Showing posts with label Assignments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assignments. Show all posts

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Assignment 5: Tutor Feedback

During the development of the concept and images for Assignment 5 I engaged in a dialog with my tutor and so his feedback was positive with no requests for major changes to images or replacements.  There were a number of comments concerning the flatness of the images and that I might increase either the contrast or the saturation.  I will look at this as I print the photographs for assessment, I always adjust the images a little for final output.  I also think that the drop from 12/14 bits per channel to the 8 bits of JPG can result in a loss of colour fidelity in the images that is not seen on the prints.  Recently I converted some B&W images for another course and there was a noticeable change in quality.

I am now at the end of this course, just need to get everything printed and in the post for the November assessment.  It has been a great journey, I have learned more in the last 12 months about photography than in my life to date.  Wonderful course and fabulous support from my tutor

Thank You!

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Assignment 5: Rework

I have now reworked the assignment text adding a tie back to Gursky to the preamble and replacing 3 of the less "Gursky-esque" photos with ones that I think make the set a more harmonious whole:

These are the images that I have pulled from the set together with their replacements:


replaced by



In many ways I think the original image was better, however, the depth in the photo contrast very sharply with the others in this sequence.


replaced by


The bin image was the only one my tutor rejected. I have replaced it with the most geometrical image I captured.  I agonized about this one, I really like it, but thought it too simple.  In fact I now think it captures the modernist stance that Gursky does in his work.


replaced by


The original image was part of a narrative that I tried to develop and did not work.  It does not have the symmetry that other images possessed and so I have replaced it with the jungle shot in the set.

The new package is on its way to my tutor, let's see what next.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Assignment 5 - Initial Feedback

Just hit a major, but not totally unexpected snag with my subject selection for the final assignment.  I deliberately chose not to select subject matter that would be suggestive of Gursky's own work, choosing instead to go with my own subject but try and bring what I have learnt from my studies to this work.

I think I may have strayed too far and pushed the limits too much.  My tutor has got back to me concerned that the examiners may not see a link between my work and Gursky's.  I am a little disappointed as I do believe that the goal of the exercise is not to copy a master, but to learn from their work and I did think that I had demonstrated that in this work.  In fact my tutor was quite positive about the images that I prepared:
I am not making any comments on each of your images which, in my opinion are of excellent quality and are redolent of the Germany and the German character that I have been acquainted with in the past and that Gursky has showed the viewer’s of his work.

I have achieved what I set out to do with the set, which was to capture the essence of a hidden German landscape.  I do not think I am being told that I have done wrong, more that the examiners simply might not get it and mark my work down.

Here is what I stated in a reply email:

First of all thanks for your very forthright comments, they were not unexpected. Whilst working on this assignment I wrestled with the same problem of how to “work in the style of” Gursky.  I wrote the essay on someone who divides the photographic world and has arguably had more of an influence recently than most any other artist.  However, at the same time one of his greatest critiques is that his influence has been too great and recently many photography graduates are copying him and producing grand but soulless work.

Initially I was going to work in the commercial heart of the city and considered working on a multi-shot basis doing some preliminary tests.  I also considered the possibility of working from elevation as he often does.  The problem both approaches brought for me was that whilst they might have paralleled Gursky’s recent visual  statements, they would have been very far from the direction I have been going, which is an increasingly intimate exploration of my city.  Throughout my landscape work I have been drawing on Gursky (and the other Düsseldorf graduates) in my own work.  I feel their influence all the time, but not in the subject matter I am drawn to, rather in the approach and framing strategies.

The Innenhof series was an outgrowth of this influence, a deliberate strategy to avoid creating large scale impressions of the city that I could not personally buy into.  What I was hoping was that I could channel Gursky’s compositional strategies into something that would be resolutely my own.

I used his early work as an inspiration, I looked at work he produced as a student and considered that against myself as a student.  One problem with Galassi’s volume is that it is considers a relatively small time span in his work, another publication “Gursky Works 80-08”, also includes earlier work he produced as a student, especially the photographs of the Pförtner, desk attendants, at German companies and photographs of his neighbourhood in Düsseldorf.  I think these can be found on the web.  In a sense I saw the Innenhof series as a parallel to the discipline the Bechers imposed on the young Gursky of photographing similar subjects again and again together with the exploration of my locale.

I also note in later work he uses a lot of floor to celing compositional strategies particularly hotel interiors.  However, as you rightly point out he is much further away from his subject and has generated a strong degree of abstraction in the images.

I knew this was a risk and if you consider it to have failed, then I am OK with that, after all my goal as a student is to learn and mistakes often provide better lessons than continued success. 

My challenge right now with reworking would then be one of timing and subject development.  I would need to withdraw from the November assessment as I will not have enough time to develop a new concept, shoot, finalize and review before the end of September when I would need to get my work into the mail.  I would have to step back and truly consider how to develop a new concept that would align better to Gursky’s more recent work.  I did have a few ideas, working more in the commercial districts of the city studying the energy of the city. This will take several months, my basic problem right now being an average 60 hour work week.

I would prefer not to do this, of course, however, I do need to pass Landscape and want a good mark if possible.  I am struggling at the moment with Social Documentary, I am finding it hard to connect with the course and find the assignments a little uninspiring.  Thus, I want a good result from  Landscape to act as a springboard into Level 3.

So now I face a conundrum, risk the work and the examiners wrath or redo the whole assignment and go for a March submission of the course.  This is not so bad, I enjoy the work, so more of it is not necessarily a bad thing, however, I do feel that the Innenhof series is good work that aligns well with my other subject matter during the past year of Landscape.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Assignment 5: Submission

Finally I have completed the edit and submitted the photographs to my tutor.  I have used the images from the preceding post, so will only document here my submission notes.


Introduction
At first glance this assignment should be pretty straightforward; produce 12 photographs in the style of an established photographer about whom I have already performed detailed researched.  However, applying the word “style” to the complete oeuvre of an established photographer is not a simple task. Over a career exceeding 30 years Andreas Gursky’s style has evolved, he has experimented with techniques, explored concepts, and occasionally changed direction.  His current style, that for which he is understandably famous, is one of complex multi-layered composite images, containing dramatic contrast in both shadow and colour.  This is quite different to the work he did shortly after graduating from the Düsseldorf art academy, the Pfötner and studies of suburban 1980’s Germany.  Even considering his more recent work; without knowing that the photograph was a Gursky, would one naturally associate “Rhein II” with “Bergwerk Ost”, a highly stylistic flat landscape with a deep shadowy image of miners clothing?.  Both images share many attributes in their size, construction, and reference to modernist abstract art, but at the same time offer a very different visual experience.
Prior to even synthesizing a definition of Gursky’s style, a more basic question must be answered; what does it mean to produce work in the style of?  Where is my style in this equation?  To what degree should I balance my own aesthetic to that of my chosen “style guru”?  At a very early stage in the development of this assignment I realized that I could not and should not attempt to imitate the work of Gursky. So what was I to do, I was becoming concerned that I had bitten off far more than I could chew in my selection of Gursky for my essay. 
My eventual answer lay in consideration of my own style rather than that of Gursky.  I took a step back and looked at my recent work and how this has evolved during the past 2 years.  I realized that a number of key elements from the manner in which Gursky constructed his images were beginning to unconsciously appear in my own photography. 
Taking these elements and combining them with what I have learned from my conscious exploration of Gursky’s work, I have identified the following aspects of his style or approach that I want to bring to my own work:
·         Ensuring that the subject fills the frame, even completely spanning the image space
·         Making the frame a strong element in the definition of the photograph
·         Imposing a very clearly defined rectilinear geometry to the photograph
·         Creating a very distinct image plane that will contain the subject matter
·         Controlling colour in a very precise and strongly delineated manner
The realization was not to imitate Gursky’s style, but to channel elements of his image construction into my own work.  My task was to produce a set of photographs that were distinctly my own work, but at the same time infused with learning from my study of Andreas Gursky.
Having decided on a philosophical approach to this assignment, subject matter became the next question.  I needed to continue my study of the city landscape, but this time get closer.  So far I have dealt with monuments, places of worship, and park land, in essence formal public spaces shared by the citizens of the city.  Now I needed to do something more intimate.  My first thought was to study heavily used spaces, environments in which I could even imitate Gursky’s multi-layered composite image building.  Initial experiments with this technique were disappointing and not really me, so something new was needed.



Subject
An accident led to subject selection.  Our cat, Doro, managed to get herself lost; 3 days before our annual vacation to Borneo.  We searched high and low, executed a poster campaign, even delayed departure by 3 days, but no sign.  With very heavy hearts we eventually accepted the inevitable and drove to Frankfurt to stay a night before catching the 12 hour flight to Malaysia.  That morning 3 hours before the flight departed she sauntered back into our house, very hungry, but otherwise fine.  The SMS from our cat sitting next door neighbour led to a very happy and ultimately boozy journey.
Looking for a tiny ginger cat led me into an ever expanding circle of exploration and a very detailed awareness of the local landscape.  We live in the city grid in an area dominated by apartment blocks.  Outwardly these apartment blocks look bland and faceless but within each there is an interior space of great variety and contrast.  In German these spaces are called “Innenhof”, inner courtyards.  Ideal places for a small cat to hide in; they are very private spaces normally only experienced by people who live locally.  They provide space for parking, playgrounds for the kids, areas to relax in the sun, somewhere to hang the washing, and in the summer a safe spot to light the barbeque.
On returning from vacation I set out to create a photographic study of the Innenhof’s in my immediate neighbourhood.  This required a considerable amount of exploration and also discretion, these are shared but at the same time private spaces.  I resolved to pretend to be looking for a new apartment if challenged, using my camera to record the area for later reflection when choosing my new home.  I did not set any limit on distance; however, I was able to complete the study to my satisfaction traveling no further than a quarter mile from where I live.  The number of possible spaces to explore essentially grew with the square of my distance from home.  In all I probably explored around 40-50 different Innenhof.
The spaces I discovered varied dramatically, each reflecting the lives and wealth of the people living in the surrounding buildings.  Some spaces were virtually derelict, others pristinely groomed.  On the whole they reflected the orderliness that Germans are justifiably stereotyped with.  What also became clear was that these were transient places, I found many under redevelopment, and during shooting one local space was completely demolished, my photo now becoming a record of a lost landscape.

Practice
The greatest challenge with this assignment was my need to respect the privacy of the residents of the places I was photographing.  The subject matter, buildings and gardens, would have ideally suited my Canon DSLR coupled with a wide angle tilt-shift lens, all mounted on a sturdy tripod.  This would also have attracted immediate attention and most likely led to some uncomfortable discussions about what I was doing and why.  Germany is truly a difficult place in which to work on public photography projects.   I opted, instead, to use a small handheld fixed lens compact camera, a Fujifilm X100, a very nice Christmas present from my wife.  The fixed 35mm viewpoint of the lens worked very well for this subject.  It enabled me to create the frame edge to frame edge aesthetic I wanted and the high ISO abilities of the sensor meant I could work handheld in poor light.
Technically I had to contend with two principal problems, light and architecture.  Inside the courtyards I was working at the foot of 5 or 6 story buildings, on sunny days the contrast between sunlit areas and shadows completely obscured the detail of what I was trying to capture.  Subsequently I could only shoot when the sky was overcast, limiting the number of days on which I could work.  Fortunately, my choice of a local subject meant that I could rapidly react to good light and run out with my camera. 
The second problem, architecture, required care both when taking the images and in post processing.  If I had been able to use my DSLR I could have emulated Gursky’s very precise large format camera framing approach, ensuring that verticals remained vertical and parallel lines did not converge unless I wanted them to.  With a handheld camera I did not have this precision, but still had to be very conscious of my position relative to the building and of not tilting the camera up or down.  An Innenhof is dominated by straight lines, any perspective error would be immediately visible in the final print.  The hardest problem was ensuring that I maintained the image sensor plane exactly parallel to the wall of the building facing the camera.  At time of shooting converging vertical lines are quite easy to see, horizontal ones are a much greater challenge.  With care I was able to limit the amount of work needed in post processing and keep any perspective adjustments within limits consistent with not badly degrading image quality.

Learning
As I write this I am currently in the bay area, South of San Francisco, on an extended business trip.  I have a camera with me, but so far have struggled to take any photographs.  All around me is the sprawling US suburban landscape, so redolent of Stephen Shore, Lee Friedlander, or Robert Adams.  This is something I have dreamed of photographing many times, walking in the photographic footsteps of people I greatly admire.  The problem is that I have no connection to it; I have no relationship with what I am seeing.  The landscape appears as a random kaleidoscope of picture potential, but with no connections.
I realize is that my photographs are not individual standalone expressions of art; they are always part of extended studies.  I can no longer simply take a photograph or even admire a single photograph; I want to see a book, a series, a set of images that exist with context and narrative.  Frequently I reject a photo, individually more pleasing/impressive/structured/meaningful (pick an adjective) than the others in my submissions, because it is not part of the story or does not align graphically with the others in the set.  During my studies for this course I have developed a strong sense of the relationships that exists within series’ of photographs. 
This is the single most important thing I have learned so far and I believe it has taken me to a new place in the creation and contemplation of photographs.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Assignment 5: The final set?


It has been some time since I last took a serious look at these images.  I have to admit I am suffering a little bit of a block on this assignment.  It is not a problem of quality, it is a problem of choice and the image I want to portray.  I think I have been too concerned with telling a story, I should leave that to Social Documentary!  What I have no done is to re-assess the set of images from a more aesthetic perspective, selecting images that I like and which portray the spaces I was exploring, from tidy almost beautiful space to grubby dirty interiors simply existing to store the bins.

I am also conscious of needing to maintain that element of learning from my study of Gursky, the careful control of the frame, the carefully constructed viewpoint and the filling of the frame from edge to edge.  This set is now close to what I call final.  I hope to write up the set and get it in the mail to my tutor by the end of the week and before I head off to California.













Recently I came close to abandoning this set and trying once again to do something more in the style of Gursky's recent work, however, that just is not me.  I really connected to this study and it is an important reflection on where and how I live.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Assignment 4: Tutor Feedback

Wow, no revisions, no changes, the following comment from Alan was a major relief:
"You have completed an extremely well balanced account of his development.  It is carefully assembled with text and illustrations.   There were no areas I felt particularly disposed to criticise so I have just attached some views of my own to expand the subject."
I felt when I finished the essay that it was a good piece of work, otherwise I would not have submitted it, however, not knowing where the standard lies and what the balance of content should be, I was nervous.

A key question I had was around the style of writing and the balance with the content.  There has been significant debate on the student forum recently about standards for writing and reading, many people finding academic texts difficult to work with.  I have experienced this but have persevered, reading as much art based literature as I can cope with.  My understanding is growing, each book adding a little to my knowledge base.  I am also beginning to understand what might make a consistent argument in a written form, i.e. I am trying to let the work I am reading inform my own writing.

When I was a Ph.D. student we had a reference model for academic writing based upon the target audience:

B.Sc. - Bullshit
M.Sc. - More Shit
Ph.D. - Pile it higher and deeper

This was coupled with another popular saying, when unsure of your stance simply "Baffle them with Bullshit".  I do sometimes wonder if much of what is written for art students follows the same rhetorical model - if I really knew what a dialectic was I would presume this is a dialectic of confusion.  Returning to my essay, I made a very conscious choice to write in an accessible manner avoiding the pitfalls of obtuseness that much academic writing conveys.  In essence I tried to combine the rigor of academic study with a written style that would sit well in the pages of a quality newspaper.

In Alan's very detailed accompanying notes he pointed to a number of my images that already contain elements of Gursky's visual language, in particular the grounding and framing of the photographs.  Since starting this course I have become progressively more interested in the work of German photographers.  Their style, whether Dusseldorf trained or not, is frequently very structural, the image has clear symmetries and the frame edges possess no ambiguity.  I think this is meshing with a scientists desire for cleanliness and order and infusing my work.  However, I also clearly need to find my own voice, seeking influence is valuable, copying slavishly is a dead end.

As Assignment 5 builds from 4 I need to be very careful to follow this closing advice from Alan:
As I have mentioned previously, there are some characteristics in your own work that are reminiscent of Gursky’s style but I would warn against trying to create images which slavishly reproduce specific features in his work.  It may sound difficult but if you can immerse yourself in his work and then work to capture your own images without any specific features of his work in mind.  I feel sure that, because of similarities in your own style the parity with his work will emerge, naturally.   
In a couple of previous posts I have tried to emulate some of Gursky's Digital manipulations and whilst they have had a degree of success they are not me.  I rarely use Photoshop, I find that the image adjustments in Lightroom are sufficient.  If I need to significantly alter an image using the advanced tools in PS I would either re-shoot the photo or reject it.  I see myself as a photographer, not a graphical designer.  I think Alan has pinned this down well, I need to understand Gursky's world view and style and allow it to inform my work.  I must not simply try and emulate what he does.

Subsequently I am rethinking Assignment 5 and stepping back from the highly composite images I had in mind. I still plan to use some Pano merging techniques, but the creation of images through substitution of vast numbers of people is not really doing anything for me.  I am not going to do any work on the Assignment until the end of May after my vacation, so have time to think.  Currently my concept is to take my imagery into the city and document the inner areas of Munich and the flow of people in that environment.  I want to document the Munich I know and love, as a place not as a people.  This will be the final step in my Landscape study of the city before turning my viewpoint onto the people of the city.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Assignment 5: Experimentation and Art

During the writing of my essay on Gursky it began to become apparent that many of Gursky's most famous and valued images contained strong visual influence from modern art of the 20th century.  I am now reading around this and thinking about how this could be worked into my own imagery for assignment 5.  I have already discussed the stylistic cues that I need to consider, however, another avenue to work  would be to also "borrow" from modern art.  This would entail looking for urban landscapes that possess similar structure to key movements or artists.  In Gursky's case I would immediately note the following:

  • Montparnasse - Richter's paintings of palettes of colours
  • Rhien II - Rothko and his broad stripes of colour (although very toned down)
  • The stock exchane images - The ordered disorder of Pollock
  • Race Track composites - reminiscent of cubism and Picasso
  • Untitled series - minimalism

Not something I necessarily plan, but worth keeping in mind.  Heading out to the Pinakothel der Moderne today to actually look at some modern art and see how it grabs me.

In the mean time I have completed my first exploratory shoot for the assignment, more a technical test of techniques that I might adopt for some of the images.  Thematically I am currently planning a series of photographs that speak to the pressures of modern urban life, the crowds, the dirt, the colour, in essence the visual cacophony of a city.  So far my assignments have skirted around the city, looking at the special spaces, parks, places of worship, and sports arenas, now it is time to engage with the reality of city life.  I suspect these will be images that most stretch the definition of what is a landscape photograph.

On Friday I spent the morning at the cities' main railway station, both inside and out, as well as on one of the bridges overlooking the lines running into and out of the city.  In each case I placed my camera on a tripod and mounted a wide angle tilt-shift lens, either 17 or 24mm depending on the location. I then exposed around 20 frames over a period of time waiting for something to happen.  Back in my office I spent several hours yesterday building composite image from the photographs that I had taken.  I was trying to enhance the sense of "business" of the photographs, very much in parallel to the techniques that Gursky's assistants use.

The first composite is of the railway lines leading into the city.  In each case I will show a first and final image in the composite.  I started with a nearly empty scene with a single train heading towards me:



Here I was trying to capture the sense of the energy of a modern railway station, the continual rush of trains in and out of the station.  What I have ended up with is what looks like a parking space for trains.  Technically this has demonstrated that I can fabricate such an image but aesthetically it does not work.  A possible thought here will be to use very much slower shutter speeds which will blur the trains, I can then merge multiple trains into composite lines of flow.  Another improvement would be to be about 10m higher up, but that is not going to work for me.  Gursky could hire a crane for the day, too expensive and I would get arrested.



Inside the station I had more success, the second image is composed of around 10 additional photos.  I did have a problem as I was nervous about my location and the use of a tripod on a station.  I did not use a remote release and so the camera shifted position, not by much, but enough to lose registry between shots, making the overlay much much harder.  In this image I have deliberately included the same person several times, in a sense a symbol of movement through the frame. This has good potential and I may return to try again.  An overcast day might also be better as I would have less contrast to deal with, although to a degree I like the areas of light and shade.



My final composite is a little less ambitious, but similar to the inside station shot.  Again I have included the same person twice, here looking at herself in the middle ground.  This image also added a further twist, the shadows and the stationary objects moved during the shoot, easily fixed, but an issue that must be considered.  This scene also contains a taxi rank, movements within which would also create both challenge and opportunity.

In all of the images I am experimenting with the multiple frame technique of Gursky with the goal of creating metaphors for modern life.  I learned a lot about the clone tool.  It was key to ensure that I had identically framed images that I then cloned between using the same reference point in each image.  I cloned fairly roughly using my tablet and pen, then in finer detail used the erasing tool to refine the edges.   None of these images are perfect, all have some issues, but as a proof of concept I am quite happy.

Next step will be to start building a list of location for similar shoots and also to consider other elements of Gursky's visual style that I can build into my shooting.

Assignment 4: The Essay

I have thought a while about putting this on my blog.  In the end I am doing so as it is a key element of my course and also a stepping stone towards Assignment 5.


Rhein II,  Worth $4.3M?
On November the 8th, 2011, the hammer fell at Christie’s Auction house in New York; $4,338,500 was paid for a 190 x 380 cm chromogenic colour print of a photograph.  Andreas Gursky’s Rhine II (1999) had captured the title of “Most Expensive Photograph in the World”. 


The Blogosphere erupted in indignation, electronic roars of “$4M for a photo?”, “I could have taken that!”, and “more money than sense”, typified the responses.  More serious commentary was mixed: Maev Kennedy of The Guardian commented somewhat pithily “a sludgy image of the grey Rhine under grey skies” (2011).  By contrast Florence Waters of The Telegraph wrote; “This image is a vibrant, beautiful and memorable – I should say unforgettable - contemporary twist on Germany’s famed genre and favourite theme: the romantic landscape, and man’s relationship with nature.” (2011)

Four years earlier, another photographic work of art by Andreas Gursky had sold for $2.48M, 99 Cent Diptychon (2001).  Gursky now held positions 1 and 3 in the value stakes for art photography. In both cases the art works were huge in scale and significant digital alterations had been made to the original photographs. 

So, who is Andreas Gursky and why is his work so valued?

Andreas Gursky was born in January 1955 in Essen, the heartland of Germany’s industrial Ruhr.  He was born into a family of commercial photographers: both father and grandfather worked in advertising, however, Andreas was to be the first artist in the family. Subsequently Gursky was never far from a camera; even appearing in some of his father’s advertising work (Galassi 2001). Growing up during the time of Germany’s Wirstschaftswunder (Economic Miracle), he directly experienced the explosive growth of the economy and surge in consumerism that marked the 1960s.  As did many other German teenagers he rebelled against the new materialism, a rebellion that echoes in his subsequent work.  Rather than do compulsory military service he took the longer road as a Zivi (Zivildienstler) – in other words a conscientious objector who performed public service in the community.

In 1977 he returned to the family trade and enrolled in the photography program at the Folkswangschule in Essen.  Under the tutelage of Michael Schmidt, the emphasis was very much on preparation for a career as a photojournalist or commercial photographer: a 35mm Leica the camera of choice and Henri Cartier-Bresson the paragon the students strove to emulate.  Looking at Gursky’s work during the time he spent at Essen it is not easy to see the beginnings of the work that subsequently brought him fame.  Schmidt also brought to Gursky awareness of the emerging American art photography movement, and in particular the influence of Robert Adams and his objective documentation of the suburban sprawl of mid-west America.

Whilst his days at the Folkswangschule grounded Gursky in the basic tenets of photography, it was his next step that would begin the rise to the summit of the art world.  Completing his studies in Essen, Gursky packed up his best work and sought employment as a photojournalist.  Without success.  Consulting a friend, Thomas Struth, he was firmly pointed in the direction of the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf.  Here he came under the influence of the husband and wife team, Bernd and Hilla Becher.  Although Bernd Becher held the title Professor, he and Hilla worked and taught as a team, indeed much of the tuition and critical discussions took place at their home rather than at the Akademie.   Inspired by the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) of Weimar era Germany, their work and tutoring emphasized a practical engagement with the world, through photographs that accurately and faithfully recorded that which stood before the lens (Gronert, 2009). Above all a dedication to craft and method infused their ethos; they were the diametric opposite of the Otto Steinert influenced Folkswangschule, where the serendipity of street photography was a stronger influence.

It was into this demanding yet intimate world that Gursky entered in 1980, one of a class that at the time included Candida Höfer, and Thomas Ruff.  After a year of general tuition Gursky engaged in a six year Master Apprentice relationship with Bernd Becher, at the end of which Becher alone would decide whether or not he deserved the title of Meisterschüler (Master Student). 

This was the beginning of the development of Gursky as an art photographer, although still within the strict constraints imposed by the Bechers.  A core element of their training was the construction of typologies, requiring the repetitive creation of a series of photographs of thematically linked subjects.  In Gursky’s case this involved two notable studies: one of details of the interiors of bars and cafés (a natural choice for a student); the other of Pförtner (desk attendants) who sit at the entrance to German companies. This latter series earned Gursky his Graduation from the Akademie.  Gently humorous, these observations of the serious faced desk attendants draw attention to the fact that they sit in pairs, ensuring the security of the building not only from interlopers, but also from each other.  Pförtner, Spaeter, Duisburg (1982, pictured) already contains essential elements that would become Gursky’s  trademarks: a nascent commentary on the commercialism of the modern world, deadpan framing and the reduction of the photograph to a single image plane.


A vital aspect of the education Gursky received from the Bechers resulted in the replacement of his Leica by a 5x4 or 7x5 view camera (Galassi 2001).  Gursky also came under the influence of the New Topology movement in the USA and in particular Stephen Shore and Joel Sternfeld.  The view camera and American influence further supplemented his visual style, by inclusion of penetrating detail and the adoption of colour, stepping away from the stark monochrome of the Bechers own work. 

To this mix of framing, detail, colour, and social commentary, a final component was needed that would eventually propel his work into the big league of art photography: theatricality.  Whilst at the Kunstakademie Gursky had met with and become a friend of Jeff Wall, the Canadian artist noted for elaborately constructed photographs that have a cinematic quality, both in creation and structure.  Wall was to have a significant influence on Gursky’s direction as he made his first forays into large scale imagery (Burnett 2005).  Fortunately, whilst Wall clearly influenced the size and chromatic intensity of Gursky’s work, Gursky did not follow his path of constructed realities: his photographs remained grounded in the real, even if it was an intensified real.

Upon graduation Gursky’s work centred on people within the environment, sometimes portrayed as lonely aliens in a mechanistic world, but mostly captured en-masses at their leisure; always small, rarely identifiable, just dots in the landscape.  Chance development of a photograph taken whilst vacationing in Austria (Klausenpass 1984 – Plate 1 in Galassi 2001), revealed within the rugged mountainous terrain tiny dots, people walking up and down the hillside.  At first glance the walkers appear randomly scattered; however, careful study reveals patterns created by the morphology of the hillside and social relationships of people in the photograph.  This almost revelatory experience led to a series of photographs that revealed the manner in which humans cluster together.  A prime example may be found in Schwimmbad Ratingen (1987, pictured). Gursky positions the camera high above the scene and looking down; people become objectified and the eye dwells not on the individual but upon their relative position within the community.


During the late 80’s and early 90’s Gursky created a number of photographs that revealed the vulnerability and isolation of mankind confronted by nature: Seilbahn, Dolomiten (1987 – Plate 7 in Galassi 2001) and Niagra Falls (1989 – Plate 8 in Galassi 2001) both place the subjects in the grip of forces seemingly outside their control.  Gursky also made what at first glance seems a rather bland, almost banal landscape of the river Ruhr (1989, pictured), showing a stretch of the river bounded at the far end by an Autobahn bridge, occupied by small groups of anglers.  This photograph captures two key elements of Gursky’s philosophy at the time: the encroachment of modernity represented by the motorway, contrasting with the need of people to find a space within which to shelter from this intrusion. Greater knowledge of the location reveals the precious nature of this viewpoint; to the side and behind the photographer sat industrial works characteristic of the Ruhr valley (Hentschel 2008).  An example of objective reality obscured by the taking of a photograph, or perhaps the beginning of the intensification of reality that Gursky brought to his later work.


The stage was set: Gursky had the tools, a distinct world view, and now entry.  He was an established artist carrying art world credentials granting him access to normally inaccessible places from which he would start to create some of the most stunning photographs of the past 20 years.  The small groups of people became vast crowds filling the frame, his objective viewpoint became almost godlike, and the detail captured by his view camera was multiplied by the digital merger of multiple frames to create huge tapestries of colour and complexity.  His photographs grew in size to a maximum height of 180cm limited only by printing technology, width essentially bounded by the length of a roll of paper and the ability to frame such a colossus (Galassi 2001).  The size of these images was driven not by grandiosity, but by the need to reveal the detail within the frame.  This was the moment that photography began to seriously rival painting in demand for gallery space: the size of the images brought a similar gravitas that fine art painting had exclusively enjoyed for centuries.

Gursky was now producing carefully planned singular works of art, the medium of photography enabling, but not constraining his vision.  Each work required months of planning and conceptual thought.  The act of photographing would take place over several days and involve multiple exposures, often needing very sophisticated lighting.  The negatives would be scanned and then combined on a computer, not by Gursky himself, but by a technician working under his direction.  Further photographs might need to be made, enabling the addition of details not present when the original shots were taken, and unnecessary elements of the original images could be removed (Schmidt-Garre 2011).  Hamm, Bergwerk Ost (2008, pictured), chronicled in Schmidt-Garre’s documentary, presents a good example of the complex image construction and working technique favoured by Gursky.  The hanging baskets containing miners’ personal effects are a fabrication of overlapping individual images; the people below were shot days later and added into the photograph to create a human dimension.


Contained within Gursky’s visual creations are a number of elements that build not only upon his own history, but also draw upon the world of modern art.  His repetitive themes echo the work of Gerhard Richter (Paris, Montparnasse 1993 – Plate 28 in Galassi 2001), whilst his frequent use of horizontal stripes of colour and form bring to mind Mark Rothko (Rhein II 2001, pictured).  This, combined with the craftwork involved in the creation of his works and the lengthy production process leading to a limited flow of new work, makes a Gursky photograph more comparable to a painted work than the mechanical reproduction referenced by Walter Benjamin (1934). I believe this underlies the rapid rise in value of Gursky’s work; his creations are not valued so much as photographs, but as unique statements in modern art.  The fact that they are photographs is almost incidental to their worth.

Ironically whilst he profits from his endeavours, I suspect that Gursky is gently mocking the worlds he portrays: the stock markets, the docks full of cars waiting to be loaded, the towering architectural edifices, and artificial islands built to house the obscenely wealthy.  By photographing these spaces and enhancing their reality through digital repetition of form and structure, he is drawing attention to the innate commercialisation and hectic speed at which the modern world proceeds.  The Chicago Board of Trade (1999, pictured) is typical of these “commercial” photographs, replete with colour and energy, money is being made.


Gursky’s rise to fame mirrored that of his contemporaries Ruff, Struth, and Höfer, all graduates of the same school during the same era, often collectively referred to within the context of Düsseldorf.  However, I feel that the differences are greater than the similarities.  In their early work the Bechers influence is plain to see, but within a few years of leaving the Kunstakademie each took their own distinct path.  Struth and Gursky are alike in their attention to detail and the monumental scale of their work, but separated by subject and philosophy (Kruszynski et. al. 2010).  Ruff’s highly experimental style has taken him far from Gursky, his reworking of JPEGs and Nudes being the anti-thesis of the detailed work of Gursky (Ruff 2012). Höfer seems captured by an almost “Becheresque” compulsion to photograph empty indoor spaces (Krüger 2003). 

The guiding hands of the Bechers have provided the art world with a new creative force, a group of now mature artists taking photographic art to new heights and in new directions.  They are not without criticism; an oft quoted article in Professional Photographer asks “Has the Düsseldorf School killed photography?” (Scott 2011).  There is some truth in this statement, the risk is ever present that young or aspiring photographers will slavishly create similar imagery, but devoid of emotion and containing oppressive visual complexity.  I feel this is always the case in art; leaders influence followers who try in vain to reach the same heights, then another leader comes along and the crowd changes direction.  Critically for student, emulating, but not aping the work of the greats is an essential way to develop one’s own practice.  The key is selectivity, take elements that drive individual progress, but do not simply recreate existing work.  In examining Gursky’s 30 years of work it is his attention to detail and working ethos that influence me, not the subject matter nor even his visual style, much as I admire both.

Returning to the rhetorical question that opened this essay, is Rhein II worth $4.3M?  Of course it is: two reasons!  Firstly the art market operates as any other market does; value is determined by balancing scarcity with demand.  Gursky is highly popular, but works at a relatively slow pace, so demand is high yet few works enter the market; values subsequently rise.  This is, however, a facile answer to the question posed.  Of far more importance is the fact that Gursky’s work bridges the gap between photography and the historically accepted view of what constitutes fine art.  His photographs present unique views of our modern world using the visual language of painting but drawing upon the unique ability of a photograph to capture detail. They are no less complex and take no less time to complete, than masterpieces of oil or watercolour.  Each is a unique and special object.

Perhaps a better question to pose would be: “Is Rhein II a photograph?

Shaun Clarke, 2012


Referenced Works

Benjamin, W (1934), The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, London: Penguin
Burnett, C. (2005) Jeff Wall, London: Tate Publishing
Galassi, P. (2001) Andreas Gursky, New York: The Museum of Modern Art
Gronert, S. (2009) The Düsseldorf School of Photography, London: Thames & Hudson
Hentschel, M. (ed.) (2008) Andreas Gursky Works 80 – 08, Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz Verlag
Kennedy, M.(2011) Andreas Gursky’s Rhine II photograph sells for $4.3M, The Guardian, 11 Nov
Krüger, M. (2003) Candida Höfer A Monograph, London: Thames & Hudson
Kruszynski, A., Bezzola, T. and Lingwood, J. (2010) Thomas Struth Photographs 1978-2010, New York: The Monacelli Press
Ruff, T. (2012)  ‘Thomas Ruff’ exhibition, Munich: Haus der Kunst. 17 Feb – 20 May
Schmidt-Garre, J. (2011) Long Shot Close Up – Andreas Gursky, Germany: Art Haus Musik (DVD)
Scott, G (2011) Has the Düsseldorf School killed photography?, Professional Photographer, Jan
Waters, F. (2011) Why is Andreas Gursky’s Rhine II the most expensive photograph?, The Telegraph, 11 Nov

Bibliography

Beil, R. and Feβel, S. (2008) Andreas Gursky Architecture, Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz Verlag
Darchinger, J. (2008) Wirtsschaftswunder Deutschland nach dem Krieg 1952-1967, Cologne: Taschen
Hughes, R.(1991), The Shock of the New, London: Thames & Hudson
Lange, S. (2005), Bernd and Hilla Becher Life and Work, Cambridge, USA: The MIT Press
Rugoff, R. (1999) World Perfect: Andreas Gursky, Frieze Magazine, 43, Nov-Dec
The Economist (2009), Bedfellows: Two artists who understand the beauty of business, 20 Sep

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Assignment 5: Getting Started

Given that I have yet to start on Assignment 4, this is very much getting ahead of myself.  However, Assignment 5 is directly related to the subject of Assignment 4.  In my case this means that Assignment 5 is going to be a series of photographs in the style of Andreas Gursky, the subject of my as yet unstarted essay.

This has led to a few sleepless nights. Whilst I can fully comprehend the structure of an essay discussing Andreas Gursky and the impact he has had on the art world, emulating his style is very challenging.  First of all Gursky uses medium and large format cameras, then composites multiple frames together to build truly gigantic images of great complexity.  The technical challenge of doing anything remotely similar cannot be underestimated.  Secondly and more importantly Gursky's work is now almost a cliche, something art students are prone to emulating and if done badly will simply look unconvincing.

My challenge will be to channel Gursky's approach and visual style into my work, but retain the sense that this is my work.  The assignment states "In the Style of an Influential Photographer", I am going to choose to interpret that as influenced by, rather than in the style of.  So what does that mean for me.  First of all I must distill the elements that make up Gursky's style and understand what they are.  I must then find a subject that I can work with over a sustained period of time that incorporates some of these stylistic elements, but one that also drives my passion and joy in photography.

I will evolve my thinking about this over time, however, I plan to work on the essay and the photographs in parallel, the rationale being that I will be better able to write a critique of Gursky once I can translate his visual language into mine.  This might delay my essay into April, not sure about that, but it does bring forward the start date for my Assignment 5.

With this in mind, what does Gursky's style say to me now:

  1. Symmetry - Most of Gursky's work exhibits distinct symmetries, either horizontal reflectional symmetry or multiple translational symmetries.  By this I mean that many frames contain strong left to right lines or are composed of large numbers of similar repeating objects.  Rhein II or the shoes on shelves are examples of left to right symmetries, whereas the many shots of masses of people have the translational symmetries.
  2. Complexity - Although some of his images are very simple, most are very busy, very complex
  3. Colour - More recent work uses very deliberate and bold colour, this can be through strong contrast, saturation or even selective removal, but a clear decision has been made
  4. Precision - Gursky does not wander the streets with a hand held camera and allow serendipity to drive his decisions.  He plans every photograph very carefully and demands complete control over the shots 
  5. Post Production - Although not a visual style in itself, the way he creates his art strongly influences the visual statement.  Recently he has exploited digital technology to create final images that combine multiple individual photographs, sometimes very overtly, at other times with amazing subtlety.
If I bring that back to myself, it means that I need to look for very strong geometrical material, exhibiting richness in colour and complexity.  In other words a city.  Munich.  Well if you had read any other part of my blog, you would have seen this coming.  Thus far I have taken my camera into 3 distinctly different areas of Munich, starting with the Olympic Games site, then focusing in on the Jewish Quarter, and most recently exploring the green space that is the Englischer Garten.  I want to finish my course by tackling the downtown area, the equally beautiful and grimy inner city.  This is a colourful, complex, ever changing, ever moving place, replete with visual material, but not the easiest place to work.

This weekend after my weekly jaunt around the Olympiagelande, I headed into the city to play with some ideas based around this theme.  The area I chose was around the main station, very colourful as well as very dubious, typical european blend of red light district, cheap hotels and small shops/cafes.  Whilst my first example image has nothing to do with the theme, I thought it quite funny and wanted to post it here


They did not come out of Sexyland, but they look like they did!

OK, back to my exploration of ideas.  The concept I have in mind is a series of photographs at street level or elevated if I can get access of rows of buildings typical of Munich.  These should exhibit strong symmetry and interesting content.  For my exploration I had a FF camera with a 16-35mm zoom, not ideal for this, the following required a great deal of perspective management, but again this was a conceptual process, not a final shoot.



The previous two photos exhibit the in close compressed view that Gursky sometimes shoots, there is no sky, the buildings should look endless.  An option here might be to extend the photograph by adding additional rows of windows via photoshop.  Maybe shooting at different times from the same place so that the windows show variation.  Dusk may make this work better.


Another possibility is the above here the bicycles and taxis are the repeating form standing against the banality of the 1960's edifice of the main station behind.


The final shot has the strongest potential, this is the front of the station with tram tracks running along the bottom of the frame.  This is a strongly horizontal image with symmetry only broken by the cars and street furniture. 

Taking the final shot as an example, my current thinking would be to return with a tripod and my 17mm TS/E lens which will enable me to correct for perspective.  I would then plan to take maybe 20 identical shots over a period of an hour or so watching how the constellations of people and cars inhabit the space in front of me.  I could then fill that space by cloning to and from the various photographs to create a single composite image that brings together a multitude of people in the same photograph.  A similar technique could work in several spaces that people move through in the city.  I would also like to try this in the station if security permits.  One idea will be to use the main station as a subject creating several large photos with multiple frames.  One aspect of the TS lenses is that by shifting left and right, up and down I can move the image circle by 12mm, not much, but compared to a 36x24mm frame this doubles the image size converting my 35mm FF 5D2 into a 42MP almost medium format camera.  There are issues in doing this, but it expands my possibilities.

So  have a start and an initial idea for this work, I now need to build out the concept and plan the photographs.  That will be a major difference for this sequence.  Each final photograph will have to be scouted, with test shots and then decisions made about time of day for lighting or weather conditions.  I may need permission for some potential shots.  The biggest question will be one of coherence, essentially avoiding this becoming a set of technically interesting but unrelated photographs.  That is the part that still bothers me about this exercise.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Assignment 3: Feedback & Corrections

Once again, I received my tutors response with a degree of trepidation.  My greatest concern was whether or not I had sufficient variety within the set to meet the requirements of the assignment.  By now I appreciate that it is largely up to me to set the parameters for the assignment, however, there is still a standard to be met.  As it turned out my tutor was fine with the assignment and in particular felt that this work "Appears to be leading you on a path to positive, future development".  This is what this assignment was all about for me, development.  In other assignments I have had more of a "demonstrate ability" mindset.  With Transient Light I deliberately set out to do something very different from previous work and adopted a new working methodology.  I start to understand the need for patience and perseverance in photography, especially when trying to build a coherent statement, versus a disparate set of images.

Within the feedback was a paragraph that discussed the reasons for making such photographs and the degree to which the photographer leaves an element of themselves within their photographs.  In particular the degree to which the digital photographer can set the mood of a photograph in the post processing process.  This assignment, more than any other to date, got to grips with personal questions about why I take photographs and what I value.  This assignment seduced me into wanting to take more and more images, always searching for that perfect juxtaposition of light and form together with the softening affect of the mist. Each week the space evolves, the sun angles in from a progressively different direction as the days now start to shorten.  I want to understand this place and the light within it, I feel drawn to continue, there are still many puzzles to be solved.  I do find myself struggling for "newness" in the photographs, but that comes with time, even if it is simply that a tree loses or regains its leaves.

There was some critique, I still fail to take enough care over the final preparation of my images, in particular stepping back and placing myself in the eyes of the viewer. This was the case for the third image, where I had over-enhanced the contrast to the extent that I nearly was rendering the top right hand corner Black.  This was the starting image, before any developing


The image I submitted, needed a fairly severe Black point adjustment to ensure that the running figure had enough presence in the photograph:


This led to the overly dark top left corner. I have taken the photo and applied a graduated filter to this area, sloping at around 45 degrees and then increased the exposure of this corner.  The great thing about this adjustment is that it is localized to the area of the image having too little brightness.


This is now better balanced and looks more natural.

Otherwise, my tutor was complementary, especially about #7, which he described as "delightful"; I have to confess I agree, this  is one of the best shots I have yet taken.  It is central to my thinking about imagery of a living breathing city.  All that's needed now is to print the corrected image and add it into my new Silverprint A3 portfolio box...