Showing posts with label 1 Project 2: Through a digital lens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1 Project 2: Through a digital lens. Show all posts

Monday, 30 January 2017

"The digital image in photographic culture: Algorithmic Photography and the Crisis of Representation" Martin Lister (ed.) (2013)

Source material: Lister, M. (ed.) (2013) The digital image in photographic culture: Algorithmic photography and the crisis of representation. Abingdon: Routledge (pp.22-40)

I started reading this chapter with a dictionary and YouTube to help my understanding of this. I was reminded of the Rosalind Krauss essay within Landscape and I seem to have gone off at a complete tangent although now I have a greater understanding of the portrayal of cinematic time and some of the issues around indexing. I may need to revisit this essay at some point.


Two conceptions of the image 
The chapter illustrates two different methods of portraying moments of time or photographic memories.

Titanic (1997) - "linear progression of structured moments" (Lister, M. 2013:22) life experiences are represented and then you die. Life has been frozen and flattened into a photograph. In this portrayal, visual representation is rational and cannot change. Settings and location give identity. Frozen moments in time are technologically complex but have no expressivity and spontaneity. Foucault - biopolitics - human body was bound to the world by mechanisms of representation.

Memento (2000) Film composed of 2 parallel sequences - black and white is chronological and colour is in reverse order, showing future past and future present. Photography in this film are "points of access that allow movement from one temporality to another following the topology of a band." (Lister, M. 2013:23) Time is a loop with blurred boundaries and was edited following an algorithm.

Memory here is an exploration of measurable time with cinematic time through photographs which depict time in crisis because it is not linear but is made up in several different ways. By placing photographs in this way, the meaning changes according to where it is placed in the sequence and location of the event in the narrative.

Is photography an archive and memory bank? Is it truthful? How photography is portrayed can be repetitive or uncertain and spontaneous. "Photography points in two directions at once; one side faces the objects, people and situations as they appear in the "real world" and is occupied with the representation of events by flattening their 4D space onto a 2D plane of the photograph.(Flusser 2011 as cited by Lister, M. 2013:25)The other side points towards photography's own  condition of manufacturing, which is to say towards the repetition and serial reproduction of the photographic image." (Lister, M. 2013:25)

I have not seen Memento (2000), although watching Arrival (2016), it occurred to me that this film mixes up the chronology of time and depicts three types of time. The basis for the film is taken from "Story of your life" written by Ted Chiang, a sci fi writer. The opening scene uses cinematic blue and the main character cuddling a child. So symbolism suggests to the viewer that perhaps this child has died. The film then follows chronologically the life of Louise (main character) with cut backs periodically to the child's life. Half way through the film, Louise tells her daughter that her name is a palindrome (spelt the same way backwards and forwards) which is the structure of the film. It is revealed towards the end of the film that the child is in the future. The heptapods (aliens) which the main characters meet and interact with consider time differently. Their time is in crisis and non linear, having the power to see into the future which is transferred to Louise which is why the flashbacks she is experiencing are future time. The theme of this film for me was that life is a journey, not a destination and so perhaps it doesn't have to be represented in a linear fashion.

Genealogies of representation
Heidigger - modernity - "world becomes a picture and human being becomes a subject." (Lister, M. 2013:25) Truth is certainty of representing. In the past, (up until Descartes - philosopher in 1600's) representation was allegorical or metaphorical. After Descartes, representation gained the status of a scientific method of enquiry which produced reliable and repeatable results, guaranteeing truth.

The Western world thought that representation of an image was like a diagram which opened up possibilities of seeing the world differently. Humans are rational and can objectify the world, but representation would "establish the human subject as a rational being capable of objectifying  the world, yet on the other hand it limits the ability to know the world only to those aspects of it that can be rationally represented" (Judovitz 1988:67 cited by Lister, M. 2013:)

Heidigger's "picture" actually means representation, knowledge, validation and rationalism.

In photography, Cartesian representation is truthful and scientific. Bazin suggests we accept what we see as the real object in time and space."

Photography has been re-contextualized into power and discipline. In 2005, photography was still accepted as an informal idea in which the world is divided through light and shapes the chemicals into an analogue print.

The porridge of the index
Digital photographs do not have the same cultural of linguistic properties as its analogue counterpart.
The two are different and the change from one to another allows theorists to stand back and consider the assumption and paradigms that are associated with analogue photography. Krauss. I had to read around indexing in more detail.

"Peirce defines the index as a category of signs that maintains a physical tie to its referent[...] e.g. Photographs, especially instantaneous photographs are very instructive because we know that they are in certain respects exactly like the objects that they represent." (Schwartz, J. 2017)

This classification was too simple which led to confusion. Is there an indexical relationship within digital mediums? Photography is now more down to the algorithm of the data collected by the camera. Pixels can be manipulated so truth can be questioned. Although even analogue photography was not always truthful.

Where is the image once it has been uploaded to the internet?

References
Lister, M. (ed.) (2013) The digital image in photographic culture: Algorithmic photography and the crisis of representation. Abingdon: Routledge
Schwartz. J. (2017) Is a photograph still an index if it's on the internet? Available at: http://dismagazine.com/discussion/41736/a-discursive-mask/ [last accessed 31/01/2017]

Bibliography
Arrival (2016) directed by Dennis Villneuve [streamed] 21 laps entertainment, Lava Bear films USA [last accessed 31/01/2017]
Canfield, J. (2016) Arrival's ending explained [online] available at: http://screenrant.com/arrival-movie-2016-ending-time-explained/ [last accessed 31/01/2017]

Tuesday, 3 January 2017

Though a digital lens

Part 1
Discuss a photograph that takes an existing work of art as its starting point. Write a 500 word reflection on your chosen piece in your learning log.

Prosperine (1874) Gabrielle Rosetti
Fig 1: Prosperine (1874)
I came across this image in every charity bookshop I visited. I was planning to use this for part one, until research led me to an exhibition the Tate had run last year called Painting with Light (2016). I also discovered Minna Keene (Observation 1: Pomegranates 1905) had made a different photograph using the same painting as a basis which is mislabelled as Zaida Ben Yusuf's photograph by more than one site on the internet, questioning the truth of the internet as an archive.

Rosetti made 8 paintings of this, not being satisfied with his original attempt. He wrote to WA Turner, a customer in 1877 explaining the meaning behind the Greek myth which led him to paint the picture. William Morris suggested to Rosetti that painting Morris's wife as a representation of this myth would work as it was similar to their own lives. In mythology, Persiphone ate a pomegranate given to her by Hades resulting in her spending part of the year in the underworld.

The painting contains several signifiers :
Pomegranate - marriage, fertility, seeds indicate number of children (in this case number of months to spend with Hades in another world)
Ivy - perennial life, immortality, strong affectionate attachment
Gloomy corridor - trapped in her own world
light in the middle of the painting = passage to another place
Wrist angle - submissive
Facial expression - resentment






















“The odor of pomegranates” (1899) Zaida Ben Yusuf 

Fig 2. The odor of pomegranates (1899)
Zaida Ben Yusuf (1869-1933)
Born in London to a German mother and Algerian father. She became an American citizen working in a portrait studio on 5th Ave New York with work published in magazines and exhibiting in photography exhibitions.

Ben Yusuf photographed artists, actors, writers and political people in her studio. As part of the International Photography Congress in Paris (1900), Frances Benjamin Johnson presented 142 photographs by 28 women photographers, which also exhibited in Moscow. This image featured amongst her exhibited work In 1901 she was voted one of 6 “Foremost Women Photographers of America” by the Ladies Home Journal.

This publication was influential to middle class American women, inspiring them to recreate the images and develop a style of photographs representative of the Pictorialist movement who favoured beauty over reality. By using a soft blur, the image was similar to paintings.

Comparing the“The odor of pomegranates” with Dante Gabrielle Rosetti’s “Prosperine” (1874) both study a young woman looking at a pomegranate. In Rosetti’s painting the pomegranate is partially eaten suggesting that the fruit is reflecting regret about Rosetti’s love life (see above). Ben Yusuf’s uneaten fruit explores temptation (such as in Adam and Eve’s forbidden apple) seductiveness and desire. The averted gaze and expression suggests intimacy. Ben Yusuf’s subject is a study of form. The folded light drapes and pale skin contrast with the patterned drapes of the curtain, creating an emphasis on light and shadow. Rosetti captured the light in a different way - to show the gloomy life 
she shared with William Morris (her husband) and the bright light she could go to with Hades (Rosetti) with whom she shared an intimate relationship. The pomegranate seeds would normally represent fertility and the number of children the woman would have. In this case it refers to spending 6 months with Hades.





Part 2
Next remake an existing work of art using photography.



Figure 3 Hering, H (1856-7) Florence Nightingale


Illustrations
Figure 1. Rosetti, Dante. (1874)  Prosperine. [online] Available at: http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/rossetti-proserpine-n05064 last accessed 2/4/17
Figure 2. Yusuf, Zaida. (1899) The odor of pomegranates. [online] Available at: http://www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/zaida/gallery/newwoman01.html last accessed 2/4/17
Figure 3 Hering, H (1856-7) Florence Nightingale [photograph] Available at:  https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw111411/Florence-Nightingale?LinkID=mp03298&wPage=0&role=sit&rNo=10 Last accessed 26/2/18

Bibliography
Crompton, S. (2016) She takes a good picture: six forgotten pioneers of female photography. Guardian. [online] Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/may/06/underexposed-the-forgotten-female-pioneers-of-photography last accessed 2/4/17
Kerr, M. (2016) How photography and painting focused the Victorian mind. Apollo International Art Magazine. Available at: https://www.apollo-magazine.com/how-photography-and-painting-focused-the-victorian-mind/ lasst accessed 2/4/17
Lawson, S. (1995) Dopplegangers. Available at: http://wendymcmurdo.com/text/dopplegangers/ last accessed 2/4/2017
Linssen, D. (2007-2017)  American Women Photographers 1900-1940. Oxford Art online Available at: http://www.oxfordartonline.com/public/page/benz/themes/AmericanWomenPhotographers last accessed 2/4/17
Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery (n.d.) Zaida Ben Yusuf. [online] Available at: http://www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/zaida/gallery/newwoman01.html last accessed 2/4/17
O'Hagan, S. (2012) Hisaji Hara review. The Observer. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2012/feb/26/hisaji-hara-photography-hoppen-review last accessed 2/4/17
Tate (2016) Painting with light: Art and photography from the Pre-Raphaelites to the modern age. Available at: http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/painting-light last accessed 2/4/17
Tate (2016) People behind the pictures - Painting with light. Availabe at: http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/articles/people-behind-pictures-painting-with-light
last accessed 2/4/17
Tate (n.d.) Prosperine. Dante Gabrielle. Available at: http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/rossetti-proserpine-n05064 last accessed 2/4/2017
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJQYSPFo7hk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-XnQ2Wsxl8