Saturday, June 19, 2010

Studio practice workbook 7.

The Temple Gallery, 29 Moray Place


Locating a gallery to present this exhibition was, typically for me, left until the last minute. There are good reasons not to do this such as the fact that galleries like to book shows months ahead of the opening. Perhaps I was relying on the serendipity factor too much but luckily I was able to find a spot in a prestigious Dunedin gallery, The Temple Gallery.


The corridor where the Moment show will hang


The Temple Gallery's owner, Victoria Timpany, told me she knew my work from my earlier exhibitions and that photography was becoming more sought after by New Zealand art collectors. Normally a new artist would be introduced in the Christmas group show and then perhaps have a solo show some months later, I was told. I made a plea for any chance to show in the next month because the show was part of my Dip Grad FA course at Art School. Luckily, again, there was an open slot due to a cancellation and Victoria needed to cover this so I was able to be in the main gallery on short notice.

The plan at this stage was to pin the prints directly to the wall. The meant there was no need to frame or mount the works which I thought was another task ticked off.

This was not the case however. Because of the flux due to the cancelled show the time and location shifted again. I was now to show in the entrance corridor which did not have gallery lighting and the walls were not suitable to pin works to. I was worried at first by the dim lighting but then decided that it may actually suit the murky, indeterminate nature of my images. However, I did now have to come up with another hanging system.

Jacque Gilbert had previously used aluminium sheet as a backing material for photographs when she lived in Amsterdam and had recommended it to me. She had been working on finding suppliers and coming up with a technique to do this in Dunedin when I had a sudden need to mount the works that were going into the Moment show. After a successful workshop session I got my own materials and set to work at home. This involved getting sheets of .9mm aluminium plate cut to specific sizes.


They are prepared for gluing by sanding the surface with 600 grit wet&dry sandpaper.


A thin layer of modified EVA glue is rolled on and then the plate is placed onto the back of the print which I had marked to facilitate lining up.


The plate is placed in a press and pressure applied.


I used an old cast iron book press and thought a warm press might provide a superior bond so placed it on top a heater.


After about an hour the plate is replaced with the next one to go into the press. Once the glue had cured overnight I trimmed the surplus paper around the edge of the plate.



I marked the back of the plate with guide lines and then used superglue to fix a length of 10mm open box section aluminium. This was to provide an edge to hang the work from as well as to stiffen it.

The prints themselves are made with my own Epson R800 printer using epson inks and paper selected from the Hahnemühle Fine Art A4 sample packs. The variety in the packs allowed me to match particular effects and textures in the image to the surface it was printed on.

The date for the opening was changed to Monday which may have seemed an awkward day for an art exhibition but it was also the eve of winter solstice and so was deserving of celebration in it's own right. When handing out the exhibition flyer I told people to expect mulled wine.

Winter solstice is the time of year when we solargraphers find ourselves busy. It is the peak of the suns cycle and the chance to set cameras out in the wild in order to get a full six months exposure in the can. It also marks the end of my one year Graduate Diploma of Fine Arts course at the Otago Polytechnic School of Art.

Mihiwaka

Studio practice workbook 6.


When I first read about solargraphy I knew that I would become an enthusiast. It is in many ways the antithesis to digital photography in that the equipment is scrounged or made cheaply, the time periods involved are astoundingly long in comparison and the in-camera results are completely unique and unreproducible. All this suited me for one reason or another but I was also attracted to working without a digital camera. I often have a feeling of a kind of nakedness if I’m out without my camera, worried that I will miss an unexpected opportunity for a great image. I don’t get that feeling if I have my camera bag full of charged pinhole cameras with me. If I can realise the beauty of the world one way or another, then I am relaxed. 

Perhaps the strangest attraction of this method of image making relates back to Matt’s bomb scare. Of course people are going to be suspicious of small objects in unusual places, perhaps even more so if it is realised that these are cameras. We live in an age where surveillance by the authorities is becoming more prevalent while at the same time police and security guards overstep their powers in preventing public photography in public places. That might be overstating the case in this country but it is a growing trend particularly in the United Kingdom and the United States as evidenced by the organised backlash to this by groups such as The Love Police. All the same, when I fix a pinhole camera in a public place I am aware that it might appear as a suspicious activity. The camera itself will not last long if it is in a position where it is easily noticed. The game that I play while setting out cameras is to try to out think the person who might spot it. I have learned to avoid placing them at eye height or on a plain surface where they will stand out. I often see a likely position for placement but must return there at a time of day when less people are around to see me place it. I will prepare the double-sided tape used to attach the camera and remove the tape covering the aperture slightly beforehand so that I can walk up to my chosen spot, attach the camera and walk away with barely a pause. It is the thrill of spycraft as taught by Le Carré, the exhilaration of trying not to be caught in the act. It’s a kind of guerrilla photography. Now that the subject has been made national news and the police have stated that they want to be informed about such art projects the game’s stakes have been increased.

Solargraphy is an extension in both of those creative directions at once. It allows us an unblinking gaze at the view for a moment that lasts for months. It distorts the world to show a place like it never was and yet always is. We are reminded, if we think about it, how narrow the field of our perceptions are. And if we don’t think about it we are still presented with pretty pictures to gaze upon momentarily.









Studio practice workbook 5.

Screen grab: Chanel 9 Online


Something occurred part way through the development cycle. Fellow art student Matt Wilson began a solargraphy project of his own. He employed a similar technique to the one I did but was not as interested in discretion as I was. The outcome was that a cluster of his cameras attached to a bridge were noticed and mistaken to be an Improvised Explosive Device. Although in this part of the world it may seem like an overreaction by the police to some unusually located Coke cans, it should be noted that a genuine malicious bomb scare had closed Dunedin International Airport the day before. The events that followed included the evacuation of eleven houses, the closing of the main highway south of Dunedin and the Bomb Squad flying from Christchurch by helicopter for the second time in as many days. To his credit Matt volunteered himself to the police as soon as he realised that it was his pinhole cameras that had caused the commotion. Following on from that fuss was the round of apologies and embarrassment from Matt and on his behalf by the School of Art. Then came a feature article on Matt and his solargraphy in the arts section of the Otago Daily Times.

Otago Daily Times 6 May 2010


When I heard from Matt about the incident soon after it occurred I knew it was going to generate interest for him. Difficult and embarrassing for sure and for a while with the possibility of a criminal charge, but still, a pretty spectacular jump start for an artist early in his career.

My feelings at this point were mixed. I was not the originator of the technique of solargraphy but I felt that I had some claim to be associated with pioneering solargraphy in Dunedin. I had been enthusiastically working on my solargraphy project for one and a half years developing it, I had thought, as an art form. I mentioned this in conversation to Nigel Benson, the author of the ODT arts section article about Matt, several months before the Koremata St bridge ‘bomb’ scare. I was upset that there was nothing in that article to suggest that Matt had not invented the technique himself. Recognition for my work seemed to have been taken from me. I was disgruntled and didn’t want to be.

I realise now that the presumed challenge to my ‘ownership’ of solargraphy in the local setting forced me to re-examine my work. What had I achieved after making and setting out dozens and dozens of cameras? What discoveries had I made over all that time of development? What had I brought to solargraphy that was genuinely creative? I determined that I needed to see it only as a technique and not an art form in itself. The bright streaks of light across the sky should not be the focus of the viewers attention, rather it was how I used the technique to convey a feeling or a narrative that should be my focus. I re-examined how I selected the images that lead the direction of my project. I reconsidered earlier images that were somehow interesting but had not shown the ‘required’ amount of solar activity.

Paul Virilio wrote about the pioneering photography of Nicéphore Niépce: “The main aim of the heliographic plate is not to revel the assembled bodies so much as to let itself be ‘impressed’, to capture signals transmitted by the alternation of light and shade, day and night, good weather and bad, the ‘feeble autumn luminosity’ that hampers Niépce in his work” .

I thought of my work along similar lines. The object was not to record an image of what could be seen, rather the light and conditions should be allowed to act upon the paper. The resulting image is made from the actions of the things that we expect and know about such as the position of viewable objects and movement of the sun. There other things at work here that we are not aware of. What objects pass before the camera too briefly to be recognisably recorded? Anything that happens within the field of view during daylight will reflect light from it’s surface and through the pinhole. Whether a trace is left on the paper may be impossible to say. At a certain level of detail there is too much noise and uncertainty to tell. Solargraphs often seem to contain mysterious marks and figures that perplex even an experienced solargrapher. My renewed focus brought me to reconsider those images with mysteries. I did not now see them as imperfect landscapes or architectural studies. Instead I began to read them at face value. Previously I might have thought, ‘What is that blue dot on a field of red?’, now I think ’Why am I moved by that blue dot?’

Other aesthetic choices evolved along the way. I became more interested in the play of sunlight upon water and through trees. The effect of these things on the images was an increase in chaotic patterns and weird colours. I sought places to fix my cameras that made more of this. Without fail the resulting paper image would be nothing like my mental image as I set the cameras yet I composed the shots as if I had complete control.


Coldwater Creek

Studio practice workbook 4.

East facing room of the Priory

This is my intention within my current studio practise: to extend the viewer’s perception of time beyond the everyday norm through the technique of extreme long exposure photographs. However, whether I have succeeded or not in this task seems to me to have become eclipsed by the often unexpected results. The worked-on images that have eventually appeared on my monitor (to my mind somehow like they mysteriously do in the chemical tray to the Darkroom Developer) often resemble nothing like my pre-visualisation. Dark and foggy exposures, unusual distortions, inexplicable farfopteros; I am often at a loss to explain where and how an image was made.

Something else takes over as the core aesthetic of the image. They seem inhabited by an atmosphere or mood. I was asked if any of the images I made in the long disused Priory showed ghosts. ‘All of them,’ I replied. Each image is a raft of unanswered questions. There has been a continuing discussion among my friends whether the images are more successful as artworks if each is presented with an explanation of where it depicts and what it is about or whether the image itself should be able to stand alone. I cannot commit myself to an answer either way.

I once attended a workshop run by a digital photographer who showed us his method for creating his award winning atmospheric landscapes. He added layer upon subtle layer of textures onto his images. A touch of tree bark, a shimmer of lace, toned down and washed out. I felt that his work was fakery and was unimpressed by the images. With these solargraphs, however, the atmospheric effects come unbidden and without my intention to add effects. The process gives equal opportunities to serendipitous enhancement as to unfortunate spoilage and it is left to me to choose which is which.

I should mention at this point my relationship with serendipity. I believe that it can be used as a method. When working with known qualities and proven formula the result will probably be predictable, which may not be a good thing. If one stirs it up and adds some randomness, one may have to work like hell to salvage the whole mess. It is between the gaps in the creaking structure that one allows something unexpected and possibly brilliant into the creation. In my experience of theatre studies, groups would often be called. The cool and clever invariably got together and produced predictably cool and clever results. I learned to wait until there were only the unconfident and the misfits left to make the last group and I would join them. This is the group that I thought had a chance to produce something unpredictable and possibly astounding.

Axel with box of pinhole cameras

One aspect of working on a project that involves such long time frames is that it is difficult to make developments within a shorter time frame. That is the predicament I found myself in this year when I decided to use solargraphy as my subject for studio practise. In some respects it was an easy choice. I had begun work on it a year previously so was already well involved. More importantly, I was still fascinated by the process and eager to explore it further. At one point I thought I might have it a bit too easy; I was sitting back while my cameras were out in the world working while other students were busy worrying about studio time and finding models. I realised my folly when it was time for me to evaluate my work so far in order to develop it further. If I processed my images early I was missing out on months of exposure time and possibly wasting the months that had gone into them so far. It became a compromise. I brought in cameras that may not have been fully ‘cooked’ and used the results to inform the sets of shorter term cameras that I set out. I found my direction moving from an interest in pure landscape and sky images to more subject orientated ones.

At this time I was also becoming frustrated with technical issues. The new high resolution Epson V30 scanner I had bought was not performing well. The images appeared with coloured bands across them. The cause puzzled me but I now think that it happened because the buffer filled in the scanner memory causing it to pause a number of times mid scan, each pause created a band. I returned to my original scanner but was not sure what to make of the images 'damaged' by faulty scans.

East facing balcony


Water of Leith, Anzac Ave bridge

Eventually, with the encouragement of my supervisor Rachel Gillies, I began to see these 'glitched' images as being interesting in themselves and chose to include some of them in the show.

Studio practice workbook 3.


Port Chalmers

The ‘moment’ is a usefully vague measurement of time. It is used to represent an unspecified short period of time. Perhaps it represents a period of no-time, when human time stops long enough to comprehend something happening. “I was thinking of something else for a moment”, one might say. Something that happens at a speed faster than can be grasped such as the ‘click’ of a camera shutter opening and closing can occur within a moment. An experienced photographer listening to the click might tell you accurately the length of time the shutter was open but for most this would be a mere technicality. A moment is a subjective measurement. If the four and a half billion years of earth’s existence was not experienced on human terms, can we say that it passed in a moment?

Solargraphy is evidence of a photographic moment that extends beyond normal conventions. Each clear day adds another growth ring to the concentric series of arcs marking the sun’s path. A season or two or three will fill the sky with these luminous intermittent bands. For us the time period that is covered might include hundreds of mundane work days, unexpected life changing events, long awaited news but for the camera it might as well be a click. That moment, fixed as an image on paper, is a view outside of the limits of our perception of time.

Careys Bay

Cameras are machines that extend our perception into realms that were not previously accessible. Muybridge’s images froze human and animal movement and allowed for the first time detailed analysis of such things as the mechanics of a horses gait when trotting or galloping. Harold Edgerton’s 1964 photograph “Shooting an apple” surprisingly shows apple matter exploding from both entry and exit directions. So familiar that they become clichéd are the long-exposure photographs of the light trails left by cars at night or else the circular trails of stars as the night sky rotates around the pole. Solargraphy takes long exposure technique to a new extreme so that the photographic moment takes place over months. The viewer can enter this extended moment and perceive the world in these terms.


View of Goat and Quarantine Islands

Studio practice workbook 2.


1952 Commer 15 CWT

Finished and printed solargraphs do have a tendency to take on some characteristics of the battered, hard worn photographic paper. The process of enlargement makes the grain of the paper more prominent. The dust and water, flaws and distortions are all very apparent. The originators of the technique coined the term “Farfopteros” to describe the detritus that finds it’s unlikely way into the camera via the pinhole. The name might read better in Spanish but the idea is universal. That isn’t the only unpredictable aspect to image making this way. The pinhole is itself a unique and critical construction. Machine made pinholes are available, pressed with superfine accuracy. I prefer to make them myself using thick aluminium foil and a thin needle. I use fine sand paper to take off the burrs that may or may not exist beyond the limits of my eyesight. Imperfections that result from this handcrafting have a bearing on the image . Some cameras will make sharper images than others, all of them are unique to their maker.

Composing the image is the joyous part. Perhaps there are endorphins that are released when one is in the creative zone. I find the world transformed and that I’m surrounded by beauty at these times. This may essentially be the reason why I attempt art at all.

I took notice of the description by Marc Anton Gaudin, one of the first Daguerreotypists, of the excitement caused by the ‘gift to the world’ upon the release of Daguerre’s photographic method. “Each of us wanted to copy the view from our windows. Fortunate indeed was the man who on the first attempt obtained a silhouette of roofs against the sky: he went into ecstasies over chimney-pots”

Negative images on photographic paper - as scanned

Studio practice workbook 1.


These blog entries represent the workbook of my studio practice leading towards MOMENT, an exhibition of Solargraphy, opening at the Temple Gallery on 21 June 2010. This is the final part of my Graduate Diploma in Fine Arts at the Otago Polytechnic School of Art.

In 2000 solargraphy was developed in Szczecin, Poland by Diego Lopez Calvin, Slawek Decyk and Pawel Kula - known as Team Solaris. Their idea was to create an international project for people around the world to collaboratively make simultaneous solargraphic images. I first came across solargraphy through the amusing and enthusiastic pinhole and solargraphy work of UK based Justin Quinell.
http://www.pinholephotography.org/

I have had some correspondence with Diego López Calvín who has been supportive without giving away the techniques he uses to create his superb colours.

The technique for solargraphy is that a pinhole camera is constructed and loaded with photosensitive paper. The camera is positioned where it can view the subject, which should include the path of the sun, and will not be disturbed. The aperture is opened and the camera is left untouched for days, weeks or months. The usual practice in pinhole photography is to expose for seconds or minutes and then in the darkroom process the paper normally. That is to develop and fix the image.  The technique used in solargraphy is somewhat different. Since the images are exposed for such extreme lengths of time the usual photochemical process is altered. The negative image becomes visible on the photographic paper without the need of chemical processing. In fact, my own experimental attempts to develop and fix solargraphic prints were unsuccessful. My results were either blackened images from the developer or completely faded images from the fix. Solargraphic practice is to remove the photographic paper from the camera under safelight conditions and scan it directly to a computer. The light from the scanner will degrade and “fog” the original image simultaneously as it is scanned. With each successive scan the image will lose definition. This means that there is only one chance to get the best possible image transferred to the computer and the original will be destroyed. Once the image is scanned and loaded into a photo editing program, it is inverted positive to negative and flipped left to right. Various adjustments are made to contrast and colour according to the whim of the artist. I see this part of the process as where much of the artistry as opposed to technique takes place. 

The process, then, is something of a hybrid of new and old. Lensless photography using a light sensitive medium is a technique from photography’s earliest days, although the light sensitive emulsion used these days is the result of a century and a half of development. The digitising of the image is of course a relatively recent innovation. It is this that makes the solargraphy technique possible. Digitisation makes it easy to handle, manipulate and print many copies of an image.

A fundamental difference solargraphy has to other photography methods is the destruction of the original work in the process of realising the desired image. The little black package that was the camera may have spent three seasons held to the discreet corner of a wall by the chemical faith of double-sided sticky tape. The camera, usually made in batches of dozens, might not have cost much in materials and time to construct but it gains value by it’s sheer good fortune and longevity. A steady stint will pay off in light absorbed and information collected. The reward to the photographer, if he has composed his shot well, can be immense. Of course many cameras don’t make it home and some philosophising over loss and attachment is sometimes called for during their harvesting. There is also plenty of room for misadventure in the rest of the process of digitisation. A mis-scan can easily ruin the result of half a year’s work.

Once the photochemical pattern is transduced into binary code the original paper will become useless. If the act of creation is related to destruction, as in “You have to break a few eggs to make an omelette”. The sacrifice has been made and the equation is seemingly complete.







 
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This work by Chris Reid is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 New Zealand License.