Explore the family
album and its iconography or reflects on representations of the self in digital
culture.
I chose to produce a
series of 6 photographs (these can be photomontage, staged photography, work
using found images, work including your own family archives etc.) which
reference the family album in some way.
Produce a 500 word
blog post outlining your working methods and the research behind your final
submission. (Whose work did you study in preparation for this exercise? Why did
you choose the techniques that you did and how effective do you think your
choice has been, for example?)
Julie Cockburn re-imagines
found photographs using geometric shapes to add a modern interpretation to
nostalgic images – a link between the past and the present. By embroidering
over or in front of the face, the viewer sees more of the unseen image.
Figure 1: The Dahlia Effect (2014) Julie Cockburn |
Diane Meyer sees photograph’s
failure as preserving the experience and personal history. A photograph is
nostalgic and obscures the understanding of the past. (Reminds me of Fontcuberta’s
Spanish archives). By cross stitching
some of the image, Meyer erases content and context, replacing it with “pixels”
(cross stitch) which the viewer is drawn to. There is a connection between the
representation (or glitch) and forgetting what really happened.
Figure 2: New Jersey (2011) Diane Meyer |
Carolle Benitah
explored
her old family photographs which represented her and her family, and shared her
identity her family history, family secrets, identity and place in the world
through revisiting the image and coming to terms with the memories by sharing
her version of events through reconstruction of the event by embroidery.
Benitah’s use of beads and embroidery is her way of coming to terms with the
past event. Making holes in the image, she puts the past behind her.
Figure 3: Les Carfads (2009) Carolle Benitah |
All the
photographers who use embroidery on their images sew either a mask or a grid
over the figures or place we are supposed to be looking at. This physically
adds another layer to the image giving it more texture and the photographer
experiences the materiality of the photograph, rather than printing and framing
or posting on social media. Because the craft involves design and working with
the image but using traditional embroidery techniques, it is quite a meditative
process and does not have to be done in front of a computer using photoshop. I
began to question the authenticity of the older image; some sites claimed to
have old embroidered postcards for sale, but I wondered how hard it would be to
produce a fake?
I have
used this as an exercise to see what works and what doesn’t and am hoping to
visit the Nottingham Exhibition.
Starting
with a few images which I downloaded from my Facebook albums, I printed them
out in a mix of sepia and colour images. The printer didn’t recognise sepia as
a tone, instead printing in monochrome which was too dark. I wanted to
experiment with different methods and see which worked and which didn’t. The
first 6 images worked and the last 3 were not brilliant. They were also chosen
to fit in with the embroidery silks in my collection.
Arranged
in chronological order, the first image is a corporate image from a firm my
husband worked for 18 years ago. This had a mix of people on it, some we kept
in contact with and others who are lost when jobs change. It brought back memories,
some good, some bad and I can see why some photographers see the needlepoint as
therapeutic. I was happy with the result. I would not be able to tell who the
people were any more, focusing my attention on smaller details.
So,
what happens when you apply the same type of embroidery to a photograph where someone
is no longer with us? It doesn’t feel like the image has been destroyed. The memory
of the person and the event is still there. It was a chance to revisit the good
memories by spending longer with the photograph and reinterpreting it.
In the
third image, I was keen to see if the landscape colours worked. They did, which
gives me an idea for an assignment 2 image. (These 3 were inspired by Diane
Meyers)
The 4th
image uses a different technique, one similar to the old postcards. By
embroidering some of the shapes such as a fountain and a bicycle wheel, I got
to spent time with a photo that was posted on social media as a holiday picture
which is forgotten after the holiday. This would have been a good exercise for
seeing shapes in photographs in the days of The Art of Photography.
Images
5 and 6 take Julie Cockburn’s idea applied to my images. I preferred the small dots. They were much
harder to finish – I covered the image in tracing paper, marked the areas to
sew and removed the tracing paper at the end. There was a risk of pulling the
stitches through. I played with the number of strands. 6 worked the best for
the large image and 3 for the smaller dots.
The ones which didn't work
I tried
embroidering a squiggly line. It made an already complicated photo look messy.
I think the circles should be
different sizes and colours. The photo is too large for the small circles.
When 2 faces are
covered, I couldn’t decide which way to rotate the stripes. Perhaps this is
where a geometric shape works best? (managed to get a glitch in it when uploading)
I came across Jane Wagner Deschner's website with a collection of interesting found photographs which had been embroidered. This one is from her "crazy quilt series". It brings together a group of unknown people. In some collections she has taken a quote and embroidered across the images. I thought this may be useful for one of my assignment images.
Figure 4: From the crazy quilt series (2012) Jane Waggoner Deschner |
Bibliography
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