Archive

Tom White

English-born photographer Tom White originally wanted to be a painter, but took a strong interest in photography and works as a freelance photographer in New Jersey, where he now resides. He went to the International Center for Photography where he studied journalism and documentary photography. I especially like his American Landscapes project, which depicts how man shapes his environment and the landscape: building roads, constructing billboards, gas stations, and railways. The long exposures of the landscapes obscure any evidence of people being in the frame: brake lights and headlights streak through the image, people walking are blurred.

His portrait and street photographs are particularly interesting as well. Many of these photographs are of homeless people, sometimes juxtaposing two ends of the income scale.

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Useful Links:

Personal Site

Beate Gütschow

Edit: Even though the heading to the post says this was published by Andy Duncan, it was truly published by fellow contributor, Scott Wheeler.

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Beate Gütschow (German b. 1970) digitally constructs landscape photographs after the manner of seventeenth and eighteenth century painters. Each image is composed of anywhere from thirty to one hundred different photographic elements, captured on film, scanned and then composited. The final montage is a photorealistic rendering of an arcadian landscape, which often contains subtle intentional artifacts showing the idealized place to be something less than whole.

At the time when Constable, Vernet, Lorrain, Poussin, and Gainsborough were painting landscapes, there were rigorous guidlines in place for the construction of their landscapes. Gütschow adhered closely to these patterns in her works, here she describes the old methods:

At the time, “landscape” in painting was a very artificial, highly organized construct: the picture was divided into foreground, middle ground, and background. The foreground is the entrance: the viewer “walks” into the picture from this entry point. The landscape is framed by clumps of trees and bushes, like a stage. The people, the staffage are generally placed in the middle ground. They look out into the landscape on the behalf of the viewer. The middle ground often contains a river or a path. The background is composed of a view into the distance: ranges of hills that vanish into the haze. The light mainly enters from the side, illuminating some areas and leaving others in shadow. The many layers create great spatial depth.


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Through these methods landscape painters would imagine edenic splendor, and populate it with bits and pieces of their own world. They would perhaps sample local flora and fauna in their depictions of religious or mythological themes, synthesizing an idealized mythic past from the banal contents of their present age. This wresting of disparate elements into a whole is related well by Richard Payne Knight, in a poem written in 1794:

I know that nature scarcely affords a complete and faultless composition; but nevertheless she affords the parts of which taste and invention may make complete and faultless compositions; and it is by accurately and minutely copying these parts, and afterwards skillfully and judiciously combining and arranging them, that the most perfect works in the art have been produced.


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The advent of photography in the mid nineteenth century brought upon a change in how one could render the world. The previous idea of landscapes constructed in a theatrical manner, like a stage or diorama, was outmoded by the cameras stationary singular viewpoint. In fact it was it’s stubborn ability to show every minute detail that brought it so much disdain from the art community. This is partly to blame for Baudelaire’s relegation of photography to the role of “handmaiden to the arts.”

Photography’s abruptness brings with it a weight of evidence, a sense that what we see in the picture is referent of reality and is true. Gütschow plays with this by using reference material which was not necessarily taken in pastoral nature. She shoots in urban and rural areas alike but excludes most evidence of our current landscape. Gütschow’s ability to recontextualize elements of our postindustrial landscape and return it to a vision of utopia, creates a compelling argument for the efficacy of photography in the digital age.


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Further information: Gütschow had a book LS / S published in 2007 by Aperture. Find it here.

Katie Kingma

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Katie Kingma makes photographs that examine the relationship between “memory, events and place.” She draws inspiration from dreams, and psychological thriller movies such as those made by Alfred Hitchcock. Some of the subjects photographed are Katie herself.

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Pulling myself in the work was sort of like I was committing myself to the character; I was becoming the character. . . . Years ago I was really torn between going to school for acting/filmmaking or pursuing photography. I chose the latter because that way I could be a writer, director and character all in one. It’s the creative process of storytelling that I love most with my photography.

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Useful links:

Personal Website

PDN’s Top 30

Lisa M. Robinson

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A few months ago my good friend Scott Wheeler referred me to Lisa M. Robinson’s website. I was immediately captivated. The minimalist compositions, the flat light in winter under which she photographed–which i find hard to work with either in color or black and white–drew me in. Her photographs are all about what she calls a “cultural landscape” where man’s remaining presence is evident, even with the physical absence of a human being. Many have very obvious evidence of man’s presence, while others obscure man-made objects with the natural world; other photographs give the feeling of being in an arctic wasteland.

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On the surface, these images are quite beautiful. They appear elegantly simple and accessible, evoking, perhaps, the silent tranquility that one might feel after a fresh snowfall. Beneath the surface, however, there is a subtle tension. Like fine haiku, each image quietly references another season, a time of life or activity that has already passed, and may come again. Throughout the series run the leitmotifs of poles and ropes and a palette of man-made color. The relationship between the human and the natural world becomes more tightly intertwined as the series progresses, and the cycles of life and death and transformation fold inward.

 

Living in southeast Idaho for nearly all my life, I think I have an even grander appreciation for these images. I’ve seen many scenes very similar to some of Robinson’s photographs. The photographs have rich monochromes, and some show small accents of “man-made color” which is what I find so intriguing about the work. My work, which has been nearly all black and white landscapes is (and I’ll be the first to admit) pretty romanticized. Even photographs that show negative or damaging effects man has incurred on the land are “beautified.” Recently I’ve begun photographing more in color, and they have been more panchromatic, and seeing work like Robinson’s is really inspiring.

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Useful links:

Personal website

SCAD Outstanding Alumni

PhotoEye

What It’s All About

After a few conversations with my friend Jon Long (who’s original idea this is), I’ve decided to take on a project wherein I choose a photographer to study/analyze, with the end result in viewing getting to know 52 photographers in a year. Don’t let that last statement and the name of this site make you think I’ll only do this for a year; I plan on maintaining this blog as long as I have the energy to do so.

I’ll be publishing a post every Sunday with my review. I hope this blog can become a resource for friends, strangers, students, and anyone else interested in photography and seeing new photographers. I don’t intend this to be very comprehensive, but I hope it can be a point of departure for those needing to research other photographers, or are just wanting to expand their “vocabulary.”

A bit of a caveat: I am a landscape photographer, so most of the photographers I review will likely be landscape photographers as well, but don’t be scared away if you’re bored with landscape photography. The whole reason for this is to look at photographers from all styles: landscape, documentary, portrait, conceptual, installation…anything and anyone I find interesting.