Friday, 14 December 2012

Roland Barthes' Latin








After reading an excerpt from Camera Lucida by Roland Barthes, I realise it presents numerous challenging ideas. Firstly, the obviously bereft mindset of Barthes and his apathetic approach to the majority of photography. I do believe, however, that Barthes tries to find a point of interest within all photographs and simply has a particularly selective taste. This taste seems to be drawn to images with a distinct sense of realism and sadness. However, the sadness is not always present within the images themselves but the 'punctum' within the context.

For example, he explains how photographs of the past present the 'punctum' of unavoidable death: the death of the subjects that has already occurred and therefore we are looking back with nostalgic sentimentality but with an unnatural feeling of omniscience. This idea suggests we can never approach a photo without feeling this contrast in emotion, well, not those who have read the same excerpt from Camera Lucida anyway. For the rest of the population, they recognise a certain over-shaddowing feeling of a tainted memory but this to them is inexpressible and the thought inevitably passes them by.
     
This apathy towards photography, Barthes describes in a singular latin word: studium. Studium is the general subjective response a photograph without any specialised or previously learned contextual knowledge (in terms of photography). It allows someone to like, dislike or be immersed in a photograph without any in-depth knowledge as to the context: political, religious and ethical references etc
Many photographs are, alas, inert under my gaze. But even among those which have some existence in my eyes, most provoke only a general and, so to speak, polite interest: they have no punctum in them: they please or displease me without pricking me: they are invested with no more than studium. - Roland Barthes (Camera Lucida)
A particular modernist sensibility is in fact that the image and aesthetics are presented and contemplated before the context (if the context is even necessary). This presents the idea that modernism conforms to Barthes theory of 'studium' at least. As for 'punctum', the stark realism of modernist photography often lends itself to the presentation of particularly emotive subject matter. And so the connection begins to unfold. However, the photographs Barthes talks of in the excerpt are by the Dutch reporter Koen Wessing and are documentary, un-staged images. This, therefore, sets it apart from Walker Evans' portraits.
A photograph taken from Koen Wessing's Nicaragua 1979 selection; one of the photographs Barthes talks about when explaining his theory of studium and punctum.
This photograph is them contrasted when compared to Walker Evans' work surrounding the great depression as although they are both of similarly distressing circumstances, the process hinders the context and gives a certain feeling of insincerity.

One of Walker Evans' photographs of The Great Depression

Although their seemingly candid nature, in order to capture the appropriate emotional distress and 'realism' Walker Evans took numerous shots. This idea of 'setting up' a shot asks questions about the objectivity and subjectivity within modernism which is viewed almost with a kind of worthiness in comparison to post-modernism and its well documented irony and subjectivity.

Friday, 7 December 2012

Composition Exploration - Lewis Baltz



In order to find out just why Lewis Baltz’s photographs worked so well in terms of composition I decided to analyze a single photograph and deconstruct its composition. Firstly I wanted to look at how the horizontal lines were arranged so I used a light box, placed another piece of paper over the top, drew across all the horizontal lines then used this new composition to create a monochrome painting. For the second piece, I wanted to understand how the boxes worked within the composition in terms of positioning and alignment. So for this I decided to print off a copy of the original and paint the whole thing black, leaving only the boxes. By only using black and white to create the painting, it retained the intentional minimalist, stark and geometric presentation of the original photograph.

Both exercises allowed me to physically see clearly the composition and in turn showed that, regardless of content, the composition Lewis Baltz has created would work on its own but coupled with the content it allows for a very effective and bold piece of art. Also, the composition clearly presents an indefinite sense of modernism with the almost grid-like structure, which is something I intend to look for.

Public Places, Berkeley, 1972
As you can see from the image, the horizontal composition is very formal and uniform. Compositional balance is something that is clearly evident within this piece and is generally a common focus in most modernist work.