Thursday 7 February 2013

Alexander Honory

Each photographic image holds a moment, a fraction of the past that holds and proves the existence of its author, the object within and the owner. By finding and re-presenting images like these artists like Alexander Honory are saving that moment in time and the memory from eternal destruction and symbolically restoring the presence of the people/objects within them. Where as Schmid takes a more physical approach to recycling images in order to help the environment, Honory uses a more 'spiritual' way to present his art. His method on re-producing the images he finds and reconstructing the meanings is through presentation. He uses enlargement, framing ect to highlight the human within the image, giving the common 'family photograph' individuality. He likes to respect his subjects and authors by not only bringing back the images but focusing on the entirety of the moment in which it was taken. For example in his work "Thirteen newlywed couples for Berlin", he projected giant wedding images in the town centre of Berlin to take a private intimate photograph and re-present it in the most public way possible. In the mid 90's he then started to question the significance of photography within family memories. He would write a description of what was missing out of the photograph and present the words in the gallery instead of the images, this work was called "The Lost Pictures". This work was widely open to interpretation, where Honory was actually portraying his disbelief in the power of photography. Controversially although he is a photographer, he struggles to believe that photography is able to describe what images really represent. This work reflects the pieces I made in the first year, layering words over the images questioning which medium best represents what happened at the time.

Finding words first


 After reading about Ed Ruscha I decided to take a different approach. Ruscha spoke about how somtimes he would find the words and add the images after. So what I did was searched the internet for phrases commenting on society and then took my own images to overlay them with.







Wednesday 6 February 2013

Ed Ruscha – Word Paintings




Ruscha is an American artist who worked with a variety of medias including painting, printing, photography and illustration around the Pop Art movement.  His art training was based around commercial photography which introduced his interest in typography and using words within images.  His first works included oil paintings with comic writing layered over the top referring to popular culture.  He once spoke about where his phases come from: “Well, they just occur to me; sometimes people say them and I write down and then I paint them. Sometimes I use a dictionary.” I find this really interesting, and so far have worked using images first and then finding words to overlay them, however I am now thinking about starting with words then finding images after and see what a different effect this has on the work outcome. Ruscha has always used different means to add words onto his images, for example pouring liquid over a flat monochromatic surface, this is something I would have really liked to have tried in my project, bringing in more of an ‘art’ factor into my work however at this point it is not a path I could take with the time scale I have but will hopefully something I can practice in the future. I also like the way Ruscha makes connections to his words outside of his images, for example a project in which he presented seven different words that rhymed, and in a separate project he did a series of images with “dirty” and inviting phrases. This sort of play on words it what attracted my attention to his works. However there is an ongoing theme throughout his work, even if it is sometimes not so obvious, Rushca is constantly asking questions about the impact urban life has on society. 






Friday 1 February 2013

Reusing images

Next I wanted to add words to my found images in the style of Kruger. Out of the negatives I chose these two images because they contradict each other, portraying the male gender of both weak and strong. Looking through Krugers work I have seen that she emphasises these stereotypes. However I wanted to make fun of them, trying to portray the point that not all men are physically strong or mentally week. This is why I used the language "man strong" and "man weak", because grammatically it makes no sense, therefore mocking the meaning. To emphasise my point I also used quotation marks to show that they are not my personal opinions but those of socialists such as Kruger. I also used paper on top or a darkroom print and brown tape to stick it down to experiment with how montage would look. Technically when enlarging the prints in the dark room I did have to do a bit of dodging and burning on both images, however because of the poor quality on the negatives or the original photograph that was taken the quality of the prints were not 'technically' pleasing. However from the beginning I said that because I had no control over the negatives themselves, the image quality out come wasn't important, making it conceptual.