For this photoshoot, I really wanted to use the merge HDR method, so I set my camera to shoot 3 photos, each with different levels of contrast (as it will effect the shutter speed). Then In light room I merged the images together to get a higher dynamic range with the photos. This means the images would look more like what the eye sees (as eyes have every high dynamic range). This would allow me to get images very similar to Ansel Adams who’s images also had life like dynamic range giving a drama packed image. I went to Plemont just before the golden hour so the lighting and contrast would be very powerful. Also, the cliffs are very tall and dramatic, which will help make my image more interesting. Here are some good photos with the editing process:
Photo 1:
I took this image from the side of a bridge, keeping a visualisation on how I want the end photo to look like. I wanted the house to look insignificant compared to the large cliff sides of jersey. The dark and sinister cave below shows that humans don’t have the same power as nature.
I bumped up the contrast to make the scene far more dramatic from the textures of the rocks to the now visible clouds. However, Increasing the exposure too much left the highlights being to over exposed and the shadows being under exposed. I felt like the rocks could do with some more detail so I increased the texture which automatically adjusts certain sections of the image for me.
Photo 2:
Here I combined the 3 images below to increase the dynamic range of my image, each with a different exposure level:
Higher exposure (by 1 f-stop)
Lower exposure (by 1 f-stop)
Normal exposure
below is the final image after the HDR processing:
I wanted to use visualisation again for this picture. I knew not to take photos with the sun in frame as it can make the image look less exiting if not done on purpose. I also saw some surfers going into the water before taking the photo so I waited for them to get in a nice position before capturing this image. The eyes are brought away from the dark rocks and towards the surfers, placed on the rule of thirds. This means the viewers eyes are always drawn to the surfers (focal point).
I wanted to bring the clouds out more in the photo so I increase the contrast and decreased the highlights and whites. This also gave the rocks some more detail. However, I believe that in photoshop It might be better as I can add detail to the image without the surfers blending in with the sea.
Urban photography can be seen as a type of genre in photography that is concerned with capturing images from Urban space, things like towns and other ecological spaces. Over the years, Urban landscape has became very popular due to the world becoming more urbanised. It is a study which links to landscape and street photography.
Urban landscape can be also seen as a primal focus in an urban environment which basically means a man made environment, which highlights the background of landscape rather than the subject of the landscape.
Topographic photography is the idea of taking landscape style photos which show the infiltration of human life through the photo. Usually these photographs are taken in urban, rural or suburban areas, so the inclusion of landscapes are viewed.
The New Topographic idea, was a reaction to the infiltration of humans and made-made structures throughout the urban and suburban areas. The early topography photographers believed that as long as humans continue to intervein upon nature and the natural world, topography will remain a important part of showing the cause this will have on nature.
This photograph by Robert Adams in particular shows the contrast between the life and the landscape of the natural world quite harshly. The way the photo is almost split in half shows the difference between the natural unfiltered world with the habited rural world.
The way the clouds above the dark mountain are looming shows almost the unforgivable nature of the natural world while the sun gleams on the caravans below – it definitely shows contrast but also shows beauty between the mix of topics.
The blend between the two themes in this photo show almost a harmony between the two ‘worlds’. While still showing the nature and beauty of the mountain range landscape, Adams manages to reveal the impact that colonisation has on more rural places throughout the world.
The idea of ‘New Topographics’ signalled the emergence of a new photographic approach of landscape. It shows the beauty and controversy of man-altered landscapes that were taken over by buildings and factories. There were 10 main photographers that founded the idea of ‘New Topographics’ them being – Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Joe Deal, Frank Gohlke, Nicholas Nixon, John Schott, Stephen Shore and Henry Wessel.
Exposure bracketing is where you take a sequence of photographs with different exposure levels, and then blend them together to create a photograph with a much higher dynamic range. It gives you all the details you will ever need in your photographs so you can create the exact image you had in mind.
For this photoshoot, I went outside of Hautlieu School and took images of the building. I set up my camera so that it would take three images, each with a different exposure (+1, 0, -1). Once I had taken my images, I imported them onto Lightroom. I then chose the images I wanted to use by right clicking on the first image of the sequence then pressing the arrow button then clicking on the last image of the sequence. This highlighted them all. I then right clicked on the images and pressed photomerge then selected HDR. I then got to select my deghost amount, ranging from none to high.
Final images:
Overall, I think this photoshoot was a successful first attempt as I learnt how to do exposure bracketing. However, next time I would use a different location and test out different deghost amounts as I used none for most of them.
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. These photographs captured a site of interaction between humans and the non-human, nature, and how the rapidly increasing population growth in countries produces new housing developments which are moving further and further away from city centres, taking over the countryside. New Topographics reflected this suburbanisation and reacted to the idealized image of landscape photography in a world where the ideal image of nature had simply been altered due to mankind. William Jenkins curated this as a signalled new approach to Landscape photography. The ten photographers who used this approach were:
Robert Adams
Nicholas Nixon
Lewis Baltz
Frank Gohkle
Joe Deal
Henry Wessel
John Schott
Stephen Shore
Bernd Becher
Hilla Becher
These photographers signalled the radical shift away from traditional depictions of landscape photography and revealed the stark industrial views around us, scenes we go by every day unconsciously aware of them. They documented these suburban areas such as housing, warehouses and even car parks, depicted in the same way that these countryside areas were captured – beautiful stark austerity. Not only did this cause people to be more consciously aware of the reality of our environments, filled with man-made structures, but it also raised a daring concern and worry on how humans had been eroded natural spaces with industrialisation. An exhibition that helped with this awareness was The International Museum of Photography in Rochester, New York featuring these photographers.
Robert AdamsNicholas NixonFrank GohlkeJohn SchottHenry WesselLewis BaltzBernd and Hilla BecherStephen ShoreJoe Deal
This documentation of combined natural and man-made structures in America also captured the tension between natural scenery and monotonous structures of post World War Two. These images were often stark of human presence, described to be “neutral” in style, “reduced to an essentially topographic state, conveying substantial amounts of visual information but eschewing entirely the aspects of beauty, emotion, and opinion” by Jenkins himself. The American Landscape being photographed in such a casual and common place without beautification opens peoples eyes to the unnoticed and how much society progresses. By foregrounding, rather than erasing human presence, the photographs placed people into a stance of responsibility towards the landscape’s future. This was a position that resonated with ecology, the branch of environmental thought that was gaining traction in the 1970s.
Through square formatting, viewers could read the landscape as if it was traces of human decision-making. Moments of too-perfect symmetry in the patterns of rocks and bushes expose the landscaping as unnatural. Joe Deal photographed suburban development in the form of construction sites which become contrasted against the large piles of refuse and empty lots regularly shown in these images that suggest the wastefulness of abandoned projects. By framing the land in this way, Deal creates a space where his viewers must consider the cost of rapid growth in the fragile desert and how dangerously this would be impacting these natural spaces that should be protected and preserved.
Climate Change:
The message of climate change and global warming is invoked within these images. Due to the mundane showings of our society’s continuous and persistent growth further and further into industrialisation, it causes the viewer to question our actions. To create these spaces for urbanisation, trees and plants must be destroyed in order to create the largest space possible to allow the largest amount of houses to be developed for example. This is due to the constant growing population rates in countries, especially after World War Two where many people, especially Jewish, were occupied in Nazi Germany. Those who didn’t pass away were returning to their homeland to re-join with their families. Alongside this, the aftermath of World War Two brought:
Inflation and labour unrest – a large economic concern
The baby boom and suburbia – millions of people had died and lost family or friends. Veterans were finally free to make up for lost time, get married and begin their family.
Isolation and mental health issues – Many people had lost family and were alone, PTSD from returning veterans
The returning people who fought for the country were various ages, especially those whose life had only begun due to being such a young age, were returning to begin families of their own after being away for 6 years of their lives already – resulting in ‘The Baby Boom’. This resulted in immediate new housing developments which began a spark, still continuing to this day where there is constantly a need for more. The burning of trees releases carbon however, when all the other trees have been destroyed for urbanization, there aren’t any nearby to take in this carbon and revert it. As a result, this carbon goes up into the atmosphere and begins to create holes in the ozone layer. This then provides the sun to be able to get its harmful rays in even stronger as the ozone layer acts as protection. This heats up the globe and continues our path down global warming. Alongside this, the burning of fossil fuels releases harmful toxins which contribute to this issue which is a result of the constant redevelopment of areas around the globe.
During an exhibition of New Topographics, some comments made were:
“I don’t like them—they’re dull and flat. There’s no people, no involvement, nothing.”
“At first it’s stark nothing, but then you look at it, and it’s just about the way things are.”
“I don’t like to think there are ugly streets in America, but when it’s shown to you—without beautification—maybe it tells you how much more we need here.”
However, it causes viewers to rethink their choices and decisions when taking advantage of what is already there and what is genuinely needed against what is not once you really look at the image.
I’m going to take inspiration from my photographers I have wrote case studies about, Robert Adams and Joe Deal, My plan is to take images of manmade things with a human stood in front of it, so we as humans see just how much damage we have done, and portray how oblivious we are too it. But I also want to capture the beauty of the environment.
Joe Deal (1947-2010) was born in Topeka, Kansas. He earned his BFA at the Kansas City Art Institute and his MFA degree from the University of New Mexico. While teaching at the University of California, Riverside, Deal established the UCR/California Museum of Photography. He is one of the founding artists of the New Topographics movement. Deal was among the eight photographers included in the seminal exhibition “New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape”, an exhibition curated by William Jenkins at the George Eastman House’s International Museum of Photography in 1975. This school of photography was marked by pictures that depicted the growing complexities of the American landscape with “stylistic anonymity” as Jenkins put it. Following the success of this landmark exhibition, in 1980, Joe Deal completed The Fault Zone Portfolio, a group of 19 silver gelatin prints that documented suburban life along the San Andreas Fault Line in Southern California. Near the end of his life, the artist produced another remarkable body of work titled West and West. In these crisp black and white photographs of the Great Plains, Deal drew upon 19th century survey photography, but used the horizon line and symmetry of square format to reframe our perception of the landscape as finite. His work is included in numerous museums and collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the J. Paul Getty Trust, Los Angeles; Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; and in the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House, Rochester. Joe Deal died in Providence, Rhode Island in 2010.
Like his peers in New Topographics, Deal trained his camera on landscapes that had been overlooked by the prominent photographers of the preceding generation, Instead of majestic, snow-covered peaks or meadows dotted with wildflowers, Deal chose to photograph places irrevocably marred by human hands, landscapes most people would consider unredeemable ugly, like the dirt road in Wyoming, at right.Among the artist’s favored subjects early in his career were sites graded for future developments, newly cut roads, mobile home parks, and all manner of shoddily built housing. Although he certainly felt they were eyesores, Deal deliberately chose to photograph these aspects of the built environment from as seemingly neutral a point of view as possible, as his interest was in visual analysis, rather than in conveying an explicit social or political message.In a more recent series, West and West: Reimagining the Great Plains, Deal stripped his pictures down to the barest of bones: rock formations, grass, sky. A return to the region where he grew up and a meditation on the constructed nature of landscape, it includes some of the sparest photographs Deal ever made.
Image Analysis
Deal has used natural daylight when taking this image, which creates a lower level of control over what you want to be lit as you cannot control the sun, but one thing you can control is exposure and things like the lense settings, which we can see that in some places of this photo the image is overexposed and blurry for example the background but the foreground is more in focus, which creates a depth of field to focus our eyes on the foreground. They do look like just some boring rocks and grass but Deal has used many different tones and texture to really portray what he could see with his eyes standing there and more, which adds depth to the image, and emotion, which ups the value of nature , and makes us want to worship it more, after seeing all the destruction we are putting on it compared to just a ‘boring’ image of natural land. Joe Deal’s photograph Colton, California is from his series The Fault Zone, which documents life along the San Andreas Fault Line in Southern California. The work encompasses themes and ideas that Deal explored throughout his career in photography, including how humans alter the landscape through ever-expanding construction. Deal’s work gained national attention in 1975 when he contributed photographs of newly constructed homes against the landscape of the American Southwest to an exhibition at the International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York, titled New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape. Deal and the nine other photographers in the exhibit were seen as breaking away from the precedent set by earlier American landscape photographers who presented romantic, sweeping vistas largely without the presence of people; the photographers in New Topographics instead turned their cameras on the built environment of modern America.