Sunday 21 October 2012

Sheep In Snow (c) Margot Baker

A delightful image taken by a fellow camera club member, Margot Baker: this was entered into a print competition last week.  What really made the image for me was the effect of the printing - somehow it looked as if the trees were bleeding very slightly into the sky - which was stunning.  This image works really well on many levels: the contrast between the bright snow and the threatening sky, the above-centre curved horizon line taking your eye towards the tree, the triangle sheep formation, with two eating and one looking, and the subtle shadows.  There is also an implied line from where the horizon intersects the left-hand verticle pointing towards the sheep in the bottom right-hand side of the foreground.  I found that in my mind I had an arrowhead shape from right to left making the image quite dynamic. Although there is plenty of light in this image, you can imagine the cold and feel sorry for the sheep finding grass growing through the snow.

I really really like this photo and I think it works well in monochrome.  I'm now hoping to see a similar sight in the Lake District this winter!



Sheep in Snow (c) Margot Baker


Saturday 20 October 2012

Men and Women

Men and Women exhibition by Tom Wood at the Photographer's Gallery overall didn't work for me, although I am a big fan of street photography.  I understood this to be a library of portraits shot by Wood in Liverpool over a number of years and I think it's an excellent catalogue of images from a curational perspective, but I didn't like it.  I couldn't get any meaning from it or relate to it.  However, there were two images that I found funny: Mad Max and Three Wise Women, both of which have also been selected by the journalist Sean O'Hagn for commentary.


With Mad Max, apart from the obvious comedy, the colours are interesting: complimentary blue and orange but not in the Freeman recommended proporations of 2:1 - this is more like 1:5 and for me it works.  I don't agree with the ratio theory and like this proportion where the majority is orange.

I like Three Wise Women because it reminds me of Last of The Summer Wine.  It's funny - that's it.  For more information see:

Out Of Focus

I also went to the "Out of Focus" exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery today. 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2012/may/09/saatchi-photography-out-of-focus?newsfeed=true

Strange, bizarre, surreal, odd, strange...I found it interesting - it pushed the boundaries of my understanding of photography, but I'm not sure I liked it.  The Californian portraits by Katy Grannan - incredible exposure against that white wall - the common element to all the portraits - but each character had something very sad to say - I think... almost as if they were hanging on to the past - hanging on to something that previously worked e.g. an outfit, a type of appearance, an image, but was no longer working.  The coloured Ansel Adams-esque landscapes - not sure I liked the colours (although pleased in a way because I've altered the colours on one of my Assignment 3 photos for TAOP to enhance purple to a point where it looks unnatural - so this series gave me some validation!) - I think I would have preferred to see the images in b&w - but then have I been biased by Adams?  

There were three photographers though that I really liked - amd three I would hang on my wall:
  • Sohei Nishino
  • Luis Gispert 
  • Phoebe Rudomino
Nishino's collage/jigsaw puzzles of an apparent google earth type image, but deconstructed and reconstructed - one each of Paris, Tokyo and New York - very intriguing.  Not sure I want to try it - would certainly teach me patience!.

Gispert views across the dashboard - bizarre yet very pleasing - I liked the weirdness of it all.

Rudomino - underwater shot at Pinewood Studios - a beautiful image and wish I knew how to do that!

Power - Prix Pictet

I attended the OCA Study Trip today to the Prix Pictet exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in London.  

For more information on what the Prix Pictet is all about, and to view the images discussed below, go to: http://www.prixpictet.com/

Attending an exhibtion with fellow students and tutors was altogether a completely different experience to going along with some friends.  Being around people who view photography in an analytical way. and participating in those conversations, provoked deeper thought and stronger reactions than I was expecting.  And it was great to meet people studying photography with OCA for the first time :-)

OCA people

The exhibition showed a selection of work by the photographers who made it to the short list for the Prix Pictet.  It's difficult to know where to start a commentary, so probably with the winner is the best place, followed the other contenders (in no particular order).

Luc Delahaye

Three images by Delahaye were on display in the exhibition; larger than life with absolute clarity, the works showed are:

  • House to House
  • Ambush, Ramadi
  • 132nd Meeting of the Ordinary Conference

House to House (with Clark and Sternfield panels behind)


Viewing the images online as I had done prior to attending the exhibition hadn't prepared me for seeing these enormous works of art.  House to House (an excellent example of colour accent - pink in orange) was striking the fact that the subject was carrying a gun made it emotional; 132nd Meeting is a busy image making the eye travel around the frame trying to take all the information in; Ambush, Ramadi was my favourite - I loved the subdued tones and lighting, the haziness and the sense that all was lost.

I'm not sure though that Delahaye was my favourite of the shortlist candidates.  The photos were slightly let down by the fact that the exhibition had not used non-reflective glass, so it was particularly hard to see 132nd Meeting due to the reflections.

Daniel Beltra

For me, these were the most striking images of the whole exhibition and the ones I was most anxious to see (having researched previously); I loved the the bright colours but limited pallettes, the very simple compositons used, and the overall striking and compelling, and almost abstract, beauty of the images.  One of the tutors asked me if I had an issue with the fact that something so awful (the BP oil spill) had been depicted as something so beautiful.  I'm ashamed to say that I don't have an issue with it.  The world is a constant cycle of disasters, some man-made, others natural, but I think that to find beauty in something awful is comforting in a weird way.  And I don't think that Beltra meant to condone the oil industry and associated risk, I think he was trying to capture compelling images that struck a chord, and for me that worked.  Oil spill # 17 reminded me of slices of Agate that you see in museums and mineral shops in Dorset!  The four images displayed were:
  • Oil Spill # 1
  • Oil Spill # 4
  • Oil Spill # 9
  • Oil Spill # 17
I have absolutely no object to photographers saturating the colour in images in processing (I do it constantly because I am drawn to vivid colour) but in this collection it seemed slightly obvious as the elements that you would expect to be weathered, i.e. the oil rig and the boat were very brightly coloured.  But for me this enhanced the images, which I thought were stunning.

I also heard that Beltra has previously submitted entries into the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Competition of birds caked in oil (highlighting the damage and destruction), so I don't feel that he can be criticised for taking the wrong view on this dreadful incident.

Beltra's Panel

Edmund Clark

I was particularly captivated by the images by Edmund Clark and found these the most alarming of all the photography I saw today.  The exhibition included four images from the series entitled "Guantanamo: If the Light Goes Out":

  • Camp One, Exercise Cage
  • Camp Six, Shackles
  • Camp Six, Emergency Response Four Equipment
  • Camp Six, Unused Communal Area
All four images were based on a very simple colour pallette and simple composition yet were very compelling.  Clark managed to convey a sense of fear, expected violence, and continuity: these images depict a sense of endlessness and loneliness.  You can image the larger than life cages, shackles, barriers, enclosures, continuing beyond the frames of the photos, and as a result of which, the endless fear...which for me is an unbearable concept and far worse than an oil slick, which although devasting, the world will eventually recover from.

Carl De Keyzer

De Keyzer's sequence "Moments Before the Flood", which exhibited:
  • Isola di Capo Rizzuto, Italy
  • England
  • Dublin, Ireland
  • Store Heddinge, Denmark
was a series of aesthetically pleasing images, despite the grim message they conveyed (as in Beltra's sequence).   Again, a simple colour scheme and compositon in all four; I particularly enjoyed looking at the structures shown in the image shot in England and having searched Google and found De Keyzer's website , I found a description:

"The Maunsell forts were built during the second world war to protect London from the attacks of the German planes.  This one was said to be sold to a Russian millionaire who plans to turn it into a hotel.
During the sixties these forts housed pirate radio stations". 

I tried hard to think why I like this image in particular: sombre tones (blue/grey), sloping horizon, uncorrected wide-angle distortion, the fact that I had to think about what the structures might be, and then what must it have been like to be on such a structure defending England from attack, or in the future surviving rising sea levels. Beautiful!

De Keyzer's Panel
 Mohamed Bourouissa

Mohamed Bourouissa's series entitled "Peripherique" made me think.  The images displayed were:
  • La Republique
  • Le Reflet
  • Le Miroir
  • Le Cercle Imaginaire
Initially I found them very striking.  Also large format, I particularly liked Le Cercle Imaginaire and Le Reflet for the almost surrealist elements, but then somebody mentioned that these were shot from reconstructions, which ruined it a bit.  I'm not a great fan of constructed images - preferring life to be shot as it is, however grim.  Nonetheless, the image of somebody dressed as a skeleton standing in a ring of fire is disturbing sight.

An-My Le

Several of the attending students remarked that they were not too impressed with Le's images; I loved them.  I loved the pale tones, particularly against the white wall with white framing, the delicated shadows and the strong sense of light.  Reading about Le's background I initially thought these were genuine war photos, being surprised to learn that they were shot in training camps - which makes them constructed and which contradicts what I said previously about not liking contstructed images.  I found with Le's images, I wasn't interested in what she was trying to convey, or what the message was, I just appreciated the aesthetic qualities of the photos and in particular liked the shadow pattern on Infantry Platoon, Alpha Company and the composition of Mechanised Assault (can I apply this to my Lake District landscapes?).

The images included in Le's exhibits were:

  • Infantry Platoon, Alpha Company
  • Mechanised Assault
  • Night Operations III
  • Embassy Medevac

Robert Adams

Unfortunately I don't remember which of Adams' images were shown; it may have been the lot.  I usually like monochrome images, but in small size and surrounded by large frame colour (wide-screen TV size photos) - he didn't stand a chance of keeping my attention.  For me this exhibit was a non-event.  I know he was conveying a message about deforestation, an incredibly important issue, but he failed to grab my attention.

Philippe Chancel

I liked Chancel's images depicting the devastation of the Tsunami affecting Japan in 2011.  I liked the images from Google earth placing the photo in context and distance from the shoreline.  The image I particularly liked was Higashimaecho_GPS_39°16’23’’N 141°53’36’’E - 2011-06-1 4 _ 07 :59: 36 G.M.T because of the scale of the boat against the house, the colours of the boat against the sombre tones of the background and the fact that despite the damage to the boat (making it obviously unseaworthy) the boat is still standing.  I think though that had this been my image, I would have been tempated to have cropped it into square format (and possibly extending the vertical scale of the boat) removing the bulk of the building on the left-hand side: I don't think we need that much information about a white building.  But, I image that Chancel is more experienced in composition than I am and knows what he is doing.... The six images displayed by Chancel were:
  • Higashimaecho_GPS_39°16’23’’N 141°53’36’’E - 2011-06-1 4 _ 07 :59: 36 G.M.T
  • Rikusentakata_GPS_39° 1’ 14’’ N 141° 37’23‘’E-2011-06-13_03 :48 :35 G.M.T
  • Sendai _GPS_38°2’20’’N 140°55’10’’ E - 2011-06-12 _04 :04 :44 G.M.T
  • Minamisanriku _GPS_38°54’20’’N 141 34’ 22’’ E -2011-06-13 _04 : 52 :47 G.M.T
  • Minatoguchi _GPS_37°43’22’’N 141°0’29’’E - 2011-06-07 _ 05 :10 :39 G.M.T
  • Kitashita_GPS_38° 0’ 5’’ N 140° 54’ 20’’ E -2011-06-08 _ 02 :44 :56 G.M.T

Rena Effendi

One of the tutors commented that for him this was the most compelling collection and reminded him of his own work (tutor - please email me a weblink!!).  I found Effendi's images both disturbing and comforting.  Disturbing on the basis that surely no one wants to eat contaminated food or grow crops on contaminated soil, yet comforted by the fact that, as previously commented, life goes on - nature recovers from disasters.  The images displayed were intriguing - 6 out of 7 were square format but not centrally composed (I often use square format for symmetrical subjects that look better within a central composition) so this has now left me wondering about composition in general and in particular within a square frame.  The pig's head in the snow aside, these are not disturbing images until you understand the commentary and get the fact that although the food looks like normal food - it's not - it is contaminated.  I particularly liked the image of tree though growing in the abandoned gym - that has to be a symbol of hope for the region?  The images exhibited in this panel were:

  • Gas masks scattered on the floor of a school lobby in the abandoned city of Prypiat. As a result of the nuclear accident and the subsequent... (OK - this one is disturbing and echoes a war photo)
  • Birch tree growing through the floor of an abandoned gym in the ghost town of Pripyat. Following the radioactive fallout after the nuclear accident...
  • Hanna Zavarotnya's trophy falcon.  
  • Hanna Zavarotnya's pig, butchered for the New Year holidays in Kapavati village. 79-year-old Hanna Zavarotnya survived WWII Nazi occupation and the...
  • Nadejda Gorbachenko's wine and corn from the orchard. Farming is forbidden in the Zone due to high levels of radiation in the soil..
  • Deer horns in the shed of Galina Konyushok's house. Hunting is strictly forbidden in the Zone, due to high levels of radioactive contamination.
  • Galina Konyushok’s chicken broth. The food chain is contaminated with radiation, especially animals that consume local grain and vegetation.

Jacqueline Hassink

I think this photographer sparked more debate than any of the others and particularly from the perspective that feminism is now outdated.  Is it really breaking news that women run companies and boards now?  It obviously is, even in Europe, as the newspapers still comment on the disproportionate gender mix in business.  However, Hassink depicted a panel of images of pairs of board rooms and dinning rooms.  What struck me was the symmetry in each pair: the dinning rooms resembled the boardrooms - not only in numbers of chairs, but also in orderliness, geometric shapes, neat and tidiness - each pair seemed sterile.  I wondered whether the photographer was trying to show that in rising to the top, and presumably sacrificing family time in the process, the women had traded their identities and had stopped investing emotionally in their homes.  Had these dinning rooms been purchased for them?  The dining rooms looked like they'd been put together for show homes - there was no real evidence of family life and the disorderliness that comes with it.  Traditionally, in Europe and in Arabia, the dining room is a place of nuture.  Mealtimes are ritualistic and bring families together.  In making the room where nuture is supposed to happen resemble board rooms, had the women traded their families for power?  Interesting concepts!  I actually didn't like these images, but they certainly made me think, making the photography successful in itself.  I believe that all ten pairs shown on the website were displayed in the exhibition.  As a panel they worked, but I don't recall reactions to individual images.
Joel Sternfeld

One of the tutors commented that these images would work as part of a news magazine, but not on their own as individual photos.  I agree with him - they are portraits, and possibly very good portraits, but without the context of the narrative, they are also meaningless.  The idea behind the panel of four, was to display the moment when the subjects realised that the full extent of the horror of what they were hearing about ecological collapse and when it was most visible on their faces.  I don't think that Sternfeld achieved that.  The four portraits on display were:
  • Anandi Sharan Meili, Managing Director, Velcan Energy, India
  • Stephan Singer, Head of European Climate and Energy Policy Unit, World Wildlife Fund, Belgium
  • Robert Kofi Bamfo, Corporate Manager, Forestry Commission, Ghana
  • William J. Clinton, Former President, United States
I think Bamfo definitely looked worried if not devastated, but the others look concerned at best.  Clinton, perhaps also looks a little shocked, but Meili and Singer, just look cross but not horrified.  This  panel did not work for me as well as the other collections.

Guy Tillim

I don't have much to say about Tillim's images.  There were not as compelling as the others in the exhibition.  I liked "Residents of the town of Goma in eastern DRC salute Laurent Kabila after his army took control, displacing the Mobutu forces" as I think that this does convey the concept of power, but I didn't really notice much about the others.  On display were:
  •  Residents of the town of Goma in eastern DRC salute Laurent Kabila after his army took control, displacing the Mobutu forces.
  • The statue of the explorer Henry Morton Stanley which overlooked Kinshasa in colonial times. It rests on a steamboat that belonged to the African...
  • Presidential candidate Jean-Pierre Bemba enters a stadium in central Kinshasa flanked by his bodyguards during an election rally.
  • A traditional dancer and crowd salute Jean-Pierre Bemba as he walks to a rally from the airport, Kinshasa, July 2006.
  • The looted remains of Mobutu Sese Seko's residence at Gbadolite.
As far as the OCA Study Trip experience goes - thank you!  I really enjoyed this afternoon, it was great to meet like-minded people, and I will definitely attend more in the future.

Slot Canyon (c) Keith Every

Another stunning image from a fellow camera club member, and one that is timely in view of my course work.  A beautiful example of "similar colours" comprising shades of red, dark brown, yellow, orange, pink and horizontal lines in the weathering of the rocks and diagonal lines provided by the shape of the light and colours.  The composition is unusal with the main off-centre triangle with a top apex and the lower triangle formed by the rock formation in the shade - the dynamism is increased by the triangle apexes not aligning and the intersecting curves formed by weathering.  In fact, the composition is triangular more than anything else - if you look from a distance you see a series of triangles in increasing sizes.  I haven't checked yet with Keith (but I will), but I imagine this was shot on a very slow shutter speed and slightly under exposed so as to avoid (successfully!) burn out with the light coming through at the top.  This would have been perfect to use for Assignment Three for TAOP - if only I had taken it!

Slot Canyon (c) Keith Every

James Burns

I don't even know where to begin talking about this photographer - his work has left me speechless!  Probably best to go straight to the link: Raw Images

I went to a talk at the City and Cripplegate Photographic Society  on Tuesday this week by James Burns, a young, exciting and original photographer with a unique perspective on life, who is TOTALLY inspirational!

Through my examination of other photographers' work, I am finding out more and more that the photographer has something to say and that photogrpahy is a medium through which to convey a message, philosophy, social commentary and so on.  Burns is passionate about the condition of social housing and much of his portfolio depicts what really are (let's be honest about this) appalling living conditions, yet he manages to translate these into stunning and compelling images.  He admits to being a good "blagger" - finding his way onto the rooftops of these monstrosities to capture, not only the awful architecture of social housing, but also the way of life of the inhabitants and the stunning views from the top.  Burns manages to convey a sense of beauty through what in reality is pretty ugly.  Burns is also a funny and honest speaker and I would definitely stop by another talk if I had the opportunity and I'm trying to get him a booking at my camera club in Kingston (that'll rock Kingston!).

I'm not going to single out individual photos to comment on - they are all amazing and it would be impossible to compare one against another.  Sitting in the audience, I felt oooh after oooh after oooh!

BUT I love the concept of "Puddleography".  It's witty and beautiful and original.  I would like to contribute to the Puddleography movement, with Burns' permission, so watch out for a link to a new blog (once I've checked with Burns that he doesn't mind!).

Seeing Burns' work has made me think about what it is that I am passionate about: what would I like to communicate through photography?  In the past few days I have been looking at blocks of flats and wondering whether I would like to photograph them, can I capture any beauty and what would it be like to be standing at the top in the wind and cold looking out over London!

The biggest takeways for me from this talk were those that I can relate to landscape photography in the Cumbrian mountains, which is my passion (and thorn - exposure issues....) - the similarities are being high up (obviously), having to define a frame within a wide panorama, photographing through haze (fog), making distant objects appear close, lugging kit up flights of stairs (scree tracks), wind, rain, possible danger..and of course stunning views and different light.  The takeaways are:
  • ISO 100
  • Small aperture (large f-stop)
  • Slow shutter speed and tripod
  • Long lens (with extenders and balancing devices to minimise blur)
  • Look for an original view
  • Take a friend to hold on to your feet
  • Don't be afraid!

Friday 12 October 2012

David Fettes

I went to a talk by David Fettes in Kingston last night.  Fettes is a wildlife photographer, whose trade mark is to try to capture animals from unusual angles or from a different perspective to how they might normally be shot.  He had many images of lions and elephants charging towards him; not a situation everyone would choose to be in!

The presentation was mainly about showing the images and talking about the experience, rather than elaborating on techniques, but the takeaways from that evening are:

  • Invest in lenses rather than the camera body; it is better to have a cheaper body and better lenses than the other way round
  • Look for natural framing around the subject, e.g. photographing an elephant through the legs of another elephant
  • Look for elements of design, e.g. lines, triangles - he actually had an image of three giraffe standing in height order
  • Lie on the ground shooting upwards - this makes the animal more impressive
  • Focus on the eyes of the subject (the rest can be out of focus but the eyes must be in focus)
  • Lie still on the ground for hours so that the animals get used to you being there and make eye contact
  • You don't have to go to Africa for wildlife - look around Richmond or Windsor parks
For more information, go to http://www.davidfettes.com/


Wednesday 10 October 2012

Photography Monthly - November 2012 edition

A bumper packed edition for November, with many interesting articles:

Wow! Image by CJ Kale pg 6-7

An image of a rolling wave shot at Sandy's Beach on Oahu in Hawaii.  The image has a low horizon (dynamic compostion) with the wave rolling in from the left hand side.  The colour palette is mainly the complementary colours of blue and orange, with fantastic light captured and crystal sharp water frozen in action.  This image is simply incredible and prompts the question of exactly where was the photographer at the time?  I then googled CJ Kale and found out that the photographer is from Hawaii and specialises in extreme photography. Lucky CJ Kale!

To see CJ Kale's work and those stunning glass waves, go to http://500px.com/cjkale?page=1

Secret Countryman by David Cole pg 16

Overall winner in the wildlife category, this is a really cute picture of a mole.  I have never seen a mole in real life so I am always interested in photos of them.  The composition of the image is along the rule of thirds with three horizontal sections and the mole taking centre position.  The grey of the mole contrasts beautifully with the blurred green background and I really like the detail of the earthy on his face and the soft texture of his fur.


North York Moors by Richard Watson pg 12

Worth a mention - this would have been a good image for me to have attempted for Assignment 3 - this image shows a great combination of violet, green and blue (similar colours), with contrasting yellow patches.


English Longhorn Cattle by Sylviane Moss pg 14

Winner of the Down on the Farm category (accessible via the same link as above), I love the simple composition of this shot, the limited colour scheme of black, white and brown with a touch of pink, and the dark background.  This set up really allows you to focus on the animal's tranquility and almost isolation as it eats its straw.  A beautiful image but also sad in a way.

The Landscape Recipe Book by Mark Bauer pg 25-33

I have been following the Landscape Recipe Book each month; particularly as I love taking landscape photos but have difficulty capturing something that means as much to somebody else as it does to me.  Judges often comment that landscapes are lacking an extra detail, e.g. a house next to a mountain...., so I am very interested in finding out what makes landscapes work for other people.  This month's recipes of coastal shots are different: they are simplistic, atmospheric and generally lacking in detail.  They mostly seem to have been shot on slow shutter speeds, to get clarity of the few details that there are and then a general milky/misty effect on the water.  I noticed that with these shots, they are not always composed along the traditional landscape thirds; some have equal prominence to sky and sea, yet this does not make them static.  The dynamism comes from the relationship between the two halves: reflections, mist, colours, horizon and sky blending together.  I also like the inclusion of small amounts of detail: an isolated deck chair, a lonely groyne, a tiny detail of land on the horizon and the remnants of derelict piers.  I really like the feeling of desolation and emptiness that these images convey.  These images are inspiring and it is helpful how Bauer also explains the processing carried out.  I feel like going to the coast now to have a go!  I may check out his workshops....

For more information see: http://markbauerphotography.com/

The Storyteller pg 55-59

This article is about Eric Kruszewski, a self-taught photographer who turned pro within a year of picking up his camera, and is now published by the likes of National Geographic.  Backpack photographer/photojournalis - basically this is what I want to happen to me.  Ok, might take longer than a year but what a dream!  In the photo details, I noticed that although many of his images are shot in bright light, Kruszewski uses a high ISO; in some cases above 1000.  This would be beyond the capabilities of my camera - the images would be too grainy - but in Kruszewski's case this means he can use a very fast shutter speed resulting in crystal clear images.

I particularly liked Haiti Watering Can on page 56 because of the perspective and wide angle and Girl on Willis Tower Ledge on page 59 for the highly original view and expression of the child's face.

A very exciting photographer to follow!  http://www.erickruszewski.com/