Showing posts with label human form. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human form. Show all posts
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Development : Edited photography images and projector test
Looking over what photography I had already achieved decided to try editing some of the photo graphs from the projector photo shoot. They have been cropped and made more abstract a lot like the first photography experiments in the woods with my arms which is here. Other effects have been added as well such as some contrast and brightness but not a lot since the images are so busy and defined with the background shadow and body.
I've also did quite bold photo manipulations with the autumn pictures and the projection pictures by bringing them straight across each other. To create a miss match of images of the body and the trees them selves. I guess this is what the type of flap book's I would like to create will look a lot like but perhaps more simple images. The images had to be scaled and stretched to a degree to make them match up with their outlines which I think has been quite successful.
Will try to make more of these types of images possibly even drawing them and using the original tree images from the first projection session. As for my final piece I may not have to use footage but instead images with opposing sounds on top but we shall see.
I also did some tests with a home projector to try to see if we could get rid of the shadow outline of my form on the projected images. It seems their is a way to do it by placing the camera on top of the projector or making it parallel with the projected image seems to make the appearance of the shadow very little. Also If the projector might be a certain distance or height from my form it seems to help with this as well.
I'll be getting back into the studio again tomorrow to try this method out with more images and try out some of the new body movements I have considered thanks to looking at film and choreography. This new session has been delayed sadly due to tutorial classes in the same space, availability of help which I don't blame because everyone is busy and sadly my depression. I feel a little more hopeful that tomorrows new photo session should go well after my elective module class.
Sunday, 6 October 2013
Research : Open tutorial with recommendations and lots of resources
Had my open tutorial with Louise Scullion who was kind enough to take the time out to speak with me about my project concerning nature. Louise's work has focused a lot on the natural world in the past so she seemed the right tutor to discuss the project about. I felt very comfortable discussing my ideas with her and she opened up a lot of different views on the subject of trees and the natural world. I showed her my research so far as well as the materials I had been collecting and my photography.
Also as humans we try to find relationships with everything because of our empathy and try to relate and create stories about things even if their not human. This subject is touched on greatly in Mike Greens article about our relationship with nature post I did. That's probably why for this project I have been trying to match the human figure with trees but I'am open to look into other perspectives about this as well.
Funnily enough Louise started to mention musicians a lot that had a lot to do with natural elements and they were actually two of my most favourite artists that I've enjoyed for a long time.
One was the singer and performer Björk who I've been a fan of her work a for many years and is an artist who uses a lot of surreal and abstract imagery in her work. She also breaks boundaries of music by using unconventional sounds into her songs as well as using unique singing techniques. She tends to use a lot of themes of nature and animals in her work especially her music videos and quite primal human emotions. Her first music video as a solo artist was about human's and the natural world and how strange and wonderful it is.
This music video directed by Michel Goundry has a lot of visuals of landscape and points meanings to the human body and it's place and relationship within and with landscapes.
Another music video using the theme of human form and nature a lot more tribal with interesting visuals.
Another band Louise brought up which made me really happy was Cocorosie and their a band I've been a huge fan and influence on me in the last few years.
They are two sisters who formed a band together and their music is described as 'freak folk' and their sound is very unique. They used a lot of unconventional sounds like children's toys and sounds of nature to create music as well as classical instruments and different genres of music combined. They touch on a lot of subjects that can be quite spiritual and to do with nature but also a lot of innocence from childhood and woman's rights. Cocorosie also touch greatly on the theme of gender and dress in untraditional ways of men and woman even adding facial hair and painting their faces putting a across a message of tolerance and freedom. That we are just being's instead of labels and doing what is more comfortable or spiritual to us regardless of class, race, gender or anything else.
Since this project mainly started out from my childhood love and feeling safe in nature I felt some of Cocorosie's work should be included in this research. For instance a video they brought out recently is on the subject of child marriage tells the story of a five year old girl getting married from the child's perspective. And the child only feels safe in nature and has friends that are animals and it's a story about the loss of innocence and trying to find it again in nature so I felt this was a strong resource.
Alot darker is a song about love and loss but also has a lot of imagery of forests and trees and has some brief stop motion animation of nature growing and dying. As well lots of contrast imagery of the human body and expressive performance art.
This music video is about their upbringing and tells the story of their parents and greatly about the passage of time and loss of childhood. Since the sisters are represented in different stages of their life and the themes of belonging and happiness are shown mostly in childhood. Symbols of nature having powers to cure their mother of illness from a child's perspective with also when your a child prejudice and gender has no meaning.
While we were talking about these things it made me feel a lot more positive of the type of influences I could use for this project since these were also bands and subjects that influence my work already. That research and development doesn't have to be so linear towards my project's themes as that is something I've been trying to be a bit more fluid with as an art student.
Their is a band I brought up to Louise who I've been into since 2010 and they use a lot of nature especially forests and trees in their work. Their called iamamiwhoami and actually started out on YouTube by putting up very surreal music videos with nature as the theme. The band and their music has all been started virally and funded by their fans to continue the project and videos. The bands mystery by releasing teaser videos and images has made their fan base decide their music's meanings and the band's following. Their a team of artists and performers fore fronted by Swedish singer and performer Jonna Lee which was not known till a later date. They have did installations and performances in forests to fans which creates very beautiful and inspiring imagery forming a relationship with technology and nature.
The first video they ever did and that I had forgotten about has the sort of imagery I have been using for this project and is a strong part of research for me to study and recreate in my own ways. Since they are using limbs coming out of trees and using some sort of digital software to manipulate the footage.
Many of their videos include trees and the symbolism of birth and growth of them as well as spreading seed's through performance art with installation and the human body. So I will only include a few videos they have done. This video has a lot of images of tree's being inside a home taking the tree from it's natural environment and putting Jonna in a type of greenhouse structure. Almost as if her and the tree have swapped places and identities and she is being born as a tree not a human.
A lot of their vidoes are so surreal that interrupting the real meanings behind them is a little tricky but their is for certain that themes of nature and the forest are strong and their videos are telling a story of a being who is closely linked with the natural world.
Louise also gave me some great recommendations of other research to look into about our relationship with nature and how important it is to us for our development as well as some of her own findings.
One was a book called 'The Nature Principle' by Richard Louv who is a journalist and which includes his views and findings about why nature is so important to our mental and physical well being. Louv has created the term 'Nature deficit disorder' that human beings, especially children, are spending less time outdoors resulting in a wide range of behaviour problems. The disorder is not recognised in any medical science but evidence was compiled and reviewed in 2009 that backed up this theory.
“The future will belong to the nature-smart—those individuals, families, businesses, and political leaders who develop a deeper understanding of the transformative power of the natural world and who balance the virtual with the real. The more high-tech we become, the more nature we need.”
—Richard Louv
"Our society, says Louv, has developed such an outsized faith in technology that we have yet to fully realize or even adequately study how human capacities are enhanced through the power of nature. Supported by groundbreaking research, anecdotal evidence, and compelling personal stories, Louv shows us how tapping into the restorative powers of the natural world can boost mental acuity and creativity; promote health and wellness; build smarter and more sustainable businesses, communities, and economies; and ultimately strengthen human bonds. As he says in his introduction, The Nature Principle is "about the power of living in nature—not with it, but in it. We are entering the most creative period in history. The twenty-first century will be the century of human restoration in the natural world."
Richard Louv makes a convincing case that through a nature-balanced existence—driven by sound economic, social, and environmental solutions—the human race can and will thrive. This timely, inspiring, and important work will give readers renewed hope while challenging them to rethink the way we live.
Seems such a fascinating read and seems to explain clearly and show how important nature is and can be to our health and upbringing and why I felt so safe within it as a child. I'll try to obtain a copy of the book soon.
This made me think about the nature playgroups that have formed from Germany and in Britain now as well. Which are groups designed to let children play and interact with the natural world. My tutor Pernille mentioned her child has started going to this type of group and I feel that Richard Louv backs up how important this is for child development and my research into this area.
Louise also mentioned the BBC 2 drama 'Top of the Lake' and that I should watch it because of the main character being young and escaping into the woods. That it has a lot of great cinematography and that it's good story telling. I've started collecting the episodes but not watched them yet so I'll give them a watch then take some notes for research and see if it's useful.
I felt my talk with Louise has been extremely beneficial and I feel more excited and confident about this projects theme and research and with an artist so like minded about the natural world. It's given me a lot stronger research that's related to childhood and nature and what it meant to me which started the project in the first place. A forest to me was a place that was safe and bright with no boundaries or prejudices when I was along as a child which was often. The negative reasons against myself sparked the original idea turning them into a positive.
Tuesday, 1 October 2013
Research : Article by photographer Mike Green looking at the human form in nature
Since my ideas are going into the the theme of human body within/combined with nature I was looking into different views and perspectives on this idea. I found an article by a Photographer Mike Green who makes valid points and views on why we try to see human shapes and forms in landscapes and the natural world.
Mike Green looks at the Human Form
Mike Green
When making
photographs, my inspiration lies in catching and interpreting those types of
light which are less familiar. Currently, many of the images I am creating are
when the sun is below the horizon, or thoroughly hidden by cloud, revealing the
subtlety of colours inherent within water, rock and foliage. Having travelled
widely, and been an active mountaineer on four continents, I am now keen to use
my experience of the many forms of light I've seen to envisage and create
photographs which capture the character of those wild landscapes, and I am
using photography as a reason to revisit favourite countries and locations. I
am based in the beautiful Yorkshire Dales, in the north of England. More of my
work may be viewed on my portfolio ( http://www.mikegreenimages.co.uk/ ) or on
my Flickr site ( http://www.flickr.com/seaofvapours/ ). I've also just started
a blog, mostly as a diary of how I came to make certain images and general
musings/thoughts on photography. ( http://mikegreenimages.wordpress.com/ ).
SEEING
GHOSTS?
I keep seeing human behaviours and emotional states in photographic
subjects which I know full well are not human and don’t have such
characteristics; trees, rocks, clouds, that sort of thing. In other words, I’ve
recently been anthropomorphising images wildly. Obviously, I know I’m
merely projecting these human characteristics, and I’ll
assert my confidence up-front that it’s not just me sliding into early dementia
here: Flickr and the like are awash, judging by the comments, with ‘malevolent‘ weather systems, ‘brooding‘ mountains, ‘dancing‘ streams,
and generically ‘moody‘ examples of just about
everything. Beyond that, people have historically named features and built
folklore around them: the countryside is littered with named rocks and trees,
and Scottish mountains often translate as body parts. It’s apparent that people
like to see their landscapes in terms of human characters, and the starting
point of this article is that I’ve come to think that anthropomorphism helps inappreciating images; but does it help in creating them too, or could it?
I’M NOT
TALKING ABOUT ANIMALS AND BIRDS….
To define the scope of what I’m musing about here: it’s obvious that
shots of animals behaving, or appearing to behave, like humans are engaging,
eye-catching and have an emotional impact ñ after all, we can readily project
our own emotions onto the subject and thereby feel that we identify and
empathise with it, making the image more appealing. As simple examples, think
‘happy dog’ or ‘playful kitten’. Apart from anything else, those projections
may well, on some level, be entirely reasonable; the dog may well be happy and
the kitten may indeed be feeling playful. But what about landscapes? I’m not
taking much risk of argument (I hope!) in asserting that a large rock doesn’t
actually feel like a ‘guardian of the cove‘, or whatever!
Nonetheless, even for non-sentient objects, does anthropomorphising make
landscape images more accessible to the viewer; more alluring? Does an image
with which we can create an emotional connection, or whose subject’s motivation
we can imagine that we understand, whether consciously or unconsciously, help
the image itself, in the sense of making it a better photograph?
Before leaping into
whether, and how, this habit we have of seeing things as exhibiting our own
characteristics is useful or good, I’d better briefly define the primary rationales
for anthropomorphising ‘stuff’. It seems generally held in psychology circles
that there are three principle reasons for our doing this:
1. Projecting our own
behaviour onto things is an attempt to understand them. Essentially, this
is a typically child-like habit which we largely grow out of when we realise
that the World really doesn’t quite work that way. This is mostly applied to
things which actually look human to some degree, often featuring eyes, ears,
arms, etc. Think dog and kitten again.
2. Seeing things as
human in order to provide a connection with them, to develop empathy. Consider people ‘sharing‘ a quiet, contemplative moment with their
favourite tree. This is more the realm of literature than visual images, though
I’ve certainly seen images in which people are supposedly ‘enjoying
sitting with the tree / flowers / rock / stream’; the very
words ‘sharing‘ and ‘with‘ imply a
connection both ways.
3. Attributing motive,
intent or emotion to objects as if they were human. This is, I
believe, the most interesting in the context of photography, or any other
visual art; at least, it’s the one we’re using most obviously when describing
images in human terms. Again, think of those ‘angry‘ storms, ‘marching across the landscape’.
So, whilst anthropomorphism is simply attributing human-like
characteristics to any non-human objects, I’m writing about landscapes only
here. I’m not talking about animal and bird behaviours: I’m considering
assigning emotion, intent, motivation, thought and other distinctly human
features to various aspects of a landscape image. This does include trees which
look like people and mountains with faces, but it applies to weather systems as
well: think ‘threatening clouds‘, ‘menacing darkness‘,
‘joyous light‘ and all those other fundamentally human
emotions which we project onto landscapes.
WHAT’S THE
VALUE IN SEEING TREES, ROCKS AND WEATHER AS HUMAN?
Tim Parkin
Here’s an image by
Tim Parkin where the two trees look very much like legs and feet, standing in
the water. I see this mainly as an example of the second type of
anthropomorphism, but it has elements of all three if you start imagining the
body attached to the legs, and perhaps the purpose it has in being there, even
where it might be going, in that I see the legs as being braced, ready to move.
I’m convinced that this vision of the subject as having near-human purpose
makes me engage more with the image.
CONVEYING
EMOTION IS KEY…
…an oft-quoted, and
paraphrased, piece of advice for making effective landscape photographs, and
not necessarily one which requires any anthropomorphism whatsoever. It’s
perfectly possible to have an emotional response to a scene due to association
and memory, but eliciting that sort of reaction in the viewer is, from the perspective
of the photographer making the image, pure luck. Whilst I may have an emotional
response to a particular view of a particular hill, based on my past
association with it, or even to a completely unknown hill which is reminiscent
of something, you, as the viewer, may not, so the photographer has no real
control over your response.
More interesting,
at least in my view and from the standpoint of aiding composition, is the idea
that we can use archetypes to deliberately induce an anthropomorphic view of
the subject. Those archetypes can be very wide-ranging and depend not only on
the subject itself but the way it’s used compositionally. Imagine a large rock
on a beach:
·
photographed close up on a sunny day, with its bulk dominating the frame
and the breaking waves in the background, it might be imagined as an impassive
sentinel, casting its gaze out over the sea; keeping watch and confident in its
role;
·
photographed from above and behind, on a stormy, dark day with waves
forming the majority of the scene and the rock shown as small compared to the
enormity of the ocean, it could be seen as a beleaguered guardian, apprehensive
and about to be overcome by the power of the ocean.
Both those examples, whilst arguably fanciful and exaggerated to make
the point, are typical of how we collectively describe features of landscape
images. Sometimes it’s subtle and non-specific: ‘moody‘ is rather
imprecise, for example. Sometimes it’s very pointed: the image to the right,
by Duncan
George,
Duncan George
is of an abandoned hide on the Blackwater estuary. Duncan says that it ìlooks out over lonely salt marsh.î Whether or not I’d
have seen this image that way without the caption, I don’t know, though I
suspect I would, but, having read the caption, I’m unavoidably thrown into
imagining myself standing there, not beside the hide
but as the hide, surveying the bleakness of the scene
ñ and yes, feeling lonely! On one level, and ignoring the technical aspects of
colour, texture and detail, this is just an old wooden shed on stilts on a
rather banal, flat landscape; adding the emotional overlay and identification with
the hide’s situation (or predicament!) gives the image a great deal more
impact, engendering a sense of isolation and abandonment. To my eyes, that
emotional and situational identification with the hut helps the image a great
deal.
Bruce Percy
Another example is the following image, which Bruce Percy has kindly
allowed me to use, of Olstind, a mountain on the Lofoten Islands of northern
Norway. Bruce describes this mountain, in his ebook on Lofoten, as looking like
an old man with a beard, perhaps wrapped in a nice, warm cloak, and talks about
how he began to see the mountain as a presence whilst there, one to be engaged
with. This anthropomorphic interpretation of the scene illustrates Bruce’s
emotional engagement with the composition and with the surrounding landscape,
and also conveys more interest in the image to me, as the viewer. It makes my
whole experience of studying the photograph more involved and empathetic, both
to its creation and to the end result.
BACK TO
NAMING AND LABELLING THEN?
In each of the
above two examples I drew their anthropomorphic quality from their names or
captions initially, though of course I don’t know whether I’d have felt similar
emotions had I seen just the images and no accompanying text. It’s obvious that
words are not essential, that we as viewers can project human thoughts and
emotions onto landscape elements without either being told to do so or told
what those projections should be; but perhaps the use of words links the
creating artist to the viewer and assists the process of appreciating their
art?
COMPOSE WITH
ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN MIND?
I think visualising
and creating compositions with anthropomorphism in mind may be a useful
technique in creating the ‘emotional engagement’ so often cited with reference
to images of all sorts. And whilst engendering anthropomorphic feelings for the
subject in the mind of the viewer is clearly easier with some subjects, and
landscape photographs are certainly not amongst that group, it’s undoubtedly
possible and potentially a very powerful tool in helping the viewer to engage
with the finished image.
Perhaps, however, rather than seeking to deliberately construct an image
with the intention of inducing the viewer to attribute emotion to weather,
rocks, trees, bodies of water or mountains, it’s most effective to simply allow
oneself to see things that way during composition and hope that the resulting
image will produce a similar response in people looking at the finished item,
as I know Bruce did with his Olstind photograph? Whichever of those two
approaches you take, I have written before about the potential
benefits of naming and captioning images and I still think it’s useful.
If anything, this idea of using a caption or name is reinforced by the idea
that we can pass on the anthropomorphic view we had when capturing the image.
At this point in my
development as a photographer, all of this is very much just speculation. I’m
not remotely suggesting that every image should, or indeed can, use
anthropomorphism, either in itself or via associated titles and captions. What
I am putting forward is the idea that doing so may well be, surprisingly often,
a means of creating that much sought-after ‘emotional engagement’ between the
viewers and the resulting image, and that it can therefore be a useful tool in
composing images.
Anthropomorphising
something can make it seem more understandable and predictable: we ascribe intent or
intelligence, even purpose, to the objects in the frame and this helps us in
our basic wish to make sense of, and connect emotionally with, an uncertain
environment. People’s need to use anthropomorphism to interpret and accept
their surroundings is a long-established one, and using that seemingly inherent
trait must surely be a useful tool to landscape photographers.
My notes for this
piece included whether or not actively treating subjects anthropomorphically is
a good or a bad thing, and I’ve failed to think of any way in which it’s bad.
So, I’d welcome comments on any of the above, including whether you think this
is generally either positive or negative, both from the perspective of the
photographer and from that of the viewer.
Oh, and I just remembered that I called by most recent image ‘Talon’, as
described in my previous article on being
aware of the ‘right kit’ and at the time I wasn’t even thinking consciously
about this subject!
Note
from the editor: You can see more of Mike Green’s photography at http://www.mikegreenimages.co.uk/
The source of the article is here. http://www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/06/anthropomorphism-in-landscape-photography/#/
Friday, 27 September 2013
Research artist : Aron Demetz
Biography
Born in 1972 in Vipiteno, Demetz lives and works in Selva di Val Gardena
1986-93 Instituti d’arte di Selva Val Gardena
1997-98 Academy of Fine Arts Nuremberg, under Professor Christian Höpfner
Italian sculptor Aron Demetz (cousin of Gehard Demetz, whose work we featured in Hi-Fructose Vol. 22) creates wood sculptures that appear distressed, burnt and scarred. The process of working with wood is a fundamental part of Demetz’s aesthetic — instead of presenting polished and perfected works, Demetz celebrates the wood’s textures and its transformation through various natural processes. The simplified, abstracted human figures can seem like personifications of the wood itself.
Aron
Demetz uses traditional woodcarving techniques to convey his preoccupation with
humanity’s relationship to nature. In his work he eschews the classical
opposition of human and nature, and allows the two to become an inseparable
whole, evoking the primordial experience.
Born in
Val Gardena, in northern Italy, where he continues to live and work, Demetz
adopted a traditional South Tyrolean technique of woodcarving that dates back
to the 17th century. His sculptures – depicting the human figure in classical
postures or unusual awkward positions – explore the possibilities and
limitations of wood as a material. The resulting works have a strong physical
presence, which deeply engage the viewer on a psychological level, conveying
both our oneness with nature and our alienation from it.
In the
piece ‘Untitled’, conceived for the Italian Pavilion at the 53rd Venice
Biennale, Demetz introduced the use of natural resin, meticulously collected
from wounds on the trees in the Val Gardena forests. With its smell, colour,
and texture, it gives his signature wood sculptures even more corporeal
presence and adds a lyrical dimension to his powerful work.
Examples of his work:
The charred remains of the artist's works evoke a new range of sentiments that delve deeper into the vulnerabilities of both the wooden materials they are composed of and the human figures they represent. Demetz's sculptures present mankind and nature as one, reflecting the fragility of both. The burned structures peel back the facade of the figurative forms and expose their susceptibility to hindering elements, both in the literal and metaphoric sense. The wood-turned-charcoal figures present an interpretive look at the outcome of physical and emotional onslaught.
Expanding on his interest in the human
figure, Demetz works with wood to evince conflicting notions of temporality and
the quest for permanence. By reviving the religious tradition of wood carving
that has flourished in the Northern Italian town of Val Gardena since the 17th
century, Demetz brings a rich spirituality to his sculptures. Yet he
simultaneously imbues his work with an oddly fitting contemporary touch by layering
silver or aluminium foils or pouring resin over his figures. The resulting
effect is startlingly truthful in capturing the complexity of the ties that
bind us to the natural world.
Demetz work has really interested me in the human form and it's relationship with nature his sculptures are beautiful but also have a powerful visual. That
looking at them we can relate and see our own form that were comfortable with
but as a still material that is expressing strong visual emotion. His works
relationship between man and nature felt valuable in my research as it’s a relationship
I’ll be exploring in this project. His use of different methods of manipulating the wood to express different moods appealed to my experimentation of natural materials I would like to achieve.
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