhouetted figure either sat or stood at a table with the camera seemingly looking upon the scene from outside a window suggests something dark and sinister, a theory complimented by the dark, monochrome colour palette. The image has the glassy effect that shows the photographer as being an outsider looking in so perhaps it is of an intimate moment in the two peoples lives and isn’t meant to be on camera. A part of the image that seems quite interesting to me, is a criss-crossed pattern (perhaps belonging to a garden fence) is shown above the predominant scene. If the photo was taken through a window, it could be a reflection in the overlaying image. However, it could be third image introduced in post-production; either way, there is a reason it is there as Sareday could have easily removed it from the final outcome. I could see it as a way of establishing where the photographer themself is taking the photo from; or perhaps it expresses an idea of isolation, the two figures being fenced in and hiding/being hidden from the world.

In my opinion, it is quite difficult to determine the true story behind the image, but it still appears to me as the dark and sinister connotations that I think of when looking at it can be used to express similar ideas when taking photos for my project.

Ideas for Images

  • Using slow shutter speeds to create ghosts in the backdrop of Mont Orgueil Castle
  • Layering two images together to create ghosts
  • Use AI technology to create the ghost
  • Actor in harsh white clothing that flows and can moved to blur the figure but not the face.