Thursday, May 7, 2009

Lecture Entry: Paul Shambroom




Visiting photographer Paul Shambroom has been conducting, as he calls it, a "long term investigation of power". The artist grew up during the cold war and has an innate fear of nuclear weapons, a subject that appears throughout his artwork. Whether he is shooting actual missile silos, or training stations for the weaponry's guards, the sense of power and the threat of nuclear anihilation pervades Shambroom's oeuvre. He began his career as a commercial photographer, and found himself wandering around the military factories that have always seemed so imposing. In his speech, he explained that the American public has a constitutional right to see what our government is up to, a right which he exercised in his series. Shambroom gained access to these highly secured locations due to his persistent letter-writing. His Nuclear Weapons series shows the reality of this country's arsenal, juxtaposing complex weaponry and missile sights with peaceful landscapes. In contrast to these high-powered and classified locations, his series, Meetings 1999-2003 brilliantly showcases the board meeting of very low-powered committees. To lend these images a classical feeling, Shambroom studied historical paintings and emulated their compositions. They are compelling scenes of ordinary individuals taking their positions seriously and with pride.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Richmond Public Library Show Application

I have applied for a gallery space at Richmond Public Library. I met last Saturday with Lynn Vandenesse about hanging work in one of the library's galleries during an upcoming First Friday event, and have a portfolio review with her on Friday the 8th of May. She seemed very receptive and interested in my photography. It would be an excellent opportunity to share my work and, seeing the amount of space available for one artist, a challenge to live up to.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Thursday Entry: Liminality




"Demand's photographs capture moments that refer to a greater event, a before and after. An abyss might me concealed behind each door and every blind window. Demand's sites evoke scenes and stories in our imagination..."
-Susanne Gaensheimer

Gaensheimer, S. (2002). "Second-Hand Experience".
Thomas Demand, 70-74.

Susanne Gaensheimer's essay, which accompanies a collection of Thomas Demand's artwork, expresses the the essence of the artist's photography, and also ties in to issues pertaining to my own work. Demand, whose final product is not unlike that of James Casebere, photographs a constructed model based upon a charged, pre-existing image. The viewer is thus several degrees removed from the actual scene-which is itself a representation. Demand gives us a specific view of each scene and every object within the photos are essential to its interpretation. Various parts in the compositions lead the viewer towards estimations of the location's significance. We are caught in between moments in his fabricated scenes; as the aforementioned quotation makes clear, the viewer can sense the importance of what has just occurred or will still come. Perhaps it is the overall stillness that pervades in his photographs that suggests a disruption is imminent. The artificiality of the scene lends to the tension as well; the artist must have recreated these scenes for some reason.

This essay has helped to elucidate some of the issues that I have been working out with my own photography. It eloquently addresses the need to envision what has occurred in the scenes that Demand presents us and speaks about the layers of recreation that he plays with.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Monday Entry: Gregory Crewdson





















Gregory Crewdson, one of the most influential contemporary photographers, was born in 1962 and received his BA from SUNY Purchase, and his MFA from Yale University. He is well known for his cinematic tableaux, many of which were extravagant productions. He deftly moves between shooting scenes on location and photographing in a soundstage at MASS MoCA. Whether inside the studio or out, his control over the details in his imagery is absolute. The lighting is bold and exquisite, as are the colors in his saturated scenes. He began by constructing dioramas for museums, and as his creativity grew, the set-ups became increasingly macabre and bizarre; in one set of images, he made a life-size cast of one of his legs, and placed the severed limb in the fabricated environment. Crewdson's Twilight series has gained an enormous amount of recognition for the stories it suggests and the tension in each image. Just like the series title implies, these scenes are set in that fertile time just before evening begins.

In an interview with Aperture Magazine, Crewdson reveals that he finds most of his inspiration while swimming. This bit of information stood out to me as quite intriguing. When I look at my own thinking process, many of the ideas I have tend to come to me while I'm in water as well. I do most of my creative thinking while in the shower, and have visited the local swimming pool for inspiration when I feel frustrated. Perhaps it is just the relaxing nature of water that allows the mind to focus, or it could be a subconscious link to the womb, a place for ideas to come to fruition.

http://www.luhringaugustine.com


http://www.aperture.org/crewdson/


http://www.gagosian.com/artists/gregory-crewdson/

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Thursday Entry: Impermanence


"Photographing spontaneously, (Maxine Henryson) has an instinctive perception of the fleeting moment"
-Mario Kramer

Kramer, M. (2007) "The Visible Time"
Red Leaves and Golden Curtains, vi-vii.

This essay examines the qualities of Maxine Henryson's photographic body of work. The artist creates her colorful abstract images by setting her camera for a long exposure and adjusting the focus while the picture is being taken; the resulting images evoke distant recollections and sensations-strong impressions of past visitations and events. Composition is important to the artist despite the blurred product, and some of her locations are identifiable, but only just. Interiors and exteriors are obscurred with varying degrees of blur; leaving some photographs more discernible. Henryson is prone to travel in search of locations across the sea, shooting most often in Asia and Europe. The author notes that the sense of timelessness in her photographs is furthered by the absence of contemporary technology and advertising. Just like in a dream, it is difficult to place when events take place. Not every element in her images is blurred to the same amount; there are clearer areas in the picture, allowing the viewer's eye to wander about the scene, wondering the significance of the revealed portion, in comparison to the unfocused sections.

I am particularly interested in Henryson's practice of excluding modern cars and technology. It takes away from the effectiveness of a scene to recognize a cell phone or certain new car, and instantly dates the image. The pervasive feeling of obfuscation in these images is clear; you are near an object or in a location yet are not quite able to find all the details that you desire.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Anderson Gallery Submission



I submitted three photographs to the Anderson Gallery Student Show last week, and one was accepted. They will be showing my "Doctor's Office" image in the gallery starting Friday the 10th.