Monday, 25 November 2013

ASSIGNMENT TWO - Single Image Narratives


ASSIGNMENT TWO

The files for my assignment can be found here ...

The file names are ... TraceyFieldDocAss2 for the word document and

Assign Two Doc Photos ... for the photo selection.



Shortlist ..... Here I have uploaded a selection of my shortlisted photos, and from these I will select my final 8.


Objection 
























Lakes Picnic 








Autumn 










Walkers 














Adoration 





Family Love 











Make a Wish











Ships Captain 

























Missed the Boat 

















The Shepherd






















Shock / Angst 












Anticipation 




Exercise - Anders Petersens French Kiss


I can see that these types of photographs have their place but I can't say I enjoy them personally.  I like photography for its beauty, and for me the sharper the picture the better.

I can see why people like to be more controversial and it would be boring I suppose if all was beautiful.

Looking at these three Anders Petersens French Kiss, Daido Moriyama Bye Bye Photography and
Jacob Aue Sobol.  Their work is very similar and could all belong to the same exhibition.

The Japanese style is gritty, dark black and white images, direct and spontaneous. The photographic language is one of blur, motion, unsharpness, scratches, light leaks, dust, graininess and stains.  Everything that most people try not to do and spend a lifetime avoiding these things.

Its definitely interesting to look at and a wide variety of subjects and views but I wont be spending my time trying to get my images to look like this.


http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/frenchkiss


http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/gbadgersayonara


Tokio Sobol 
http://www.oca-student.com/node/94179


Bye Bye Photography

http://www.google.co.uk/searchq=bye+bye+photography+daido+moriyama&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=kS_yUt3DJI2rhAfuk4DIBQ&ved=0CDwQsAQ

Exercise - What is Street Photography



http://archive.lfph.org/what-is-street-photography.html


WHAT IS STREET PHOTOGRAPHY ?

Street Photography is as old as photography itself, 1870s, as soon as cameras became portable
photographers began documenting everything about them.

It used to be studio and landscape photography that paid the bills and it was these that were
artistically recognised.

So what is Street Photography ?

Street photography captures people and places in a public domain.  Street photography is Unposed, unstaged, captures, explores or questions contemporary society.

Its the relationship between individuals and their surroundings.

Street Photography doesn't need to include people, although it usually does.  Situated in public environment which is often urban - this is not exclusive.

Subjects and settings can vary greatly but the key element is of spontaneity.. Careful observation, and
you need to keep an open mind, ready to capture whatever appears in the viewfinder, this is essential.

Another aspect of Street Photography is the sense that the captured scene is unplanned.  Its not to be from a pre planned public event, it doesn't have the same spontaneity... however saying that.. you can find a unplanned situation even at a pre planned event, away on the sidelines.

PUBLIC DOMAIN...  is any public space. ... must be spontaneous, if you alter the subject or the environment in any way then it is no longer street photography.

If someone stands for a photograph, a portrait, on the street it is not street Photography as the person has interacted with the photographer... it could be candid and unposed however, but you would have to be careful if you wanted it to be classed as street photography.

EVENTS.. Photos at an event would be classed as photojournalism, however here again you may
find street photography on the side lines, away from the action, a unique moment.




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_photography



http://streetphotographynowproject.wordpress.com/

I looked at the wordpress Street Photography now project, I was really interested at the categories and
also seeing how some people interpreted them, some of them i would know where to start but when you look at other work you gain insirpation.

Possible choices ...

Turn you attention to the four legged population.

Say it with flowers.

The different shades of grey are astonishing.

Surrealism now.

Clashing Colours.

If you can smell the street by looking at the photo, its a street photograph.





Five images ...










Street Photography Web sites ...

www.inpublic.com

www. seconds2real.com

www.vivianmaier.com


Exercise - Making Sense of Documentary Photography By James Curtis

http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/makingsense


A picture may be worth a thousand words, but you need to know how to analyse the picture to gain any understanding of it at all.

I must admit I have always been taken in by documentary photographs and until now not questioned whether they were genuine or not.  I shall look at them in a whole new light now.

Historians had regarded photographs as a critical form of evidence, mirroring past events - a photograph being a  mechanical reproduction of reality.
Photograph images do not seem to be statements about the world so much as pieces of it.

When we see an historical image we tend to accept it as factually correct.  We don't question it.
America's first photographic image, in 1839, was a mirror like object called a Daguerreotype.  It was a complicated process and very time consuming.  (30 mins ). So for these photographs which we view as snapshots, the people would have had to sit motionless for several minutes otherwise the photos would have been blurred.  So this is confirmation that even the very first pictures would have been contrived in some way.
There were many experiments to improve the photographic process.  As documentary developed the photographers were still classed as recorders, skilled technicians - but not artists, they were fact gatherers.

Mathew Brady wanted to capture images of the civil war, but because of long exposure times resorted to taking photos of bloated dead bodies after the action had passed.   Another photographer Alexander Gardner even dragged a body 40 yards to set up a photo shoot.  The resulting picture - Rebel Sharpshooter in Devils Den, has and continues to command attention even though it has now been discovered that the body had been moved to set the shot up.

William Henry Jackson, Mt of the Holy Cross, 1873... Jackson had to wait to the spring to take his bulky equipment to a vantage point across the mountain but to his dismay he discovered that one arm of the fabled cross of snow had melted.  It was later 'restored' in his Denver darkroom !

Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine took up the effort to explore the wilderness of the inner city and used Documentary photography as a tool of social reform.  Riis and Hine shocked their contemporaries with dramatic images showing the human consequences of unchecked urban growth and industrial excesses.

Before the turn of the twentieth century pictures of working and poor people were limited to the studios.

If we are to determine the meaning of a documentary photograph we must begin by establishing the historical context for both the image and its creator. Documentarians such as Mathew Brady and Dorothea Lange succeeded because they understood the desires of their audiences and did not shy from moulding their image accordingly.  Documentary photographers are active agents searching for the most effective way of communicating their views.

Examples of adjusted images ..

Riis - Bandit's Roost - 1888,  is an alley off Mulberry Street, New Yorks Chinatown,  Riss argued the alley was a breeding ground for disorder and criminal behaviour.  Two men seem to guard the alley entrance, but what of the women and children would they be hanging around if there were any danger.
Again they would have had to wait for the long exposure and would a criminal gang be prepared to do that or want there picture taken in the first place.  There is even washing hanging to dry - maybe they are not so bad.

In another picture - A Growler Gang in Session, 1887, the boys were set up to mug one of the others, and then Riis paid them with cigarettes.  Another 'Street Arabs in Sleeping Quarters' it looks like they are pretending to be asleep and its also happens to be daylight.  But no one questions it.

Riis - FIve Cents Lodging, 1889 - This was made to look like he had crept in and taken the shot whilst they slept, being awoken by the flash.  However they had to pose with their faces towards the camera and hold whilst he ignited the flash powder and made the exposure.  So again, intervention.

Another Walker Evans had a bulky camera and had to fix it to a tripod.  His Barbershop image was praised for its clarity and precision, it seems a candid unposed image.  Looking further these men appear in a selection of five images so all were set up and also he would have had to stop any passing traffic or his image would have been ruined.

Documentary photographers rarely take one picture, they take a selection and select the best one.

Russell Lee - Christmas Dinner in Iowa ( 1936 ) - Lee took a series of pictures of a tenant farmer struggling to make a living.  The photograph showed his children standing at the table eating a meager Christmas dinner, no parents with them.  It showed Pauly to be a widower doing his best for the children.  Making a powerful portrait.  However, it has since been discovered another picture with Paulys wife standing in the doorway with two of the children. !!  Her presence in the other picture would have changed it completely.

Photographers could add material afterwards, ie, text or titles. directing the viewers gaze.
Riis and Hine placed great faith in the power of accompanying words to drive home the point of their images.

One of these was One Arm and Four Children, 1910, which illustrated industrial accidents, and the head of the household unable to work.

By contrast, Walker Evans refused to title his photographs. But he was known to move items in a said set up to tell the story better.  Taking things out, putting in a butter churn, leaving clues to help you read the story of how he wanted it told.

Russell Lee took a selection of Mexican Households.  But again it looks like he gains the cooperation of the subjects.  Its a family, shown to be without a mother but the little girl is dressed in a way that is quite feminine maybe dad wouldn't put a bow in her hair. ?!

Also he tries to show a boy poorly from the conditions and drinking something, contaminated supplies, but this boy appears well in another shot.  He doesn't show anything at its best.

Ironically this factual finding was not a prelude to a call for help for Mexicans but a dramatic statement that if white Texans did not receive federal assistance they would end up in a primitive condition akin to thier Mexican neighbours.

So even these photographs that we trusted to be genuine have slight interventions.  I feel they can be forgiven in those early days because the cameras they were working with had so many restrictions and they would have had to tell their subjects to be very still, if that were all and if they hadn't the pictures would be blurred and they would have no picture a all.

But maybe its us that haven't changed over the years, always wanting our perfect picture, and setting things up to suit.  I always remember a picture which had won a competition, black and red phone boxes and then colour co-ordinated people walking in opposite directions complete with correct colour umbrellas.  At the time I thought - I would never have my camera with me when /if i saw such a sight.

I did then begin to think that it had to be contrived but it was good enough to get away with it. I think thats where I might b going wrong, awaiting the perfect moment.  But when then perfect moment does happen it cant be beaten - I love a natural image that has no intervention at all.












Visit the FSA online Gallery on the Library of congress website...

http://www.loc.gov/pictures/collection/fsa/


Exercise - In the American East by Richard Bolton


I have read 'In the American East' after purchasing the book from Amazon, The Contest of meaning.  I found it a very interesting piece.  Using the poverty of some to work alongside more glamourous images of others whilst making money along the way.

The article starts by discussing the move from industry to the more glamourous computerised offices and money making banks and businesses.  But although it seems like there is a decline in heavy industry, it has in fact just moved, it is still there, as it needs to be.  It has moved to countries where wages are low and unions are non-exsistant.  Also it is still very much in America.  It was said that the lower classes would eventually benefit from the increased wealth of the upper class. Political theorist Goran Therborn said economic stability did not require the creation of this marginalised class..
He noted countries with strong policies kept unemployment low.  No commitment was made by the USA. Capitalism seems more heroic than ever. The present condition of art can tell us much about the nature of communication in this new society. Artist have always contended with competition from the mass media.  Corporations effect more and more information, newspapers, TV and Art exhibitions aswell.  Communication has become infused with the powerful and fascinating effects of advertising.

These effects not only sell products, they effect everything from news broadcast to presidential elections.  Discoveries in art art put to use in public relations, sales and entertainment.  As a result, Art, fashion, and advertising have become entwined.

In 1979 Avedon began a five year photography project taking pictures of citizens of the West, those who work hard at uncelebrated jobs, people who are often overlooked and ignored.
His photographs didnt show specific locations in the West by pacing the subjects against a seamless studio back drop.  He used a narrow depth of field and he photographed them in the shadows.  With further printing effets.  Then they were large final prints, exaggerating the effects.
Avedon wants you to find meaning in the photograph solely through the subjects appearance. Avedon expects his subjects to communicate to the audience.


_________________________________________________________________


Then look at work of Charlotte Oestervang in Appalachia.

http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/foto861appalachian

The full issue of the magazine can be found here ..


http://issuu.com/foto8/docs/vol6no1


Exercise : August Sander - MOMA


http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/asandersfmoma-0


IMAGES FOR AUGUST SANDER

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=august+sander+photographs&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=D9igUpmpA9G0hAfK14HwBg&ved=0CC8QsAQ&biw=1178&bih=613




ZED NELSON

http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2011/mar/12/goodbye-to-all-that-zed-nelson-photographs?INTCMP=SRCH


PENN

http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/penn/


AUGUST SANDER - PEOPLE OF THE 20TH CENTURY

More than 200 images were part of the exhibition from the photographers monumental portrait of German society, made for the most part between the two world wars.  August Sander was hailed as an aviator of modern photography. He was a commercial photographer specialising in architectural and  industrial photographer. Through this project Sander created a compelling record of the world and time in which he lived by making direct, descriptive posed portraits of ordinary people from a broad cross section of German society.  Farmer, bricklayer, painter, secretary etc ..  He had some 45 portfolios which were then split into 7 further groups ..

The Farmer
The Skilled Tradesman
The Woman
Classes and Professionals
The Artist
The City
The Last People

Sander worked on this project until his death in 1964.  He was forced at one point to stop work and has thousands of negatives confiscated and destroyed.  He later relocated and sat out the war years.

The first section of the exhibition The Farmer showed his familiarity with the rural environment and his view that the farmer as the basic archetype of society.  This first section also included a portfolio of 12 photos that Sander created as a prologue to the total project.
The Skilled Tradesman - the bricklayer , the locksmith, shoemaker etc.. also included industrialists, technicians and inventors.
The Woman - women largely appear in a relationship with someone else for example the innkeepers wife. There were later images of women in their own right, as nun, dressmaker, secretary etc..
Classes and Professionals - sub sections - The clergymen - the teacher and educator - the business man.
The Artist - Ranges from world class conductor to cafe musician. Film actor to touring player.
The City - Urban dwellers, circus artist, gypsies, transients, city youth.  Also included are persecuted jewish citizens, foreign workers and political prisoners.
The Last People  - people on society's outermost perimeters - the sick, the old, the frail, people born with mental or physical disabilities. Also in this section is a picture of his son Erich, in a death mask, he died as a political prisoner.

I can see that these groups are effective and you can see how these people group together.  I wonder if by looking at all the portraits he could see the groups emerge.  Women would be proud to be in their own group, but then disappointed to find they were 'someones wife'.. not there in their own right but that seems to change as the years pass.  Today I feel women would definitely be there in their own right, it would be a much stronger group.
The group I feel uncomfortable with is the last one The Last People.  I can see how they become a group but to actually put all these people together seems wrong to me.  Maybe at the time it was acceptable but I wouldn't have wanted to find myself in that group.  These people could have been put in other groups.  I think most of these groupings would be effective for other photographers to use with a FEW alterations.






Exercise - Daniel Meadows Video


Video


http://vimeo.com/28349336



http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/meadowsguylane


Then read the essay 'The Photographer as the Recorder'  By Guy Lane.



I listened to Daniel Meadows video on the link above he is a photographer and takes documentary photos but he sees himself as a documenturist, someone who is interested in people and their stories, not just his pictures. He is interested in their tales.

He was from an all male school and environment, everyone of a similar class.  He was curious of the world and wanted to experience all things he hadn't seen - ethnics and women. etc.

He left school in 1970 when the vietnam war was on and the student riots in Paris.  There was lots of things to explore and experience.

He didn't want to take nice portraits of people and he was not interested in fashion or advertising.  He listened to peoples tales and took the photographs to express these. He liked the engagement with people and saw himself as a mediator for them.

He learnt lots of new skills along the way and when the digital age came along he was ready to flourish further.   At his workshops he had images of the 1970 of people on the streets who had been happy to pose etc.. right up to the present day when people were making two minute video or documentary photos.  All being peoples histories.  He thinks we all live in awe of people on the TV, so now we can make our own media so it give us our own power - the power has shifted.
He looks forward to the time when we can all be on the TV or stage.



IMAGES FOR DANIEL MEADOWS 

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=daniel+meadows+photographer&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=zoigUtLOJqqu7Aas2YGAAg&ved=0CDwQsAQ


DANIEL MEADOWS - THE PHOTOGRAPHER AS RECORDER


Daniel Meadows embarked on a journey around England on a double decker bus to complete a photographic survey of the English people. Especially those who he believed to be under threat. The project was called The Free Photographic Omnibus.  Free because he proposed to give away portraits along the way.  He set off in his bus living upstairs and having his studio and darkroom downstairs. Both  his exhibition and book were called 'Living like this'.
Today, the Free Photographic Omnibus is remembered not for its spirited defence of livelihoods, but for its portraiture.  Meadows free pictures were only meant to entice people to take part, an introduction to the real documentary photos but they have taken over the documentary photos.
( the bait on my photographic hook turned out to be the big fish )
When a subsection of his work was exhibited in 1997,  it was noted that of the 41 pictures 34 of them were people standing in front of a blank wall.  A contrast to the original 'Living like this' - where more than 150 pictures, the minority were portraits and only four were against the wall.

His flyer said of his ambitions, the nature of his concerns and his attempts to engage.  His intentions were to photograph people who's quality of life was threatened, wanting a complete cross section of the English people, at various events and places where people go for entertainment and relaxation.
The only qualification I have for undertaking this work is that I am interested. ( I like this saying )
He started off in a small photographic studio where people could go in and have their portrait taken for free, it was an excellent way of collecting pictures. It was a pilot scheme for the Free Photographic Bus.

Discursive Practice - surfaces of Emergence - Archive

The bus statement features a black and white photograph of its author, Meadows, probably a self portrait, its an unremarkable image and is deliberately so.  The photography was neither professional, commercial or amateur but shows 'youth'.  In and editorial, Bill Jay advises, "produce your own heart felt photographs for a client and you will probably starve - and, if not, the pressure to compromise will drain your energies, dull your sensibility and dilute the quality of your work." Dont sell out .. produce your own personal pictures in your own way to satisfy yourself.

Meadows wanted to produce a "straight" record of events.  A statement signifies that Meadows was an "alternative" practice uncontaminated by mercenary imperatives or the constraints of commissioned work .. while the properties of the adorned "straight" record signified truthfulness, humanity and sincerity.

The bus statement can be found in the archives of the Arts Council held at the Victoria and Albert Museum.  This location reveals something of the nature of the changes that photography underwent in this period.  Barry Lane was the first officer of the newly formed Photography committee.  He wrote we are now committed to supporting photography as an art.  He said that photographers themselves need assistance .. they ought to opt a more active role in the production of work - unlike painters photographers have to work on location.  Despite being the media for creative expression, he wrote there is very little income for photographers.  The Arts council remained - slightly hostile art dept reluctant to recognise the upstart (photography ) in its midst.
The rapidly expanding network of galleries were opening.

Meadows statement was to persuade a lot of people to contribute just a little towards his project.

Archive - Meadows wanted to photograph people who he believed were endangered by the apparent necessity for social change, the intention to record lives blighted by the process of modernity.  A race to record life before destruction.
He photographed a black boy on Moss side - Amongst those most directly effected by the construction of new high rise housing was one of the oldest black communities in the country - that of Moss Side.

Meadows identified social change, over population and pollution.  Meadows text moves, in the space of a few lines, from threatened lives and global problems to a Conker Championships and Blackpool Beach. ( all tempered by a comedic register ).   This urge to document calendrical events discloses a desire for stability, the definition of Englishness.



Exercise - Mraz Salgado



http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/mrazsalgado


Images by Salgado 

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=salgado&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=eT-iUpvHHcGjhgeg9oDgCQ&ved=0CEkQsAQ&biw=1178&bih=613




Research the work by Salgado to which Mraz refers....


Book - OTHER AMERICAS

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=sebastiao+salgado+other+americas+book&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=oT_yUrHYDoSjhgefpYCABw&ved=0CD4QsAQ&biw=1178&bih=610


TERRA 

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=sebastiao+salgado+terra&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=NUDyUuDBO5GrhQfPiIHgCQ&ved=0CCwQsAQ&biw=1178&bih=610


MIGRATIONS

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=sebastiao+salgado+migrations&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=g0DyUsaSIoOShgeykIDgBQ&ved=0CDkQsAQ&biw=1178&bih=610

The Americans - By Robert Frank



THE AMERICANS - ROBERT FRANK 




















Robert Frank .. Swiss, unobtrusive, nice, with that little camera that he raises and snaps with one hand
he sucked a sad poem right out of America onto film, taking rank among the tragic poets of the world.




Find five images in the Americans where symbols are used.  Explain what they are and how they function in the image.

Find symbolic references that you can identify in Robert Franks photographs. ( not necessarily the above )


ROBERT FRANK - THE AMERICANS

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=robert+frank+the+americans&client=safari&rls=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=DkHyUpb-KIXMhAelhID4BA&ved=0CCwQsAQ&biw=1178&bih=610




Exercise - Two Young Footballers



Descriptive prose ......

On first looking at the picture of the two boys I thought they were walking home from football, as normally boys would be kicking the ball all the way if they could, and only carry the ball if they had tired.  But saying that their shorts are very white and no evidence of mud or grass stains.  They are obviously buddies of a similar age and are friends despite the fact they support different teams.  Heads turned in in conversation and they seem very close.  I like the fact they have a ball each.  They wouldn't be playing on the surface they are walking on and they seem totally at ease with their surroundings even though the buildings are derelict.  There is no one else around but I would think they will be joining more friends.  The weather is mild because of their lack of jackets and the ground is dry.  Grey skies - english summer !

From looking at the photograph I can't tell whether it is about the two boys or the surrounding areas.


Denotations - A literal meaning of a word..  The most direct or specific meaning of a word.

Connotation - association which the word evokes ... an idea or feeling which a word evokes for a person in addition to its literal meaning.
Overtone, undertone, undercurrent, suspicion.



Also ..

Core resources : footballBoys.pdf

Read the text ..

http://www.oca-student.com/sites/default/files/FootballBoys.pdf

  • Does the text relate to your initial deconstruction of the image. If so how?
No not really, the text is all about the surrounding buildings and the demolition of them.  The boys were  only mentioned in the picture text.  Where as for me, I am always drawn to the boys the story should be about them or they should have a tale to tell but the main story is of the buildings.  
  • Does the text change your perception of the image ? If so how ?
Yes I suppose it does - I look further into the image and analyse the buildings more I'm not sure if the boys are even relevant for this article.  It does add to the desolation.  

Marcus Bleasdale - Eight Magazine




I have read the interview with Marcus Bleasdale in Eight Magazine.

Marcus Blesadale was a banker and gave it up to be a photographer.  A colleague asked how a particular event would effect the rate of the dollar - he was shocked at his thought process and he resigned.  Three days later he was trying to get into Kosovo...
He lived off savings for a while until he started to earn from his photographs.
He was asked .. do photo journalism and conflict go hand in hand ? He said no not at all, some of the most amazing photo journalism has nothing to do with conflict. Also Nursing / Doctor pictures or pictures of famine or of a natural disaster has nothing to do with conflict.

What is the appeal of Joseph Conrad?
He demanded the reader to look at their soul and ask questions about themselves.  Conrads work is about the shadows and guilt that rests in our minds.
Still no-one listening ??
The reasons for not continuing the media coverage became financial and the only ones who will benefit are the companies.  They limit the budgets for foreign news and concentrate on the lucrative celebrity market.  which is shocking and shameful.

Human Right Watch - need to target the audience who are directly or indirectly responsible for mining these regions.  They are turning a blind eye, this effected the gold market, which in turn gives no money for weapons - so it is making small changes.

Do you feel conflict between representing hardship and appropriate dignity ?
Its all about spending time with the family and gaining their trust and respect.  And offering them respect.  Evidence shows in the final image when you can see that the person concerned allow their photographs to be taken and at some very tricky and emotional times.
You have to try and show the world what is happening.

Its not about taking a particular image, you have to take lots and see what makes itself apparent.  Then once you have your selection of photograph you then edit and he edit to suit the NGO.

Heidi Brodners work from Chechnya has impacted on him, extremely sensitive.  Best set of images Sakura Lisi - best portrays the Congo - has managed to get desperation across with dignity.



The whole issue can be downloaded here ...

http://issuu.com/foto8/docs/vol4no3



And you can see the tear sheets of Bleasdales work here ....

http://viiphoto.wg.picturemaxx.com/id/00075419

Friday, 22 November 2013

Exercise - Discussing Documentary


By Maartje van den Heuvel.

http://www.oca-student.com/node/93673


__________________________________________________________


 DISCUSSING DOCUMENTARY 

There are discussions about the legitimacy and effectiveness of documentary practices
within the art circuit.  Whether documentary can still perform its communicative role in the museum.
The mass media dominate our perception of reality, more and more, and current generations are growing up with a constant stream of photographic and film images.  It is where we inform, amaze and entertain ourselves.  Visual literacy refers to ones ability to distinguish and interpret visible actions.

If you are visually literate then you can change these to communication, you can visually fathom their meaning. This develops by looking at a lot of mass media.
Documentary applies to every image made with a camera. The origins would be the 1900's, with photographers such as Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine.   Their photographic work emerged from strong compassion for immigrants, workers and farmers who at that time were living in wretched conditions.
The term documentary was first linked to film - a documentary was meant to describe things from actual life objectively and realistically - as opposed to the subjectivity of films that represent a fictitious reality.

The germans workers' photography movement came to an abrupt end when Hitler came to power 1933.
As the 35mm camera developed the coarse grain black and white documentary photographs developed.

The 1970's bought the TV, knowledge about visual literacy became widespread.
Alternatives in the forms of documentary, there have also emerged more alternatives in the choice of subject.  it is no longer the under privileged and victims.

Everyone has their different styles of how they present images and some let the picture tell the story, some photographers tell their story, and others let the story be told by the person in the picture.

There are also photographers who simulate photography in completely artificial surroundings, for example wax works with just a suggestion of reality.  Another photographer Jeff Wall has been making documentary looking photos since the 70's, however they are all carefully staged, showing how cliched they can be.   Both dwell on the construction of documentary images and expose their manipulative effect.
The debate about the documantary in an art context should take visual literacy as its starting point to a greater degree, thereby enabling the significance and value of documentary photography and film in art to be better assessed.







Exercise - Bill Brandts Art of the Document

http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/campanybillbrandt


By David Company.

How did black and white become such a respected and trusted medium in Documentary.?
The black and white medium are less distracting than colour, making you look properly at the image
and deciding for yourself the story it is trying to tell.  They look more gritty not glamourising certain events.  Some of the subjects needed to be dour to give the correct feel.
Some of this could be to do with the fact that the old documentary photographs would be black and white because of their age and maybe we have followed a trend for this.  But I do feel personally I look deeper at a black and white shot and colour automatically has a different vibe.




Photographs are highly mobile images, made at particular times for particular reasons.
Many essentially simple withstanding transit. Some become well known through use via media. Others
gain meaning over time.  Able to move over social classes.

Dinner is served - forces us to see opposites.. understanding social structures of class and service. In his book of images the viewer was expected to see the relationships and differences that build up, page after page.

Brandt shows himself not only as an artist but an anthropologist.  He wandered about England with a detached curiosity of a man investigating and unfamiliar tribe !
The surrealist approached the document more dialectically - with conflicting views - Brandt was unconvinced of the effect of the photo as a straight forward social description and was wary of its use in projects of social reform.

He was drawn to the rituals of daily life.  In his photos people look self-involved, fixed in their ways and old fashioned.

In the last few decades his book has been regarded as a classic work. A picture of the insular English, unable to recognise their own image when they see it.

Under Parlour maid ready to serve dinner - Across 5 pages the piece narrates the activities of a head parlour maid of a stately home.  It was a comfortable, often conservative format that fitted documentary photography into popular literary structure.

At dinner 'she hears every word that is spoken, yet she does not hear it.'
The parlourmaid is shown as part of an old class structure but a sign of new trends too.

Towards the end of the war his style changed.  He lost the enthusiasm for reportage.  Documentary
photography had become fashionable.

In the 1950s Brandt continued with the genres Portraiture and Landscape, he began to print his negatives much more harshly, sacrificing mid tones.  Rich descriptive information could be obliterated in his new aesthtic. His latest work was pursued as art.  Art and Documentary are never entirely separate.

The reprinting of Parlourmaid was never too harsh as Brandt new the power of this photo is in the detail.  Brandt deliberately focused on the shiny glass and silverware of the table.  The focus falls away from the maids, avoiding eye contact. The camera clearly sees them but fails to focus on them.   He is keener to scrutinise the table rather than the people.

The maids were out of focus technically, and by extension .. socially.

Brandt was discovered by a wide range of audience - he was regarded as a figure of the past and as a contemporary artist at the same time.  There could never be any simple distinction between his artistry and his documentary description.  The two are inextricable and give no clear answers.
In the end it is the contradictions at the heart of his work that are the bedrock of his success.












Exercise - Read Survival Programmes in Eight Magazine


http://www.oca-student.com/resource-type/foto851survivalprogrammes

Full Issue of the magazine ...

http://issuu.com/foto8/docs/vol5no1



I read the article Survival Programmes - Three young photographers - Nicholas Battye, Chris Steele-Perkins, and Paul Trevor -  set out to document the growing crisis in Britain's inner cities in the 1970, they achieved a body of work so insightful that its relevance is undiminished in the new millennium

These photographers sought the country's most impoverished neigbourhoods, meeting residents and listening to how they grappled with issues of race, religion, class and justice.  They produced a brutally honest document of the times. Its not a relic of a bygone time but stands as sorry testament to how little things have changed.

Saying that though the pictures do look for a bygone age and its only 1974 .. its amazing how things have changed, although people are still poor the same there possessions look dated and minimal and the interviews, the language was very dated and things we wouldn't say today although very similar in someways, still the same old grumbles things that annoy us always.

The school in Middlesbrough tells of how the reading age of secondary school children is so poor but that is still a problem we have today.  A brixton woman tells of racial comments - which hopefully are not as bad as the were in 1974 .. but you wonder how some people may suffer.  Mrs Stephton's comments make you cringe a little, she like s England even though we welcome 'everyone' in..

PART TWO - Exercise 1 - 1939 Article on Documentary Photography



By Elizabeth McCausland.


I have read the 1939 article on Documentary Photography and I have made bullet points below.


  • The rise of documentary photography is not fashion, its rapid growth represents strong organic forces.
  • Documentary is not just a fad because of what lies in the history of other movements of photography.
  • We have the new function of Documentary photography, an application of photography direct, realistic, dedicated to the profound and sober, chronicling of the external world.
  • There are different directions and purposes for photography. 
  • Old style photography and new style are like the difference between two continents. We all have pretty pictures .. picturesque bits of life torn out of their sordid context. 
  • It is life that is exciting and important - and life whole and unretouched.
  • Photography looks at the outside world with uncompromising honesty.
  • The camera may lie - over-looking peeling paint & rotting wood.
  • Old womans hands knotted hands - symbol of social distortion.
  • The photographer controls the new aesthetic, finds the significant truth and guess significant form.
  • The channels of distribution for truth are no more numerous for the photographer than for the printed or spoken - the arts.
  • The opportunities for publishing honest photography of the present day life in magazines or newspapers are not many.
  • What is ideal - a hundred years ago when photography was born, an enthusiast cried .. "from this day painting is dead" ... nevertheless painting has survived till the present.
  • Is Photography Art ?? ..... Progressive photographers are not especially interested in this point - it seems and empty issue. There is a whole wide world before the lens and reality uniting to be set down imperishably. 
  • Photography is not art in the old sense - its bound to realism.
  • Today we do not want emotion from art - we want solid substantial food on which to bite, strong, hearty.
  • Truth not romancing.
  • Yet this truth is not made in the desert with none to hear. 
  • For communication the photograph has qualities equaled by no other pictorial medium.
  • The blink of the camera eye has reality captured. 
  • No limit to the world of external reality that the photographer may record.
  • Photographers personality mustn't take over his subject, its important the images and there meaning must shine through.

I feel this is giving a general overview of Documentary raising lots of points, for further discussion later in the section.  Its giving you an idea of what its covering - what documentary means. 







Working Towards the assignment 2 - Single Image Narratives


Thoughts on the preparation for assignment 2 ..

Well I need eight images of single image narrative, so the image telling me something.
I have a few ideas some straight forward - I'm thinking Autumn.  The colours of Autumn are so self explanatory that would be all you need to tell you the story.

Another thought is one of love which may be not so obvious.  I have a few ideas and a new baby to visit so that could produce what I want .. lots of love in the air.

One thought i have is to do with my dog and him 'objecting' to do as he is told .. we will see what that produces.

A trip away will hopefully produce something for me and I'm hoping the weather doesnt keep my camera tucked away.