Vanessa Louzon

Friday, October 23rd, 2009 - Nicholas Calcott

Vanessa Louzon
Vanessa Louzon, selections from ‘Family Dinners’ series

I have sat on this one since i heart photograph first posted Vanessa Louzon back in February.  I never found a good enough reason to post her, but I keep returning to her – I find her reworked family photographs incredibly… appetizing.  In her words:

[A] collection of reworked photos of family dinners that took place in my mother’s family home in Szczecin, Poland, ranging from 1978 to 2008. The series of photographs show the evolution of life in Poland, from the communist 70s and 80s, to today’s modern consumerist times, while its traditions and mentalities remain unchanged.

More on her site.

Looking at Pictures…

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009 - Nicholas Calcott

Junior Bazaar
Junior Bazaar, January, 1947, with art direction from Alexei Brodovitch

Fred Ritchin writes frequently on how photography, and specifically concerned photojournalism, is and has changed on the web and in the era of digital.  A recent post caught my eye:

When one looks at great magazine design there is almost nothing like it on the Web. The era of mass picture magazines started with magazines like Vu in France where the covers were as graphic and stunning as posters. Inside pages for Vu and other early magazines like Regards and Picture Post were used to experiment with all kinds of juxtapositions of images, text and other graphic elements. But what we end up with in terms of design at the beginning of the Web era is much like what we have in desktop publishing — clean sites that look professional but are almost never transcendent.

Clearly, a lot of this has to do with the technology – In print, it’s one thing to, for example, overlay text and image, and in code it’s an entirely different and much more complicated thing.  Which is not to say the technology isn’t there, because it is, in Flash, which is an entirely different ballgame in terms of ease of use and loading times on a site.  As it is, Flash sites tend to be overdesigned, not underdesigned, frequently suffering from the seductiveness of whizzing, moving images and text, not an unwillingness to experiment with the medium.

Anyways, even within the limitations of technology, there are few people willing to push the limitations of text and image on the web.  I can think of one, off the top of my head – i heart photograph, with it’s seemingly endless list of photos of the day and willingness to ignore the conventions of blog interface in order to give the reader an endless way to explore it’s particular corner of the photography world.

Words Without Pictures site is one (recently back online with the publication of their book) even though it’s dialogue between text and photos is defined by a self-conscious absence of the latter. A commenter on Ritchin’s original post points to three other super-flashy sites: http://www.sobluesoblue.nl; http://www.go-no-go.nl; and the really, really excellent accompaniment to the book of the same name, http://www.whymisterwhy.org.

Who knows of any others that bear a special mention?

P.S. I wasn’t able to track down an decent images of Vu, but you can find a couple here and here and some more with a google search.

Toru Aoki

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008 - Nicholas Calcott


Toru Aoki

Following with the generally morbid tone around here today, here are Toru Aoki‘s ghostly images, featured on i heart photograph a while back.

Catch Up

Saturday, April 19th, 2008 - Nicholas Calcott


Carlo Van De Roer, from the series ‘Blinded By The Light’

Some of you may notice that I took a few days away from blogging last week. I was, unfortunately, terribly busy. Anyways, I’m sequestered away this weekend to catch up on a bunch of things I’ve fallen terribly behind on. One of them, of course, is blogging. The next few posts are to that end.

One artist I’ve been meaning to point to is Carlo Van De Roer, who was recently up for sale on 20×200, and who takes already well known pictures of pools and swimming. In addition, his recent work will appeal to anyone who’s a fan of i heart photograph.

Long Exposures

Monday, March 31st, 2008 - Nicholas Calcott

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Mathew Pillsbury

I fucking love long exposures, so it was with great joy that I came across the following two posts:

i heart photograph posts on the work of Lisa Byrne
Shoot! posts on the work of Mathew Pillsbury

Which also reminded me of one of Roni Horn‘s books, that I can’t find the images or name of, that were all shot in a sauna or something but had no subject but a blurry figure that was in an occasional image. Any ideas?

Ethnic Restaurants

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008 - Nicholas Calcott

evapel_3.jpg
Eva Pel’s ‘Mexican’

Over on i heart photograph, I found a short series by Dutch artist, Eva Pel. It’s only 4 images long, which is a shame because I totally love the series. It reminds me of this old Vietnamese restaurant I go to whenever I’m in Seattle that has the best food in town and these giant, wraparound, full technicolor murals of alpine meadows. I have no idea what the relationship is between pho and the ‘Sound of Music,’ but if there wasn’t one that existed before, this restaurant provides it.

Digital vs. Analog Part 3

Friday, February 29th, 2008 - Nicholas Calcott

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Yeah, that’s right, I’m using that Gursky image

The following is the third part in a multi part essay. The first part can be found here, and the second here. I’ll publish each part whenever I get around to it:

It must be said that there are quite a few art photographers who have taken advantage of the things offered by digital (a discussion of who, exactly, recently took place over at 40 Watt), some of whom are extremely popular, but the full on migration to digital has never really happened in the way that seemed such a possibility only a few years ago. It really seemed, for a little while, that the photo world was on the verge of a sea change to digital that would be as significant and as drastic as the migration to color in art photography was in the 70′s.

I recall visiting the Andreas Gursky retrospective at MOMA when I first arrived in New York, and being some what shocked to hear that he actually created some of the works with digital manipulation. Now it seems so old-hat that I usually forget to include him in my list of photographers who use digital because he does it in such a subtle way. And if, as Mcluhan states, “the medium is the message,” and digital is a much different medium, how can we react to work done digitally with such a shrug?

Well, frankly, it’s because digital is apparently not such a different medium, and photographers have always accepted the idea of manipulation in their work. The very act of framing is a manipulation, as Joel Sternfeld recently announced to the Guardian in defense of photography, so a manipulation like Gursky’s which doesn’t seem to invalidate photographic reality seems like such a small thing.

But crossing that line into photographic un-reality seems to be a much bigger deal, and one that the photo community seems, in large measure, to recoil from (unlike the art world, from which photogs like Loretta Lux seems to have found a much more comfortable home). As photographers, it still seems normal to announce that “I prefer straight photography.” And most of the photo blogs fit this criteria.

So why hasn’t the increased freedom of creative possibility (as opposed to distributive possibility) spread throughout photography? The only site I know about which consistently showcases explicitly digital un-realities is the red headed step child of the photoblog world, (the often featured here) i heart photograph. The rest seem to stick with the traditions of documentary photography, always constrained by journalistic ethics, which (sometimes explicitly, sometimes not) conveniently ignores the act of creation that is the taking of a picture.

Due to that whole ethics thing, photojournalism has settled into the digital age much more comfortably. This biggest changes in this field seem to be distribution and speed. There are a bunch of photojournalism online magazines, and, of course, the big boys like the NY Times, Newsweek, and Time all feature multimedia content on their websites [which I occasionally feature], and numerous sites have popped up with picture news that is the supposed antidote to the mainstream media (two of my favs are Pixelpress and Mediastorm). Of course, one can argue that the speed with which work is published in this realm leads to a failure to engage with a story for longer than it takes to file a story, but I have to say that I, for one, am glad to see images coming out of news events immediately after they happen. But film still raggedly holds its grip on a select few (many of whom find their home in the boutique agencies like Magnum and VII), where its sometimes seen as a mark of commitment and a willingness to really become involved in a story, in opposition to the wire agencies, who exclusively use digital.

Some people have engaged within the fine art tradition without breaching the decorum of ‘straight’ photography. The book ‘End Commercial‘ [which, Dean, I finally got a chance to see] is a great example of how digital has freed the medium. Its a compendium of images- a photographer and art director’s attempts to index the city. And it’s exhaustive. There is almost everything in there, and in a volume that never would have been possible without cheap digital cameras, databasing programs, and the organizational skills that the web has taught us all.

This, I think, has been the real revolution of digital – not the one image, but the many. Blogs like The Sartorialist (and, indeed, most blogs) are great for this, in that they index a particular component of the world in an obsessive manner. But this approach is inherently limited – No one image will provide a payoff (For more on this particular example, see Robert Wright’s blog, here and here). The experience of these indexes is more akin to a scientific study (even if the subject is not one normally so deserving of rigorous analysis) than it is like literature or classical art, an approach not without merit but somewhat limited.

Part 4 will be posted Monday or earlier (perhaps).
If this post interests you, please link it or post to the comments – I‚Äôd love to get feedback, suggestions, evidence for and against, but most of all a discussion.