Thursday, December 3, 2009

Research no.14: The Ontology of the Photographic Image

The Ontology of the Photographic Image
André Bazin; Hugh Gray
Film Quarterly, Vol. 13, No. 4. (Summer, 1960), pp. 4-9

This was a really interesting read discussing the plastic arts, problems of realism within painting throughout time and how photography's advent affected this. I found it interesting that when compared to painting, something requiring the interaction of a human hand much more heavily than in photography, photographs are taken as truth, fact, and as effectively representing reality.





Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Artist Research no.14: David Goldes 11/29/09

Thanks to Patrick I was able to take another look at a photographer I first discovered in high school. I remember being envious of his greyscale, the ability David Goldes has to create Ansel Adams-esque variety in tones, but otherwise not being too impressed. Patrick facebooked this guy over to me, and upon reviewing the work I was astounded. His photographs are GORGEOUS. Goldes biography is impressive, a Guggenheim, two Bush Foundation fellowships, and countless other grants and residencies, he also holds a MFA in Photography from Visual Studies Workshop, Rochester, New York, an M.F.A. M.A. from Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Molecular Genetics and a BA from SUNY at Buffalo, Buffalo: Biology/Chemistry, Phi Beta Kappa. He is a scientist turned artist, and it surfaces as a beautiful blend of almost spiritual experiments in some very simple ideas of science illustrated as photographic images. 
All images Copyright David Goldes, from the Water series.










Research no.13: Hubertus Von Amelunxen 11/26/09

"Photography has often been criticized for exchanging resemblance for identicalness. In 1841, Rodolphe Topffer was already complaining that the daguerreotype offered "the image of the visible instead of a sign of the invisible." For the picture to be identical would mean that the object had no significance beyond itself. Identicalness, Topffer said, is the indirect and therefore verifiable product of the daguerreotype process, whereas resemblance is the freely expressive sign of something other than the image. Truthfulness, then, is to be found not in the identical picture but in the picture which gives a resemblance. This traditional distinction shows the dilemma of photography, which was not permitted to depict what it could depict, but was unable to depict what people demanded of it."
- Hubertus von Amelunxen, excerpt from A New History of Photography.

"We continue to make a link between the image and the real, the actual 'has been there' of the body in front of the camera. But a doubt, a concern, a fear has crept into our understanding of these images. And this fear intrudes on our self-evident notion of representation and recollection. Therein lies the fascination of the photographic medium, that which is so captivating about it, which distinguishes it from all other reproduction media. The suspicion that 'perhaps it was not there."
 -Hubertus von Amelunxen, Photography After Photography, The Terror of the Body in Digital Space


"The preposition after refers both to the temporal and spatial difference in photographic representation, and thus to the space and time of the referential which is so fundamental to the photographic image. The historically established belief in the authenticity of the photographic image has its roots in the assumption that a physical-chemical apparatus can (re)produce the displaced analogue image of an optically perceivable phenomenon. We believe in photography just as we believe in our shadow. From the inventor of the negative process, William Henry Fox Talbot, to the 'revolution in seeing', an agenda formulated in the first third of this century, the basis for the social, artistic and theoretical treatment of photography has always been an implicit linking of the technically generated photographic image to a referential outside that image.



Whether as a 'faithful imitation', an anamorphous, distorted 're-creation' or as a subjective design, right up until the 70s the photographic image had still to withstand comparison with an 'ideal' (German: vor-bildliche, pre-image) reality of which it was held to be the artistic but binding indexical representation. Photography was understood in its relationship to the co-ordinates of space and time in which it originated and which left their mark on it. That is to say, it was understood to the extent that it was able to correspond to, or contradict our traditional view of things. Photography is the image of our history. It has been regarded by some as a source of historical records, by others as the ruin of a historical continuum. It took the progressive digitisation of the pictorial and lexical worlds, both grounded in analogy, to show us just how far we had evolved down the road towards becoming 'homo photographicus'."
 -Hubertus von Amelunxen, Photography After Photography, The Terror of the Body in Digital Space


Thursday, November 19, 2009

R.I.P Jean-Claude

Jean-Claude died yesterday of sudden complications of a ruptured brain aneurysm. Following a promise the couple made to each other years ago the works in progress and those in the future will continue. Loved that crazy hair.

Research no.12: Neo Geo

1 part Op art
2 parts 80's day-glo
1/2 part 7th grade geometry
4 parts Completely awesome
Renders you.... NEO GEO.
(Thanks Tom.)
Neo Geo was a movement in the late 1980's that combined 1960's psychedelic patterning, Op Art from the 1970's and an interest in geometric forms. This conglomeration of movements has a variety of names, Also Fakism, Neo-Conceptualism, Neo-Futurism,...Neo-Op, Neo-Pop, New Abstraction, Poptometry, Post-Abstractionism, Simulationism," and "Smart Art. Artists working in the manner of Neo Geo include:
David Burdeny, Catharine Burgess, Marjan Eggermont, Paul Kuhn, Eve Leader, Tanya Rusnak, Laurel Smith, Christopher Willard, and Time Zuck.

These images are taken from Neo Geo, A new Edge to Abstraction, Edited by R. Klanten, S. Ehmann, and B. Meyer. Specific artists and titles were unable to be located. 




It was difficult to find more information on this movement as it shares a title with this...

Artist Lecture no. 6: Francis Cape

 I attended Francis Cape's artist lecture presented by the sculpture department in the VCU commons. I was a couple minutes late and felt behind and unsure the entire time. His process seems inaccessible and his work, rather far from my understanding of the medium. I was not sure if I had missed some very important introduction/ explanation of his work, or if it was some disconnect occurring due to the distance of woodwork to my medium of photography. 
He is a British artist living in upstate New York, about 2 hours from Wall Street and his work centers on social awareness, and political ideas. His speaking was laborious, in all the lectures I've attended he presented the least amount of slides, he just talked so slowly, not necessarily carefully, or intentionally- just slowly, so that I was anxiously waiting for more visual clues to his "point." It didn't take long until I was no longer anxiously awaiting the images to progress, as they seemed to go over my head. Perhaps it is an ingrained politeness of myself that when something does not make sense, or generally seems boring, I chalk it up to being higher than my learning, that my ignorance must be blocking out the lovely nature an artwork is trying to speak about. I'm unsure if this was the case with Francis Cape's lecture. 
He is interested in our government's reaction to Katrina, or lack thereof, and makes commentary on our government's (un)involvement in social disasters. I connected most with his "Waterline" series from 2005. He walked through the neighborhood of Gentilly and noticed an eerie silence in what was a middle class anytown, USA community. He made images of the houses, all with a matching waterline, and hung them in the gallery stringing that line together. He also took note of the wainscoting he continuously observed in Louisiana, painted, or not, and recreated it in the gallery, insuring the height of the paneling corresponded with the height of the water that rushed through Louisiana. 
He also has made images of his town, a lower class area of upstate New York who's dilapidated state could easily be confused with a place that had a hurricane tear through it. His photographs were accompanied with replicas of the Utility Furniture Scheme which was a program that existed in Britain from 1942- 1951, as he mentions on his website, it "was the last example of the link between  furniture design and social idealism; a history that started with William Morris in Britain, continued with Bauhaus, then De Stijl, and was taken up in Scandinavia, before returning to Britain. Design is no longer seen as part of a larger scheme for social improvement; the material itself is the end." His work takes off from here into finely crafted woodwork, meant to last, into a world I could not connect with. 









Saturday, November 14, 2009

Artist Research no.12: Roger Ballen

Roger Ballen is an American artist born in New York in 1950. His work is influenced by the time he has spent living in Johannesburg, South Africa for the past 40 years or so. His work began as documentary photography but has since moved into the realm of fictional theater, and jumps between something photographic, and sculptural. His images comment on space, and the information allowed to a viewer. Bodies are fragmented and distorted, and his work has a very eerie feel to it.
Roger Ballen Untitled. Silver Gelatin. Date Unknown