Sunday, December 11, 2011

For Hali



I just discovered the work of Daniel Coburn from a Joel Sternfeld book review he did on Fraction Magazine's website. One of his series is called Next of Kin, which explores the complex relationships that exist within his family. This made me think of your work this semester and thought it might be good to look at if you continue this work in the future.

Here is the link:

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Martin Parr Commentary


This is a two part interview, commentary rather, by Martin Parr. It's nice to hear what he has to say about his individual images. Thought I might share:

Here are the links to the videos:

Monday, November 28, 2011

For Kate

I feel masculine when I am home, I can take care of myself. I often feel emasculated when I leave the apartment though, with everyone asking me if I need help. I don't need any help.


I discovered the work of Chad States today and I thought of Kate's project when I viewed his series Masculinities. I just thought I would share it with everyone, as we are all going though the process of relating text with image.

Here's the link to his website:

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Individual Meetings

Please arrive AT LEAST five minutes early.

1145 Kelsey
1157 Jamie
1209 Alexis
1221 Kate F.
1233 Lauren
1245 Adrianna
1257 Mark
109 Kate C.
121 Hali
133 Augusta
145 Ravi
157 Diego
209 Mel
221 Sam
233 Soo

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

For Mel

They have the entire text of The Pit and the Pendulum online if you're interested! good stuff yo
le link
http://www.literature.org/authors/poe-edgar-allan/pit-and-pendulum.html

Monday, November 14, 2011

Potraits

A video on choosing an aperture while taking portraits.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Some Light Reading...

Found this really convenient blog/article/collection of words on the internet that lists really helpful photography books, if anyone is interested in that sort of thing.

enjoy

Australian star trails by Lincoln Harrison. It's so beautiful!!

Natural Expressions in Portraits

Check out this article

article is the wrong word. Blog, I suppose. It's a portrait photographer talking about how she gets natural expressions from her subjects. Could be helpful to some who are doing portraits.

Movie Monday!

Gran Torino


click the link and watch the trailer. Clint Eastwood calling someone a 'puss cake' and drinking PBR and just generally being a badass. Also, transcending racism and vigilante justice are very important.

Response and Recommendation

First of all: Thank You Kate for that posting on Ivan and the Moon...very cool and to Sam for sending us that link You Are Not So Smart; I've perused the site and love it- great ideas Also: I wanted to tell Augusta that her work reminds me of the first seven or so images of Doug Dubois 's series "Avella". You might want to check him out umhmm

Saturday, November 12, 2011

We should all shoot this much.

The Edit from Ed Wargin on Vimeo.

Help Please!

Hey guys,

Do any of you have black velvet or black velveteen (or a black backdrop of some kind) I could barrow? I would so appreciate it!!!

Thanks

ivan and the moon

For Adrianna:

http://www.burnmagazine.org/epf-2011-finalists/2011/05/daria-tuminas-ivan-and-the-moon/

ivan and the moon..

I'm not sure why people are suggesting films for "movie monday" (I must've missed out on this on Friday..) BUT! If we can just suggest any film, I've got a few!

Persona (amazing stillness that accentuates the distance between two people)
Frankenstein (amazing sets, amazing lighting, brilliant story..AMAZING!)
Susperia (amazing use of symbolism through color)
Days of Heaven (Incredibly strong compositions, amazing utilization of natural light)

Lemme' know if this is not what you wanted! Enjoy, Adrianna..

a herp for your derp

HAI can we watch Amelie please ?

Why? it is just so happy :) it seems we all could use a little more happiness right now. and look kids! Amelie presents an interesting idea for a conceptual series with the incorporation of the photobooth storyline, har har. could perhaps argue that it's class related...hmm


ALSO: in this blog post, I've included a completely irrelevant video:

Movies for next week:

I only have a few proposals:

Terrence Malick's latest film, which was really hard to find in theaters, has finally come out on dvd. It's one of the best films I've seen in a long time. It very successfully straddles the line between a non-linear art film and hollywood entertainment, somehow.

I know we've probably all seen this many times, but I am always in the mood to watch this documentary.

I got this documentary during his Democratic Camera show at the Corcoran two years ago. It is an excellent look into the rather strange life of William Eggleston.



Alec Soth, William Eggleston in His Music Room, Memphis Tennessee, 2000

For Kelsey - Sara Winston



Sara Winston graduated from Corcoran last year and is currently pursuing her MFA at Columbia in Chicago. I thought it might be helpful to look at some other student's work concerning their own personal space.

"Worn Out Joy is a testament to domestic life. The photographs convey a view of home, its value, and comforts. Over a period of 9 months, I have investigated the developments of my apartment. Growing up, I was told that the respect and order one shows their living space is directly linked to their self esteem. Do one’s habitats reflect the values of its tenant? This pursuit confronts dilemmas of a fleeting domestic space in the form of personal documentation. "

Here is a link to the rest of her series:

For Sam - Vito Acconci



Vito Acconci. Blinks, Nov 23,1969; afternoon. Photo-Piece, Greenwich Street, NYC; Kodak Instamatic 124, b/w film

Holding a camera, aimed away from me and ready to shoot, while walking a continuous line down a city street.
Try not to blink.
Each time I blink: snap a photo.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

A Hilarious youtube clip

This is for Shane. Risque 7 year olds, how do you react? Laugh? Weep for humanity?

Answer: laugh. Because this is utterly ridiculous.

Movies!

So here are my following recommendations (with little snippets as to why I picked them) for our movie monday:

Batman The Dark Night - The Joker.
The Goonies - Treasure and Pirates.
Inception - A maze of physiological goodness.
The Shawshank Redemption - Morgan Freeman.
Vernon, Florida because its one of the best documentaries about the lives of some pretty off-beat people. I think most people have already seen this one in Elements of the Moving Image.
The Great Escape - Steve McQueen and an amazing motorcycle chase through Switzerland.
Havery - Its my favorite James Stewart movie ever. Its about an imaginary 6 foot rabbit.
Donnie Darko - Another giant rabbit and time travel.
Little Miss Sunshine - A Yellow Bus and a Beauty Pageant.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

For Adrianna, Alexis, those focusing on the self etc., etc.

Feel free to check out the blog You are not so Smart: A Celebration of Self Delusion, which was recently published into a book (you can also check out wikipedia's List of Common Misconceptions). Debunking the myth that coffee stimulates you, when in actuality "You become addicted to caffeine quickly. After a while you are drinking coffee to cure withdrawal more than for stimulation." I digress. I found this really interesting piece on the self:
"Hopefully by now you’ve had one of those late-night conversations fueled by exhaustion, elation, fear or drugs in which you and your friends finally admit you are all bullshitting each other. If you haven’t, go watch The Breakfast Club and come back. The idea is this: You put on a mask and uniform before leaving for work. You put on another set for school. You have costumes for friends of different persuasions and one just for family. Who you are alone is not who you are with a lover or a friend. You quick-change like Superman in a phone booth when you bump into old friends from high school at the grocery store, or the ex in line for the movie. When you part, you quick-change back and tell the person you are with why you appeared so strange for a moment. They understand, after all, they are also in disguise. It’s not a new or novel concept, the idea of multiple identities for multiple occasions, but it’s also not something you talk about often. The idea is old enough that the word person derives from persona – a Latin word for the masks Greek actors sometimes wore so people in the back rows of a performance could see who was on stage. This concept –actors and performance, persona and masks – has been intertwined and adopted throughout history. Shakespeare said, “all the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.” William James said a person “has as many social selves as there are individuals who recognize him.” Carl Jung was particularly fond of the concept of the persona saying it was “that which in reality one is not, but which oneself as well as others think one is.” It’s an old idea, but you and everyone else seems to stumble onto it anew in adolescence, forget about it for a while, and suddenly remember again from time to time when you feel like an impostor or a fraud. It’s ok, that’s a natural feeling, and if you don’t step back occasionally and feel funky about how you are wearing a socially constructed mask and uniform you are probably a psychopath." (remember Ram Dass' "You are not who you think you are?")

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Want to buy a nice flash?

I found a coupon online for a LumoPro LP160, so if anyone is trying to buy a new flash or anything like that, you should check this out.

City-Street-Documentary-Night-Cool-Stuff

This is a really cool project, and definitely worth looking at for anyone interested in street photography, night shots, or NYC. Sorry I keep posting a lot, but I keep finding cool stuff while procrastinating in class.

Technically Brilliant Photos

So, no one is doing anything quite as aesthetically based as this, but it still was something cool that could be applied to later projects, or just something nice to look at while taking breaks from being completely stressed. Also, on this link there is an image of his set up (and these aren't digital images!). Just thought I'd share.

Monday, October 31, 2011

So, this is fun

This is just really fun and cute. I enjoy it quite a bit. Fun to look at recreations and stuff.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Cool Thing to try?

Hey! So I found this video tutorial online about how to transfer a photo onto a block of wood. Making transfers is really easy, it's something I used to do a lot in high school, you just need to make sure you're using a print made by a laser printer rather than an ink printer. But I thought I would share this with people who might want to try a new presentation technique or just want to learn something new. :)

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

For those Freudian people.



A Dangerous Method is due to release next month. Its about Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud... not sure if its actually based on fact, but it does look interesting enough. Good actors and actresses. Might be something to look into for those of you who are concentrating on psychological concepts.

For Kelsey.



Meek's Cutoff is the movie I was telling you about a couple of weeks ago. I think you'll really enjoy it. Its SLOW but stay with it! The whole film is comprised of beautiful, sweeping landscapes of the West. Let me know what you think about the ending, it frustrated the hell out of me but its super thought provoking.

For Hali

I stumbled upon this artist, Irina Wering, her series back to the future is what i want you to look at. She takes old photo's of people and recreates them as accurately as possible. LOOK AT IT WOMAN.

For those photographing people

Steve McCurry's 1 Minute Masterclass

Monday, October 24, 2011

For Augusta - Allen Ginsberg's Photographs

Allen Ginsberg, "Rebecca Ginsberg, Buba, wife of Pincus, laundry-man, my paternal grandmother...", 1953.

I thought this photograph Ginsberg took of his grandmother relates directly to you photographing your own grandmother.

This exhibition was at the National Gallery last fall. It included an extensive collection of Allen Ginsberg's photographs, after archivists discovered his extensive negative and 5x7 print collection. Ginsberg bought a cheap Kodak Retina in a pawn shop and began documenting his fellow beat authors during their prominent rise to fame. He then started shooting again in the eighties, which reveal some amazing portraits of William S. Burroughs, his life-long partner. One amazing thing about the exhibition was that Ginsberg's handwriting was at the bottom of every photograph, lengthily describing each situation in full detail. This could possibly be an approach to try if you felt inspired to do so.

Here is the link to the National Gallery's archived site:


500 Photographers

http://500photographers.blogspot.com/

Sunday, October 23, 2011

For Victoria


I know your project is about yourself and people close to you, but I thought you might consider referencing some imagery from documentary photographers, specifically those that show people after natural disaster that are disconnected from loved ones, or children in war torn areas that are literally abandoned by parents. I don't suggest recreating them, just see what makes these images emotional, and translate that into your own work.

For Kate C

Art + Botany: X-ray Photography

I like how simple these are, viewing the biological forms. It might be a good place to get yourself focused again, since you seem a little disjointed as to what you want to do right now.

Also check this out:

For Adriana (Late!)


You should check out Danny Santos II. He is a street photographer from Singapore, and I think his series The Street Is Everyones Catwalk could be applied to some of the stuff you're trying to do.

For Alexis (Late!)


You should look up De Biasi Mario. He unfortunately does not have a central website, but you can Google image search his photographs fairly easily. He's an Italian photographer that began working during WWII. There's something very relatable to your work about identity that also relates to perception, which could be inspiring to you.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

For Ravi

Check out Glen McClure.




I interned with this guy about 2 years ago. He does commercial work to pay the bills, but on his free time he often photographs strangers that he meets on the street. He usually sets up a mini studio outside and then has his wife (and other assistants) ask people to come get their portrait taken. He is able to relate to each person through friendly chit-chat, which relaxes the person. This so called "chummy" atmosphere allows him to capture wonderful moments of pure personality. I know your dappling with making your subjects uncomfortable, but I thought I would show you an example of the other side of that.

For Diego



Like I told Kate C. below, movies are wonderful resources because they are so chalk full of well-executed imagery and themes. I think Son of Rambow relates to the whole "childhood" aspect of your concept. Of course it does deal with actual kids, but the shenanigans they get into reminded me of the games Kate and Mel were describing during your crit. I really recommend watching any sort of boyhood (coming of age) movie, from the classics like THE GOONIES to modern ones like Son of Rambow or even Hesher (although that is much darker).

For Kate C.



I often find that movies are great sources of inspiration! About 1 minute and 15 seconds into this clip from A Beautiful Mind we see a chaotic collection of papers/pictures pinned up to walls that to us (and to the wife) seem to be ramblings of a mad man, but in the mind of of the man (John Nash) it all makes perfect sense. Is this the sort of imagery your hoping to capture for your photographic project?

Alexis

Li Hui

Looking through her work reminded me of your concept. A lot of her images tend to play off of feminine identity and memory, I also think that the way you should would lend itself well to color 35mm film.

For Mark

David LaSpina has a few series about locations, which I think could help give you ideas about what to photograph in Farmville. Here's his website: David LaSpina


I thought of your project when I saw this picture, because your concept is sort of a backstage-view of the situation, and this photograph is literally a backstage view of an event. But, you get the idea.

Ravi

http://www.behance.net/gallery/Tourist-Stranger-Self-portrait/925193?utm_source=network&utm_medium=project_sidebar&utm_campaign=project_sidebar_references

A series of self portraits by strangers on the beach by Benoit Paille. A good example of giving more control to the strangers you photograph, even if it's just the shutter button.

For Jamie



I think you should look at Uta Barth's work. It feels very sentimental and fragile to me, which, I think if you interpreted it in your own way, could work well for the memory aspect of your project.

For Adriana


Francesca Woodman, On Being an Angel #1, 1977

Adriana,

Research Francesca Woodman if you haven't before. I think her work speaks of a theme similar to yours. I thought of Francesca Woodman during your critique and I couldn't remember her name for the life of me, but I finally remembered. I got to see some of her work in Chicago over the summer, and it is very powerful, especially in the context of her life's story. Hope this helps.

Here's a good link:

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

For Augusta


Check out Wesley Cummings



He documents the changing effects of a space around him though time. I believe this work to show you another approach towards pushing your concept of relating your grandmother to our culture.

For Adriana and Hali

http://pictureperfect.theballetcats.com/


His work with masks applies to Adriana's concept and interactions with family could work with Hali's concept.
For Adrianna-




























Clarence John Laughlin

I just recently learned about this photographer. His work sort of reminds me of yours, I thought you should check him out!

For Kate


Kate,

I really enjoyed the images you showed us on Monday, you are definitely headed in the right direction. I am sure you are familiar with Phillip Toledano, as we have even discussed him in our class, but I think going through his Days With My Father series a few times could spark some ideas. He photographs his father in a somewhat similar way as you recently. I believe Toledano broke away from a traditional, structured way of shooting and pursued digital methods, similar to what you were saying about your turning away from your usual use of medium format.

If you haven't seen this yet, it's rather gut wrenching.

Here's the link, hope this helps:

For Kate















Not sure how much this applies to what you're doing in exploring your parents through your adult eyes, but i did mention it in class. Aline Smithson's portrait series of her mother...if you were looking for any way to give it a whimsical spin heh heh. has a nice artist statement with the series too
http://www.alinesmithson.com/site.html

For Thibby


Dan Estabrook's work really relates to a lot of your sensibilities, as well as your themes. I appreciate his ability to work graphically through symbolism and think that his photography could be of great influence to you.




http://danestabrook.com/artwork/NineSymptoms

For Hali



Hali,

This is the series I was talking about yesterday in class. The butterfly image you showed the other day proves that you are definitely on the right track. Keep up the good work and I hope looking at this helps.

These are from Cortlandt Glover's series DCA/JAX.

Here is the link to the rest of the series:

For Kate

Check out Corinne Day and her "exhibition" part of her website: http://www.corinneday.co.uk/exhibitions.php
She had a knack for capturing moments full of emotion and disfunction... could help you out?

America is...




This photograph is from Mitch Epstein's American Power series.

For Adriana


Thought of you and your Mask when I was revisiting Kim Sooja's work entitled A Needle Woman.

@ Sam

Check out this work by this person: Oliver Morris Reminded me of your image you showed us in class

For those of you working with Family

Jocelyn Allen

For Kate Cantolina

Stephen Eichhorn is a mulitmedia artist who makes arrangements using a variety of plants

Look at this idea

Here

For Adrianna

Hello!

I was looking through Olivia Wright's series Figure of Speech (under portrait) and was thinking of the mask's you have been using. Instead of using a full mask she's changing different parts of their faces. I know it's not exactly what you're looking for but it might be something to try.

=)

For Hali

Hello my Love!

There is this photographer named Ryan Pflunger that I found a long time ago. He mostly photographs other gay men, some lovers some friends. However, he has one series that he did on his father, it's titled Not Without My Father. This is the series I want you to look at. Specifically the last image which is a dyptic of he and his father and old family photo's of the two of them. I don't nessecarily feel that this series is extremely strong but it is a portrait of a relationship which is beneficial to your concept.

<3<3

Monday, October 17, 2011

Paul Graham - Definitely Read

Photography is Easy, Photography is Difficult

It’s so easy it's ridiculous. It’s so easy that I can’t even begin – I just don’t know where to start. After all, it’s just looking at things. We all do that. It’s simply a way of recording what you see – point the camera at it, and press a button. How hard is that? And what's more, in this digital age, its free - doesn't even cost you the price of film. It’s so simple and basic, it's laughable.

It’s so difficult because it’s everywhere, every place, all the time, even right now. It's the view of this pen in my hand as I write this, it's an image of you reading now. Drift your consciousness up and out of this text and see: it's right there, across the room - there... and there. Then it’s gone. You didn’t photograph it, because you didn’t think it was worth it. And now it’s too late, that moment has evaporated. But another one has arrived, instantly. Now. Because life is flowing through and around us, rushing onwards and outwards, in every direction.

But if it's everywhere and all the time, and so easy to make, then what’s of value? which pictures matter? Is it the hard won photograph, knowing, controlled, previsualised? Yes. Or are those contrived, dry and belabored? Sometimes. Is it the offhand snapshot made on a whim. For sure. Or is that just a lucky observation, some random moment caught by chance? Maybe. Is it an intuitive expression of liquid intelligence? Exactly. Or the distillation of years of looking seeing thinking photography. Definitely.

"Life’s single lesson: that there is more accident to it than a man can admit to in a lifetime, and stay sane
- Thomas Pynchon, V

Ok, so how do I make sense of that never ending flow, the fog that covers life here and now. How do I see through that, how do I cross that boundary? Do I walk down the street and make pictures of strangers, do I make a drama-tableaux with my friends, do I only photograph my beloved, my family, myself? Or maybe I should just photograph the land, the rocks and trees – they don't move or complain or push back. The old houses? The new houses? Do I go to a war zone on the other side of the world, or just to the corner store, or not leave my room at all?

Yes and yes and yes. That's the choice you are spoiled for, just don't let it stop you. Be aware of it, but don't get stuck – relax, it’s everything and everywhere. You will find it, and it will find you, just start, somehow, anyhow, but: start.

Okay, but shouldn’t I have a clear coherent theme, surely I have to know what I’m doing first? That would be nice, but I doubt Robert Frank knew what it all meant when he started, or for that matter Cindy Sherman or Robert Mapplethorpe or Atget or... so you shouldn’t expect it. The more preplanned it is the less room for surprise, for the world to talk back, for the idea to find itself, allowing ambivalence and ambiguity to seep in, and sometimes those are more important than certainty and clarity. The work often says more than the artist intended.

But my photography doesn't always fit into neat, coherent series, so maybe I need to roll freeform around this world, unfettered, able to photograph whatever and whenever: the sky, my feet, the coffee in my cup, the flowers I just noticed, my friends and lovers, and, because it's all my life, surely it will make sense? Perhaps. Sometimes that works, sometimes it’s indulgent, but really it’s your choice, because you are also free to not make 'sense'.

"so finally even this story is absurd, which is an important part of the point, if any, since that it should have none whatsoever seems part of the point too" 
- Malcolm Lowry, Ghostkeeper.

Ok, so I need time to think about this. To allow myself that freedom for a short time. A couple of years. Maybe I won't find my answer, but I will be around others who understand this question, who have reached a similar point. Maybe I’ll start on the wrong road, or for the wrong reasons – because I liked cameras, because I thought photography was an easy option, but if I’m forced to try, then perhaps I’ll stumble on some little thing, that makes a piece of sense to me, or simply just feels right. If I concentrate on that, then maybe it grows, and in its modest ineffable way, begins to matter. Like photographing Arab-Americans in the USA as human beings with lives and hopes, families and feelings, straight, gay, young, old, with all the humanity that Hollywood never grants them. Or the black community of New Haven, doing inexplicable joyous, ridiculous theatrical-charades that explode my preconceptions into a thousand pieces. Or funny-disturbing-sad echoes of a snapshot of my old boyfriend. Or the anonymous suburban landscape of upstate in a way that defies the spectacular images we're addicted to. Or... how we women use our bodies to display who we believe we should be, Or...

"A Novel? No, I don't have the endurance any more. To write a novel, you have to be like Atlas, holding up the whole world on your shoulders, and supporting it there for months and years, while its affairs work themselves out..." 
- J. M. Coetzee, Diary of a Bad Year.

And hopefully I will carry on, and develop it, because it is worthwhile. Carry on because it matters when other things don't seem to matter so much: the money job, the editorial assignment, the fashion shoot. Then one day it will be complete enough to believe it is finished. Made. Existing. Done. And in its own way: a contribution, and all that effort and frustration and time and money will fall away. It was worth it, because it is something real, that didn't exist before you made it exist: a sentient work of art and power and sensitivity, that speaks of this world and your fellow human beings place within it. Isn't that beautiful?

Yale MFA Photography Graduation, February 2009.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

For Adriana



Adriana, this is the movie I was talking to you about this past week (Submarine is it's name). Cheers.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

This Is Halloween

A link for Diego.

Diego,

First and foremost, I am really impressed with the large format images you showed us all yesterday. After hearing all the ideas that arose from those images, I am really excited to see where you will go with it. I just thought I would share a link with you, because I don't remember many artists being mentioned for you to look at.

Jordan Swartz graduated from Corcoran last year, and his work was entirely based on his everyday life with his friends, mostly focusing on touring/traveling the country. He shoots mainly 35mm, and I honestly think you have much greater potential, given the images shown yesterday, if you continue with large format. Hope your ideas keep flowing.

Here's the link:




Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Sunday, October 9, 2011

New Images

The first image follows Adriana's instructions given to me earlier this week. The second image is a summary of work that has influenced me and some things I have not been doing in my photography so far.