Wednesday, 16 March 2016

The Aftermath Dislocation Principle



Jimmy Cauty, artist and former member of late 80s band KLF, discusses his most recent work, a 1:87 scale model of a dystopian London, where grim tower blocks stand inbetween looted and vandalised fast food outlets and damaged public property. The only people in this scene are police in hi-vis jackets, surveying the scene as if in bewilderment. All trace of what we assume must have been crowds of out-of-control rioters and demonstrators is gone. Only the damage and slogans daubed on walls remains. The scene is made eerie by its realistic medium and by the timing of the scene. The clock stands still as we, the viewers try to imagine what could have happened, and what will happen next.


      Photos: Thomas Mayer



 

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Facades by Zacharie Gaudrillot-Roy


While researching my project, I have returned to familiar photographers and artists as well as discovering new and innovative projects by practitioners whose work either builds on that made by previous artists or investigates something more contemporary.
Work which recently caught my interest is a series called ‘Facades’ by French photographer Zacharie Gaudrillot-Roy. There are three collections; Facades #1, Facades #2, and Facades #3. To me they suggest a confidence in technique as well as a pleasure the photographer takes in building an illusion, which despite knowing it is an illusion, still keeps the viewer very much in the sphere of reality.

The photographs in Facades are of streets, sometimes in urban areas, sometimes in more isolated places in the French countryside, photographed to capture every detail in a careful, considered way, yet some include passers-by to remind us these places are real and not computer-generated. The illusion comes from the fact that all the buildings are stripped of their solid bulk and all that remain are flimsy facades, standing precariously tall, without even the supporting beams you’d expect from a film set.

Facades #1 utilizes various angles, giving us an objective viewpoint in places, as though we are there walking along the street. There is even one photo taken from a high vantage point, with a cityscape in the background, peeking through the gaps where the remains of the buildings should be, adding to the vertiginous effect.

Facades #2 almost takes on a journey, through streets where people walk casually, unaffected by the freestanding facades around them. There are photographs taken in more rural and isolated areas, and I am reminded of Mel Brooks’s film ‘Stir Crazy’, where a group of villagers construct a town entirely from fake fronts of buildings in the middle of the desert as a decoy to a group of cowboys who terrorise them.

The photographs in Facades #3 are all taken at night, and for me another type of magic happens. Night is when our senses are more acute, and familiar places can often seem different, almost as if from another world. Moonlight, streetlamps (they often render colours very differently) and shadows can play tricks on us. I find the photographs in Facades #3 the most convincing.  Like William Gedney’s ‘Houses at Night’, I feel that what I am looking at is unusual, but it is because I am there at an unusual time, and viewing in an unfamiliar atmosphere.

Gaudrillot-Roy’s aim is to highlight the feeling of walking through a place for the first time, where all the information we have to go by are the fronts of buildings. 

‘The façade is the first thing we see, it’s the surface of a building. It can be impressive, superficial or safe.’

‘Just like during a wandering through a foreign city, I walk through the streets with these questions : what will happen if we stick to that first vision? If the daily life of “The Other” was only a scenery?’

Most of us have had the experience of walking around a foreign town or city. Our senses are heightened as we grasp for something familiar, and our curiosity for what lies beyond the surface may be sharper. There is also a slight tension, the possibility of becoming lost, of wandering into unsafe areas, of never finding a way back, or walking into a trap. Gaudrillot-Roy’s photographs and the technique he uses play on these tensions and our feelings of vulnerability. 

That feeling of discovering all is not as it seems, that what we see is a fake, can have a powerful psychological effect, and can often hark back to our childhood and loss of innocence. Certainly dreams formed by anxiety can shape scenarios where familiarity and security are turned on their head. The photographs in Facades do have a dreamlike quality to them, and it is in large part due to the techniques used, where they are manipulated digitally just enough to make them almost believable. The photographer has presented us with the right amount of illusion and inventiveness so that his aim is clear, without drawing attention to the technique used. Like dreams that tell us something, Facades is a series which captures just the right amount of reality for the message to be convincing.

Photography is a medium where lines between reality and fantasy can be very thin, and a technique such as computer manipulation is only one method of finding a place between the two. Studying Gaudrillot-Roy’s series of facades is helping me to determine how to present my work with just the right amount reality and fiction. I am also keen to explore how to seduce the viewer and make them enjoy the experience of viewing a different world through my photographs.
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         Stir Crazy (1980) – directed by Mel Brooks 
        
         Houses at Night by William Gedney (1960-73) http://www.americansuburbx.com/2013/06 /william-gedney-houses-at-  night.html

         Hitchcock and Art: Fatal Coincidences by Dominique Paini and Guy Cogeval (Mazzotta   Edizione, 2000)























Sunday, 6 March 2016

Portraiture




There are many photographers who have document people, society, and the human condition. There are quite a few who have produced work which leaves an indelible impression, and some portraits can be described as ‘iconic’. Dorothea Lange’s portrait of a poor mother with her children during the Great Depression. Brassai’s photo of two women in a lesbian bar in Paris in 1932. So many of Henri Cartier Bresson’s photos taken all around the world.


My interest is in producing portraits of people, couples, families, of various ages, in their own home. The pictures I have in mind are quite structured:

The people will stand or sit in front of a window, with London in the distance. 

The people will be posing for their photograph, aware that their portrait is intended to be part of a series.

The photos will take place at different times of day: morning, dusk, night.

They are all intended to show how the people are from all walks of life, different ages, with the only common factor being that none are very rich.


The most obvious difference between my series and photos taken by documentary photographers is that mine are entirely staged. I am setting up a premise which is fictional, but not unlike science fiction, is intended to bring home a message or warning of the future.

There are two series of my own work which I have produced in the past which I refer to when working through ideas for my current project. One is an exhibition ‘Inside, Dreaming of Outside’, which was composed of twelve large-scale photographs, each prominently featuring a window, usually with one person in front of it. For this series, which was based around my childhood memories, I constructed a fake set for each photograph, thereby making the spaces only exist for the photograph. I enjoyed the activity of physically creating imaginary spaces. I was careful to make them believable, but with certain elements which would make the photographs unusual. Even the scenery seen through the window was constructed in situ.



The other series was a commission for The Guardian Weekend magazine, where I was asked to take individual portraits of around six people, each having an amazing and heart-warming story about them (it was a Christmas issue). For this job I had to visit each of the people in their homes or places of work which happened to be in different parts of the country. I am happy to meet new people, but I have always been more comfortable photographing people I already know. My working method involves quite a lot of control over the subject, so this commission would challenge my usual methods. I enjoyed it immensely as I was forced to condense all the equipment and tools I needed into one portable bag, and to an extent improvise with each new person and their environment.


What both working methods (on set, and in situ) have done to me over the years is strip down to the bare essentials I need, in order to get the result I want. Admittedly this is to make my life easier, but also I feel it brings me closer to the essence of what photography is, and its role in what I wish to say. 




August Sander: 60 Fotos Deutscher Menschen (Face of Our Time) 1929

Initially planned as a collection of 500 – 600 photographs, Face of Our Time was published featuring 60 portraits of a cross section of German society.  The book is divided into sections: The Farmer, The Skilled Tradesman, The Woman, Classes and Professions, The Artists, The City. The final chapter, ‘The Last People’ featured the sick, disabled, insane, gypsies and beggars. It would invoke the wrath of the Nazis who in 1936 destroyed the books and the its printing blocks.




Sander, A. (2015) Face of our time. 2nd edition. Germany: Schirmer/Mosel Verlag GmbH. 

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

Fantasy landscapes

Below are inspirational work, as well as my own photograph, where the places are given dreamlike qualities (literaly, in the case of Winsor McCay).

Scale, the colour of the light, and point of view all create the impression that what we are seeing may not be real, but may be based on our subconscious. 

In my project I am keen to present a world which is based in reality, but which also belongs to a fictional narrative of my choosing. I wish to present a timeless place of indeterminate location, so that my comment on social issues can be interpreted by anyone, anywhere. I also wish to present my work as a fictional narrative to avoid bringing my message across in a way that can be heavy and didactic.

photo by Dominik Klimowski

De Chirico, G. (1914) Melancholy and Mystery of a Street 

McCay, W. (1906) Little Nemo in Slumberland