Art Appreciation DB5
Chapter 2.8 Photography
PART 2
MEDIA AND PROCESSES
Copyright © 2015 Thames & Hudson
1
Recording the Image: Film to Digital
The word photography derives from Greek, “writing with light”
Collecting the image
Film: negative and positive
Digital: pixels, computer
Camera mechanics are similar to those of the human eye
Gateways to Art: Understanding the Visual Arts, Third Edition, Debra J. DeWitte, Ralph M. Larmann, and M. Kathryn Shields
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Traditional photographic processes recorded an image onto a light-sensitive material, usually film, which darkened when it was exposed to light
Produces a negative (a piece of film in which the lights and darks are the opposite of what we see in life, with the tones reversed)
This negative can be reversed again to make an infinite number of positive prints, called photographs
Today, digital photography is the most common way of creating photographic images
Light enters the eye through the pupil; similarly, light enters the camera through a small opening, the aperture
In both eye and camera the lens adjusts, or is adjusted, to bring things into focus and give a clear vision of what is being viewed
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The Dawn of Photography
Camera obscura (Latin for dark room) used for centuries as an aid to drawing
In the 1800s, inventors found ways to make images permanent (fixed)
Daguerreotype, Calotype, Cyanotype
Invention of digital cameras c. 1980s
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Daguerreotypes were invented during the 1820s and 1830s by two Frenchmen—a painter and stage designer, Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (1787–1851) and a chemist, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce (1765–1833)
Created very detailed images
Only one single, positive image on a metal plate
In 1839, English scientist John Herschel (1792–1871) discovered a chemical compound that could fix camera obscura images; also invented cyanotypes
Englishman William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–1877) developed the calotype process; discovered how to reverse the negative to make numerous positive prints (basis of film photography)
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Artwork: Optics: the principle of the camera obscura
2.8.1 Optics: the principle of the camera obscura, 1752. Engraving, 3¾ × 6½"
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Optics: the principle of the camera obscura
A camera obscura is created by placing a small hole (aperture) in an exterior wall of darkened room
Outside scene is flipped upside down and backward on opposite wall
A person could trace over the image projected on the wall to capture it
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Smaller, portable models that often reversed the image (to the right way up) using mirrors became widely available in Europe in the eighteenth century.
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Artwork: Abelardo Morell, Camera Obscura Image […]
2.8.2 Abelardo Morell, Camera Obscura Image of the Panthéon in the Hotel des Grands Hommes, 1999. Gelatin silver print, 20 × 24"
Abelardo Morell, Camera Obscura Image
Morell turned an entire hotel room into a camera obscura
Projects an upside-down image of the Panthéon in Paris
Temporary projected image until he took a picture of it
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Cuban-American photographer Abelardo Morell (b. 1948) records camera obscura images in his photographs.
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Artwork: Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, View from the Window at Le Gras
2.8.3 Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, View from the Window at Le Gras, c. 1826. Gernsheim Collection, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, View from the Window at Le Gras
To create this work, Niépce used a method that he kept secret
He worked with Daguerre to develop a process known as daguerreotypes
A technique for fixing a camera image on a metal plate
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French Chemist Joseph Nicéphore Niépce (1763-1833) accidentally captured a camera obscura image on a metal plate
The exposure time was about 8 hours
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Artwork: Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, Boulevard du Temple
2.8.4 Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, Boulevard du Temple, c. 1838
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Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, Boulevard du Temple
This work is one of the earliest photographs created
This daguerreotype captured only one person on this busy street (the man getting his shoes shined stayed still during the 8-10 minute exposure)
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Some of the first commercially viable photographic images made using a camera obscura came to be known as daguerreotypes
This process was developed and invented during the 1820s and 1830s by two Frenchmen—a painter and stage designer, Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (1787–1851) and a chemist, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce (1765–1833)
Daguerreotypes produced very clear images, but they were single, direct positive prints and could not be used to make multiple prints
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Negative/Positive Process in Black and White
Cyanotypes
Calotypes
Collodion or Wet-plate process
Albumen prints
Gelatin silver prints
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In 1819, the English scientist John Herschel (1792–1871) discovered a chemical compound that could fix, or make permanent, camera obscura images
Using another of Herschel’s processes, the English botanist and photographer Anna Atkins (1799–1871) made cyanotype images in 1843
Calotypes: invented by English scientist and photographer William Henry Fox Talbot (1800-1877) in c.1841
Collodion or Wet-plate process: invented by English inventor Frederick Scott Archer (1813-1857) in 1850-51
Albumen prints: paper prints made from collodion/wet-plate glass negatives
Gelatin silver prints: introduced to the public in 1871
Also known for her portraits of celebrities, the British photographer Julia Margaret Cameron (1815–1879) intentionally avoided the sharp focus that many photographers sought from the collodion process
The French photographer Nadar (1820–1910) made collodion negative/albumen print portraits of many well-known artists, writers, and politicians
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Artwork: Anna Atkins, Halydrys siliquosa ß minor
2.8.5 Anna Atkins, Halydrys siliquosa ß minor, 1843. Folio 19 from Volume 1 of Photographs of British Algae. Cyanotype, 5 × 4". British Library, London, England
Anna Atkins, Halydrys siliquosa ß minor
This work is a cyanotype image
Algae placed on light-sensitive paper
Areas exposed to light turned the paper dark; shaded places stayed white
Looks like a film negative
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Anna Atkins (1799–1871) made cyanotype images in 1843–44.
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Artwork: William Henry Fox Talbot, Oak Tree in Winter
2.8.6 William Henry Fox Talbot, Oak Tree in Winter. Left: Calotype, c. 1842–43; and Right: salted paper print, c. 1892–93
William Henry Fox Talbot, Oak Tree in Winter
Talbot's image is an example of a calotype image
Talbot invented calotypes
Discovered how to reverse a negative to make numerous positive prints
Basis of modern black-and-white film processes
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Englishman William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–1877) captured on light-sensitive paper a negative image of a tree
The shades of gray in the negative calotype are reversed to make a positive print that matches the lights and darks of the original scene
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Diagram of Film Photography Darkroom
2.8.7 Diagram of film photography darkroom
A camera is loaded with film; film is loaded into a canister; the unrolled film contains several images; an enlarger with light bulb projects an image; the photograph is placed in a developer bath, a stop bath, and a fix bath.
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Artwork: Maia Dery, Storm Drain–Cape Fear River Basin
2.8.8 Maia Dery, Storm Drain–Cape Fear River Basin, 2013. Caffenol negative/Caffenol silver gelatin print, 9¾ × 7½”
Traditional and Alternative Darkroom Methods
An enlarger reverses the tones of a negative, projecting a positive image onto light-sensitive paper
A series of chemical solutions reveal and fix the image
Caffenol (a coffee-based developer) is an alternative to toxic chemicals
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In 1995 Scott A. Williams, PhD, and his Technical Photography class at Rochester Institute of Technology, New York, discovered that prints could be made using a coffee-based developer
The ingredients are simple: caffeinated instant coffee, washing soda to adjust the pH, and vitamin C
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Artwork: Nadar, Sarah Bernhardt
2.8.9 Nadar, Sarah Bernhardt, 1865. Albumen print, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, France
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Nadar, Sarah Bernhardt
Sarah Bernhardt was a famous actress and Nadar's photographic portrait helped to increase her celebrity
Nadar’s style is straightforward; simple props (fabric, column), and focuses attention on the sitter
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French photographer Nadar (1820–1910) made portraits of many well-known artists, writers, and politicians.
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Artwork: Julia Margaret Cameron, Angel of the Nativity
2.8.10 Julia Margaret Cameron, Angel of the Nativity, 1872. Albumen print, 12⅞ × 9½". The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California
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Julia Margaret Cameron, Angel of the Nativity
Cameron believed photography could show allegorical, poetic, and intuitive aspects of life
Known for her portraits of celebrities
She used special lenses and long exposure times to create a soft-focus look
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British photographer Julia Margaret Cameron (1815–1879) transforms her niece into a cherub, similar to those commonly featured in Renaissance and Baroque paintings.
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Artwork: Ansel Adams, Sand Dunes, Sunrise […]
2.8.11 Ansel Adams, Sand Dunes, Sunrise—Death Valley National Monument, California, c. 1948. Gelatin silver print, 19½ × 14¾"
Ansel Adams, Sand Dunes, Sunrise […]
Adams preferred gelatin silver as it allowed him to capture his subject with everything clearly in focus
Arranges black, white, and gray tones to achieve a balanced effect
He was deeply involved with the Sierra Club, dedicated to preserving America’s wilderness
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For Ansel Adams (1902–1984), a balanced photograph contains a range of tones that help us see the subject the way the artist wants us to, with everything in the picture clearly in focus.
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Artwork: Edward Weston, Pepper No. 30
2.8.12 Edward Weston, Pepper No. 30, 1930. Gelatin silver print, 9⅜ – 7½".
Collection Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona
Digital rights not available for this image. See p. 321 of the textbook.
Edward Weston, Pepper No. 30
Weston concentrates the viewer’s attention on the form and texture of the vegetable
Enhancing visual experience through the camera lens
So focused on the object it starts to look abstract
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American Edward Weston (1886-1958), like Adams, wanted to photograph the subject as he found it and made sharply focused gelative silver prints on glossy papers
He framed them simply with white mats and simple frames
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In Living Color
First color photographs were made by hand tinting black and white images
Autochromes
Chromogenic or C-prints
Cibachrome (or Ilfochrome)
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By the early 1900s motion could be stopped on film
Photographers sought an even greater degree of reality by recreating color in their photographs
Early color processes were very unstable and faded quickly
Hand tinting: applied like painting; made black and white photographs more lifelike
Later processes used various systems to achieve color images
Autochromes: the first commercially viable color photographic process
An additive color process made using potato starch grains, RGB dyes, and glass plates used as a transparent screen
Chromogenic or C-prints
Subtractive color process: create light-sensitive material by replacing silver with a color emulsion
The emulsion reacts chemically to form dyes that absorb the opposite colors in a negative (they are reversed to make the image positive)
Cibachrome
Additive color process
Uses layers of CMY dyes that are bleached away based on the exposure
Forms a transparent, direct positive image
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Artwork: Alfonse van Besten, Fragility
2.8.13 Alfonse van Besten, Fragility, c. 1912, autochrome
Belgian painter and photographer, Alfonse van Besten (1865-1926).
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Alfonse van Besten, Fragility
This work was made using the autochrome process
Autochrome characteristics: sharp contrast, areas of atmospheric blur, and areas where colors pop
Why might the title be Fragility?
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The title may be a general reference to the fragility of all living things, like a still life as memento mori. It could also be specific reference to the symbolism associated with flowers.
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Artwork: Sandy Skoglund, Radioactive Cats
2.8.14 Sandy Skoglund, Radioactive Cats © 1980. Cibachrome or pigmented inkjet color photograph, 25⅝ × 35"
Sandy Skoglund, Radioactive Cats
This work was made using the Cibachrome process
The print is a direct positive image
Cibachrome characteristics: bright, crisp colors and high-gloss base
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American Sandy Skoglund (b. 1946) creates a surreal combination of factual and fictional elements that make us question whether seeing should really be believing
Surreal effect of the image is enhanced by the way the artist uses outlandish color
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Photojournalism
The use of photography to tell a news story
Some of earliest examples date back to the American Civil War
This medium was once thought to be inherently truthful, and even today credibility is crucial to news reportage
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Nowadays we accept that photographs can distort, exaggerate, and even lie about the truth, but originally photojournalism was thought to be inherently truthful and this reputation lives on today.
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Portal Artwork: Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother
4.8.9 Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother, 1936. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
The impact of this famous photograph on its subject, Florence Owens Thompson, has raised issues about ethics in documentary photojournalism.
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Artwork: Steve McCurry, Rabari Tribal Elder
2.8.15 Steve McCurry, Rabari Tribal Elder, India, 2010
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Steve McCurry
For 75 years, Kodachrome film was known for its rich, vibrant colors
To mark the demise of the film, McCurry launched a project to use the final roll (2009)
Made a series of portraits in various locations (New York, India, Kansas)
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Perspectives on Art:
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McCurry decided to make a series of portraits because it was the final roll of film and he could not take as many risks as outdoor settings and street scenes would require
Along the way, McCurry worried about technical mishaps common with film as opposed to digital cameras – light damage can ruin the photographs
McCurry used his digital camera to set up the lighting, determine the composition and design, and make test photos before shooting a frame of the film with his analog (traditional) camera
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Artwork: Lewis Wickes Hine, Ten Year Old Spinner […]
2.8.16 Lewis Wickes Hine, Ten Year Old Spinner, Whitnel Cotton Mill, 1908.
Photographic print. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
Lewis Wickes Hine, Ten Year Old Spinner […]
Hines used photography to expose the injustice of child labor
Impersonated a salesman, inspector, etc., to get access and record the dangerous working conditions and ages of children
Led to the establishment of new laws
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American Lewis Wickes Hine (1874–1940) used photography to expose the injustice of child labor in the early 1900s.
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Artwork: Hiroko Masuike, Here Is New York […]
2.8.17 Hiroko Masuike, Here Is New York: A Democracy of Photographs,
exhibition at the New York Historical Society, September 2007
Hiroko Masiuke, Here Is New York […]
This exhibition was organized just a few days after the attacks of September 11, 2001
Gave voice to almost 800 people who experienced the attacks
The exhibition traveled all over the world
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Professional and amateur photographers were exhibited.
40
Photocollage and Photomontage
Fragments of separate materials (photo-based and pre-printed) are glued together to form an image
Photocollages are unique artworks that are not generally reproduced
Photomontages are made to be reproduced (re-photographed or scanned)
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41
Artwork: Oscar Gustav Rejlander, The Two Ways of Life
2.8.18 Oscar Gustav Rejlander, The Two Ways of Life, 1857.
Albumen silver print, 16 × 31". Royal Photographic Society, Bath, England
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Oscar Gustav Rejlander, The Two Ways of Life
Emulated the appearance and process of painting, hoping his photographs would earn the same respect
Made thirty separate negatives, cut out like puzzle pieces, and exposed them one at a time
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Swedish photographer Oscar Gustav Rejlander (1813–1875) worked in a time-consuming way, just like a traditional artist
Took six weeks to make finished image
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Artwork: Loretta Lux, The Waiting Girl
2.8.19 Loretta Lux, The Waiting Girl, 2006. Ilfochrome print, 11⅞ × 15⅞"
Loretta Lux, The Waiting Girl
Lux photographs her friends’ children and subtly manipulates the colors and proportions to give an otherworldly effect
Sometimes paints the backgrounds and uses digital retouching
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German photographer Loretta Lux’s (b. 1969) subtle use of digital technology allows her to alter certain attributes, such as scale and proportion, to create the effect she wants
Takes up to a year to complete each work
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Artwork: Höch, Cut with the Kitchen Knife […]
2.8.20 Hannah Höch, Cut with the Kitchen Knife through the Last Weimar Beer-Belly Cultural Epoch of Germany, 1919–20. Photomontage and collage with watercolor, 44⅞ × 35½". Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen, Berlin, Germany
Hannah Höch, Cut with the Kitchen Knife […]
Höch was one of the first artists to make photomontages
Protests social conditions during and after World War I
Dada: nonsensical combination of text (including the work’s title) and images reflects the chaos of life at that time
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Comprises pictures of political figures and modern technology from mass-media publications
German artist Hannah Höch (1889–1978) also expresses her concern about women’s issues in post-war Germany, highlighting their traditional tool of the kitchen knife and also including, in the lower right corner, a map showing where women had obtained the right to vote
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Postmodern Return to Historic Processes
Postmodernism playfully adopts features of earlier styles and critically focuses on content
In photography there was a revival of and interest in vintage processes
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The immediacy of the medium still causes some people to have trouble considering photography as “art”.
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Artwork: Roger Fenton, Valley of the Shadow of Death
2.8.21 Roger Fenton, Valley of the Shadow of Death, 1855. Salted paper print from a paper negative.
Gernsheim Collection, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Roger Fenton, Valley of the Shadow of Death
Fenton was hired to photograph the Crimean War (1853–56)
Example of the effect created by 19th-century photographs
Made salted paper prints from paper negative
Empty, desolate, poetic landscape
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We can see in the work of British artist Roger Fenton (1819–1869) some of the haunting effects achieved by early practitioners of photography
The title seems to derive from a passage from Psalm 23 in the Bible, referring to the comfort God offers for life’s suffering, but in fact Fenton chose it some time after he had taken the photograph, as a result of the popularity of a now-famous poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson which refers to “the Valley of Death”
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Artwork: Sally Mann, Untitled #7
2.8.22 Sally Mann, Untitled #7, Fredericksburg, 2000. Silver gelatin print, 38 × 48"
Sally Mann, Untitled #7
Series Battlefield captures present day views of Civil War battlefields
Used vintage process: glass plate negative with gelatin silver print
Transforms ordinary moments into nostalgic and provocative statements
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American photographer Sally Mann (b. 1951).
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Comparison: Weems, From the series: Kitchen Table and Here I Saw What Happened and I Cried
2.8.23 Carrie Mae Weems, “Untitled (Woman and Daughter with Makeup),” 1990, from Kitchen Table series, 1989–90. Inkjet print,
41¼ × 41¼ × 2¼"(framed)
2.8.24 Carrie Mae Weems, “You Became a Scientific Profile,” from the series From Here I Saw What Happened and I Cried, 1995. Chromogenic color prints with sand-blasted text on glass, 25⅝ × 22¾". MoMA, New York
Story Telling and Sto-re-telling
Kitchen Table series:
Glossy gelatin silver print
Black and white
Clear focus
Calls attention to the subject rather than the technique or appearance of photograph itself
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Story Telling and Sto-re-telling (contd.)
You Became a Scientific Profile series:
Also black and white and clear focus
Re-photographed a 19th-century daguerreotype
Restores dignity and promotes respect
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The Art of Photography
Labor-intensive methods, similar to those used by traditional artists
Manual and digital technology to assemble elements in the composition
Scenes are created that did not exist before the artist made them
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Recording Detail and Stopping Time
Strengths of photography (according to Alfred Stieglitz) are its clarity and realism
Photography also has the ability to capture a fleeting moment in time honestly
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Artwork: Alfred Stieglitz, The Steerage
2.8.25 Alfred Stieglitz, The Steerage, 1907. Photogravure, 13¼ × 10⅜".
J. Paul Getty Museum,
Los Angeles, California
Alfred Stieglitz, The Steerage
Stieglitz actively promoted photography as a fine art medium
Shows the decks of a passenger ship; a composition of shapes and rhythms
Reminiscent of abstract paintings of that era
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At a time when other photographers were trying to imitate traditional painting, the American Alfred Stieglitz (1864–1946) was among the first to emphasize what he considered to be the particular strengths of the photographic medium: its clarity and realism.
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Artwork: Garry Winogrand, Central Park Zoo […]
2.8.26 Garry Winogrand, Central Park Zoo, New York City, 1967. Gelatin silver print, 11 × 14"
Garry Winogrand, Central Park Zoo
Winograd used a small hand-held camera
Snapshot aesthetic
Spontaneous
Looks casual, but intended his photographs to be serious and artistic
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American Garry Winogrand (1928–1984) walked the city’s streets and captured what he found there.
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Portal Artwork: Nikki S. Lee, Hip Hop Project (25)
4.10.16 Nikki S. Lee, Hip Hop Project (25), 2001. Fujiflex print
Nikki S. Lee’s photographs confront ideas of fact and fiction as the artist takes on different identities.
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Reality and Artifice in the Anthropocene
The era we live in is called the Anthropocene
Human impact on natural conditions, systems, and processes has become so far-reaching that many scientists consider it geologically significant.
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Today, so many of the images we see are in color that black-and-white photographs sometimes give the impression of being old-fashioned.
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Artwork: Edward Burtynsky, Manufacturing, #17 […]
2.8.27 Edward Burtynsky, Manufacturing, #17: Deda Chicken Processing Plant, Dehui City, Jilin Province, China, 2005
Edward Burtynsky, Manufacturing #17 […]
Large photographs (3 × 4 ft.) create an impression of the vast scale of urban landscapes
Shows a vista of workers in a chicken-processing plant
Encourages viewers to contemplate civilization’s impact on the planet
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Without passing judgment, Canadian Edward Burtynsky’s (b. 1955) arresting images call attention to things not usually in our consciousness
The vivid pinks of the uniforms, the white pants and boots, and the bright-blue aprons punctuate the industrial grimness of the warehouse
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Artwork: Daniela Edberg, “Death By Cotton Candy”
2.8.28 Daniela Edburg, “Death by Cotton Candy” from the series Drop Dead Gorgeous, 2006. Archival Ink Print
Daniela Edburg, “Death by Cotton Candy”
Exaggerated fictional scenes with dark, humorous quality
At the same time it s a commentary on past-war photography
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Comparison: “Death by Cotton Candy” and Vietnamese Girl [...]
2.8.28 Daniela Edburg, “Death by Cotton Candy” from the series Drop Dead Gorgeous, 2006. Archival Ink Print
4.7.2 Nick Ut, Vietnamese Girl Kim Phuc Running after Napalm Attack, 1972, p. 639
“Death by Cotton Candy,” and Vietnamese Girl [...]
Reference to Nick Ut’s famous photograph from the Vietnam war
The look of a documentary photograph with addition of exaggerated color
Calls attention to the fabricated nature of the photograph
PART 2
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Chapter 2.8 Photography
Gateways to Art: Understanding the Visual Arts, Third Edition, Debra J. DeWitte, Ralph M. Larmann, and M. Kathryn Shields
Without passing judgment, Canadian Edward Burtynsky’s (b. 1955) arresting images call attention to things not usually in our consciousness
The vivid pinks of the uniforms, the white pants and boots, and the bright-blue aprons punctuate the industrial grimness of the warehouse
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Photography
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PART 2
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Gateways to Art: Understanding the Visual Arts, Third Edition, Debra J. DeWitte, Ralph M. Larmann, and M. Kathryn Shields
Chapter 2.8 Copyright Information
This concludes the PowerPoint slide set for Chapter 2.8
Gateways to Art: Understanding the Visual Arts
Third Edition
By Debra J. DeWitte, Ralph M. Larmann, and M. Kathryn Shields
Copyright © 2015 Thames & Hudson
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Picture Credits for Chapter 2.8
2.8.1 Wellcome Library, London
2.8.2 Image appears courtesy Abelardo Morell
2.8.3 Gernsheim Collection, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Centre, University of Texas at Austin
2.8.5 British Library, London
2.8.6 British Library, London/British Library Board. All Rights Reserved/Bridgeman Images
2.8.7 Ralph Larmann
2.8.8 © Maia Dery
2.8.9 Bibliothèque nationale, Paris
2.8.10 J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (84.XM.443.3). Digital image courtesy the Getty’s Open Content Program
2.8.11 © Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust/Corbis
2.8.12 Collection Center for Creative Photography © 1981 Arizona Board of Regents
2.8.13 Photo Collection F. Van Hoof-Williame
2.8.14 Sandy Skoglund, Radioactive Cats © 1980
2.8.15 Copyright Steve McCurry/Magnum Photos
2.8.16 Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., Prints & Photographs Division, LC-DIG-nclc-01555
2.8.17 © Hiroko Masuike/New York Times/Eyevine
2.8.18 Royal Photographic Society, Bath
2.8.19 Courtesy Yossi Milo Gallery, New York. © DACS 2018
2.8.20 Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen, Berlin. © DACS 2018
2.8.21 Gernsheim Collection, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Centre, University of Texas at Austin
2.8.22 © Sally Mann. Courtesy Gagosian
2.8.23 © Carrie Mae Weems. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York
2.8.24 Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift on behalf of The Friends of Education of The Museum of Modern Art, 70.1997.2. Photo 2012, Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Florence. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York
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Picture Credits for Chapter 2.8 (contd.)
2.8.25 J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (84.XM.695.19). Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program
2.8.26 © Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
2.8.27 Photo © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Flowers, London & Nicholas Metivier, Toronto
2.8.28 © Daniela Edburg
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