Archive for January, 2010

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Friday, January 29th, 2010

So there he was, old Frank Frith, bumping along the sands of Egypt in his Ford Focus, his fed-up-to-HERE wife riding shotgun, equipment, chemicals, and crabby kids rattling around in the back. Up ahead he sees the sign that is his salvation: Scenic Overlook, 1 Mile. Hallefuckinglujah.

In his great blog Conscientious, Joerg Colberg expanded his earlier examination of perceived plagiarism in photography, and it raises some interesting points. As a photographer of the land, however, I might have a different angle on this discussion, both literally and figuratively. I’m currently working on a set of books that reference Victorian photographs of antique ruins and monuments. In my online research, I quickly saw a basic problem.

That scenic overlook is clearly crowded, and while I generally run a bit cynical, or perhaps just skeptical, I don’t hold the automatic assumption that similar photographs are, without question or exception, plagiarism. When I followed Joerg’s link here, I could see why: I, too, have long-shots of tiny people on beaches (English beaches, come to think of it), people on benches looking at Nature (craploads of these), winding, precarious paths going up (and down) hills, and people on a snowy peak  - and at a golf course, even. Snow, and I live in Minneapolis!

I think this discussion is most interesting when it addresses intention and coincidence. Many of us work alone, often developing ideas and projects over several years. Decades, even. If several bodies of work come to light at the same time, with startlingly similar images and techniques, it’s entirely possible that it’s simple coincidence. That’s not a juicy explanation, but it happens a lot. A strip of buildings between water and sky can only be photographed two ways: color, or black and white. Now, of course, the color can be saturated or pale, and the buildings can be romantic and quaint, or industrial. We can make our choices. Would you prefer a Granny Smith or a Bramley apple? Both green, both apples. There is really only a problem when you remove the annoying little Granny Smith stickers and put them on the Bramleys because they’re a lot cheaper. It’s dishonest, and dishonesty is the bastard child of ill intent.

I try to keep up, I really do, but every so often I’ll run across a body of work that everyone else seems to know but I’ve never seen before. Or even heard of. That happens to all of us, and often. I’m not sure how else Steven Meisel could have shot the Dogging pictures if they weren’t at night, with flash, just like Kohei Yoshiyukis’s The Park. I’d be interested to hear from regular reviewers at venues like Review Santa Fe, Photolucida, or Fotofest. I’m sure they have witnessed the sudden appearance of new, identical themes, subjects, and processes cropping up, seemingly from nowhere. Did Jung have anything to say about the contemporary photography market? Can we pretend he did?

I started this post with a music reference in the title, so I’ll end with another. As I said before, I’m a Minneapolis girl, and if you know much about music, you will know The Replacements. I’ve been a huge fan for 25 years. Check out Art Brut’s great song, called “The Replacements” where Eddie Argos is aghast. He can’t BELIEVE he’s only just discovered The Replacements. Cracks me up every time I hear it.


Artful dodgers

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

I miss them terribly. I have a handful of them in a plastic bag on a darkroom shelf. Large and small circles of card, wrapped in black tape and stuck on coat hanger wire. Little masking tape handles. I even have a rectangular one. If you haven’t a clue what I’m talking about, read here.

As much as I love using a camera, my first love is printing. I don’t do it anymore. My work has been expertly printed in platinum-palladium by Keith Taylor for the last several years, and I’m now putting together a book that is ink on paper. I’m very excited about this book, and there will be more on it later. But for now, I’m thinking about listening to loud music in der Dunkelkammer with a red box of Agfa Portriga and the size-focus-crop-expose-dodge-burn-dev-stop-fix-rinse-wash-tone-wash-tone-wash-dry. Magic.

Jack Wild, the actor who played the Artful Dodger in the 1968 film Oliver!, died a few years ago. I remember him best as Jimmy on the psychedelic Sid & Marty Krofft spectacle, H. R. Pufnstuf.


Get lost

Monday, January 25th, 2010

E.L. Trouvelot. The planet Saturn. Observed on November 30, 1874, at 5h. 30m. P.M.

This is a cyanotype by Anna Atkins, from her Photographs of British Algae. I’m way too busy with new work at the moment, so I like to visit the Digital Gallery of the New York Public Library for a little vacation. This amazing resource is addictive, so consider yourself warned.

Visit the NYPL Digital Gallery


Gush

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

Below are random comments I harvested from Facebook. They do not refer to my own photographs.

LOVE! I would love to step into this picture I love your pictures! Your stile is great, you are great, Thankx for such beautiful pictures =)  Oh my PERFECTION! A floating city, somewhere in space? I love the unreal aspect in so many of your images! A dreamy wonderland. Oh wait that’s NYC. Nice place you call home only concrete around here bleak and beautiful  AM I THE ONLY ONE WHO THINKS THIS TREE IS SEXY? Gorgeous. Perfect. THANK YOU FOR REMINDING ME THAT YOU ARE A GENIUS you have a fantastic eyeball =)  I had an actual dream that was visually so much like this, in 1992 or 3…Except there were naked prepubescent ice skaters. Your photos not only amaze me, but inspire me :0) Thank you x LOVE THIS!


Cookie talk

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Homework: a viewfinder

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

We will start this baby out with a little present for you. A 35mm SLR and a roll of film. Print it and put it together. This is an unusual present in that I ask for something in return. Feel the shape of the film in your hand. Smell it – it’s tangy-sweet. Imagine loading it into the back of the camera and snapping it shut. Use your right thumb to advance the film until it stops. Check your film speed setting and away we go. Ease the strap over your head. Hold the viewfinder up to your eye and let it do what it’s meant to do, like a divining rod. Move around, look down. Find a view, and then a few more. If you press gently on the top, you can see the paper’s horizon. Use your right forefinger to press the shutter button. Click. Use your thumb to advance the film to the next frame. Click. Advance. Click. No need to focus. Not today.

You will need scissors, an X-Acto knife for the viewfinder, a small paper clip for film, and a bit of string for a strap.

Download PDF


Indirect Objects

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

This new blog is an experiment in attention. A million things distract me every day. Some of those things will land here with a splat, while others might fizzle in the vapor only a moment. I promise nothing, and will assume no one is looking.


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