Monday, April 29, 2013

Robert Mapplethorpe

Self Portrait, 1975

Robert Mapplethorpe (Portfolio) was an iconic photographer of the 20th century-famous for his black and white provocative portraits of men. Robert was born and raised in Queens in a strict catholic family.


Mapplethorpe did not start out as a photographer. He studied drawing and graphic arts at Pratt in Brooklyn, and hobbied in mixed media collage. Robert was engaged in the avant garde scene of the city in the late 60s and early 70s; connecting with artists, musicians, and socialites living in the Chelsea Hotel. Mapplethorpe did much of his creating and artistic expression under the influence of psychedelic drugs such as LSD. The first camera he owned was a Polaroid and was mainly interested in photographing friends to integrate into his collages. The Light Gallery in NYC held a show of his Polaroids in 1973.

Robert acquired a Hasselblad camera and with the change in format came a change in subject as well. He began his professional career by taking Patti Smith's portrait for her album cover, and also party pictures for Interview Magazine. From here his career began to expand.

While exploring his sexuality, Mapplethorpe was photographing the New York City S&M scene. While his photographs where aesthetically pleasing to the eye, they also shocked, excited and disturbed audiences. Yet, perfection that Mapplethorpe strives for in his photographs of the male form make his work more serious.

As his career and scope expanded, he was showing at multiple galleries in New York and was even envited to show at Documenta 6 in Kassel Germany which is a famous festival of contemporary art. Eventually, the Robert Miller gallery became his exclusive dealer.
Ajitto, 1981 / printed 1991
gelatin silver print
paper: 20 x 16 inches (50.8 x 40.6 cm)
edition of 15
MAP-542

As times changed in the city and America welcomed the Reagan administration, Mapplethorpe's style was changing rapidly to more stylized, aesthetically pleasing images of the nude form and flowers. Mapplethorpe photographed flowers in a sensual manner just as Georgia O'keefe depicts them in her work.

When I visited the Accademia in Florence last year, I was surprised to see in the sculpture room a lone photograph of a nude male by Robert Mapplethorpe-it complimented and contrasted the classical sculpture so well. Seeing that piece really cemented the idea of a photographer's artistic influence on the past and present.

In 1989, Robert Mapplethorpe died from health complications due to AIDS. His provocative work can be seen in many art museums such as the Getty, MoMA, the Tate, and Guggenheim. 

Here is a video of Patti Smith talking about her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe. Her book Just Kids includes a lot about their relationship, and exposes Robert as a kind and gentle person.


References

The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
http://www.mapplethorpe.org/

Getty Museum
http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artMakerDetails?maker=2969

The Tate
http://www.tate.org.uk/download/file/fid/12777


Sunday, April 28, 2013

"Mamma don't take my Kodachrome away"


KODACHROM
1935-2010  
R.I.P


Photo. Image Permanence Institute


Kodachrome film was introduced in 1935 and was the first commercially successful chromogenic color process. A transparency, or slide, it is a one-of-a-kind direct positive image containing three emulsion layers. Although prints can be made from the slides. Each layer is dyed a subtractive color with cyan on the bottom, magenta in the middle and yellow as the top layer. The result is a positive image on transparent support. Two musicians "turned scientists" Leopold Godowsky Jr. and Leopold Mannes, employed at Kodak's research facility in Rochester, looking for a higher quality color film, experimented and the process was first used as 16 mm film. Within a year, film for still cameras was available but was extremely costly.The film is "basically black and white."  The dye is not added until the development process and this is what gave Kodachrome images the unique, very saturated color look. The color was fade resistant and very stable if stored properly. For the first twenty years of its production the Kodak laboratory controlled all the processing. In 1954 the Department of Justice declared Kodachrome processing a monopoly and Kodak was forced to allow other finishing facilities to process the film. The price of a roll of film,that originally had the processing cost added in, fell by 43%. This drop in price and increased options for processing brought Kodachrome into its heyday in the late fifties. But as early as 1936, Kodachrome was the film that captured a color version of the Hindenburg disaster. Sir Edmund Hilary took Kodachrome to the top of Mount Everest in 1953 and Abraham Zapruder using 8-mm Kodachrome "accidentally" recorded President Kennedy's assassination in Dallas. 

Kodachrome II was released in 1961. It was a faster and more versatile version of the film and was popular with the point and shoot generation. Super 8, a low-speed, fine-grain Kodachrome movie film was released in 1965. Both were popular for recording family events featured in Kodaslide projector shows and Super 8 film showings. Kodachrome was popularized in song by Paul Simon in 1973 and it was used extensively by National Geographic photographers. In 1948 National Geographic explored and photographed extensively a wilderness area in Utah and subsequently named it Kodachrome Basin State Park  It was changed to Chimney Rock State Park but a few years later was officially renamed Kodachrome Basin with Kodak's approval.


Steve McCurry shot one of the most iconic images of the 20th century in Kodachrome for National Geographic. 

Photo by Steve McCurry



By the 1980s video camcorders were in use and film producers like Fuji and Polaroid took over Kodachrome's market share. Kodak ended their film-processing in 1988 and gradually stopped film-manufacturing. "By 2008 Kodak was producing only one Kodachrome film run-- a mile-long sheet cut into 20,000 rolls-a year." On June 22, 2009 the Eastman Kodak Company announced that they would be discontinuing production of Kodachrome film. At that point it represented a fraction of 1% of their still film sales. 

Kodachrome 2010 Vimeo  Check out this great Vimeo that features the last lab, Dwayne's Photo in Parsons Kansas to process Kodachrome.




When Steve McCurry learned of the imminent demise of Kodachrome film,  he contacted Kodak's marketing head and persuaded her to give him the very last roll of film to come off the assembly line at the plant in Rochester. Kodak gave the last remaining rolls to the George Eastman House's Photography Museum but one last roll was "symbolically" shot by McCurry and his images, taken in India, New York, and Parsons Kansas, the home of Dwaynes Photo are known as Last Roll of Kodachrome.  His 36 images are a mixture of portraiture, photojournalism and street photography. McCurry has been shooting digital for quite a while but over the last 4 decades he has shot at least 800,000 Kodachrome frames. He maintains that he still has a few rolls of Kodachrome in his refrigerator just in case of a revival like with Polaroid. 



Fred Herzog - A Kodachrome Man

see the article and more photographs in "The Design Observer Group"
photo by Fred Herzog

Fred Herzog started shooting Kodachrome slide film in 1953. It was his choice for the vivid color and he was aware of its excellent archival qualities. But at that stage of his life, he was not able to afford to have prints made from his slides so he just continued to shoot and store his images. 
Recently, Herzog discovered archival laser printing and his work is being shown and widely recognized as a significant body of work in the art world. 


In 2007 I heard the rumblings of the end of Kodachrome. I hadn't been a user. I mostly shot Tri-x but I thought it would be a good idea to get in on the last days and I just couldn't get that Paul Simon song out of my head. So I bought a few rolls and shot it in my 35 mm Canon and sent it off to Dwayne's and here are a few samples. The 2 sort of abstracts in yellow and red were taken at Mass Moca in North Adams.

E.Antaya

E.Antaya

E.Antaya

E.Antaya




References:

http://www.graphicsatlas.org/ Image Permanence Institute. web. 28 Apr. 2013.

http://stevemccurry.com/galleries/last-roll-kodachrome. "The Last Roll of Kodachrome." stevemccurry.com. web. 28 Apr. 2013

http://www.dwaynesphoto.com/ Dwayne's Photo. web. 28 Apr. 2013.

Engle, Dresden. "Saying 'Farewell' while celebrating 75 years of Kodachrome." George Eastman House Blog. 5 Jan. 2011. Web. 28 Mar. 2013

Foster, John. "Kodachrome Finds New Life." The Design Observer Group. 10 Mar. 2013. Web. 20 Mar. 2013.

Kodak. "Kodachrome discontinuance notice." Eastman Kodak Company. 22 June 2009. Web. 27 Apr. 2013.

Sudduth, Claire. "A Brief History of Kodachrome." Time. 23 June 2009. Web. 28 Apr. 2013.

Zander, Robin. "Kodachrome 2010." Vimeo. Web. 28 Apr. 2013.












Saturday, April 27, 2013

Real Photo Postcards



Real Photo Postcards: Snapshots of Social History

"Even the humblest material artifact, which is the product and symbol of a particular civilization, is an emissary of the culture out of which it comes"- T.S. Elliot


A Brief History of Postcards


The first postal card was issued on October 1, 1869 by the Austro-Hungarian post office. It was made of thin card stock and measured 8.5 x 12.2 cm. The card consisted of a decorative frame on the front, and a blank space on the back for the user to write a message. The popularity of the postal card was immense; an estimated nine million cards were sold during the year of its creation. 

Literature on postcards explains that there is a difference between “postal cards” and “postcards.” Postal card is the term typically used for government issued mailing cards, while postcards were produced privately. Pre-stamped postal cards were issued by the United States Postal Service in 1873, until the Private Mailing Card Act was passed in 1898, which allowed for the private production of cards. “Private Mailing Card” was required to be written on these cards, because they were not produced by the USPS. At that point, only the government was allowed to place the word “postcard” on cards. 

Cards printed by private producers were described with such terms as: souvenir card, correspondence card, mail card, or the aforementioned private mailing card. The "undivided back" postal card replaced the private mailing card in 1901. This card, issued by the United States Post Office insisted that the back of the card could only hold the address of the recipient. In 1907, the "divided back" postal cards were put into circulation, which allowed for consumers to write a personal message along with an address on the back. 

In the United States, postcards were in circulation as early as the 1860s. The first patented American postcard was issued by John P. Charlton in 1861, and the rights were later sold to H.L. Lipman. The first non-Postal card (as mentioned above : meaning privately made postcards where postage was applied by the consumer) was introduced in 1869, in Austria. By December of 1901, the United States Post Office allowed for the printing of the words “Post Card” on the back of cards which were privately printed. These postcards were traditionally categorized as: real photo, lithographed, and special cards. They could be made of any material that could be mailed. 

Precursors to Real Photo Postcards

A few photographic formats can be considered early ancestors of the real photo postcard, though they were somewhat different (the fact that they were mailed inside an envelope), including carte de visites and stereographs. 

There are two specific instances in which earlier postal cards can be considered the precursor to real photo postcards. These examples are described by Robert Bogdan and Todd Weseloh in their book, Real Photo Postcard Guide: The People’s Photography. According to Bogdan and Weseloh, some photographers printed images by using the non-address side of postal cards after coating it in a light sensitive emulsion. The other example they gave was of a postal card (U.S.) mailed in 1874 which had the photograph of a child who had been kidnapped glued to the blank side. The card also contained information about the kidnapping, and claimed that a reward would be given to those with details about the incident. 

Picture Postcards and Real Photo Postcards

There are two different types of picture postcards. The first is the printed card, which are mass-produced “mechanically from plates or screens on printing presses.” Real photo postcards, or RPPCs, are real photographs “produced from a negative chemically on photographic paper with postcard backs.” 


“Genuine photo,” or “actual photo” postcards were made directly from a negative on paper that had been sensitized. This paper was available through photographic suppliers and dealers. Some people even sensitized the paper themselves, in the comfort of their own homes. There were several different processes used in the printing of the real photo postcards, such as collodion, cyanotype, and albumen. The most popular process was the silver gelatin. Most real photo postcards were created in black and white, but were often hand colored. 

The first documented photo postcard was mailed in 1899, but didn’t gain much popularity until a few years later when Kodak started selling photo paper along with a pre-printed postcard. The Kodak Company also produced models of Kodak "postcard" cameras in 1906, which created negatives the size of postcards. The outcome of using such a camera were clear, crisp images. Another feature of some of these cameras was that the photographer could write a caption or comment on the negative itself by lifting a tiny thin door at the back of the camera body. This user-friendly camera and paper made sending postcards extremely personal. It was also fast and affordable, so the average person could create postcards to their heart’s content, without spending too much time or money.

Many real photo postcards are confused with photochrome cards, which were introduced in 1934. Photochrome cards look like color photographs, but they were created through a color printing process which used lithography techniques. The two can be identified by using a magnifying glass; real photo postcards have a smoother gradation of color and form, and photochromes contain tiny dot patterns. 

I was inspired to research real photo postcards because I had received two as a gift recently, and was curious about their origins. I found some background information on a wonderfully informative website called Metro Postcard. They have put together a list and descriptions of the many postcard artists, studios, and distributors. I was able to find information where at least one of my postcards came from by matching the little logo in the corner of the image to one on the website. 
The postcard came from the Noyer Studio in Paris, France. The photographer responsible for the images was Alfred Noyer, who was in charge of production from 1910 until the 1940s. Noyer was a member of the Salon de Paris, and he photographed paintings for the Salon, to be used in the creation of art carts. The website states that Noyer’s earlier cards were photo reproductions of artworks which were printed in halftone lithography. Noyer was also known for creating illustrated photo cards depicting World War I, which tended to be of the patriotic persuasion. The postcard I received, according to this website, is from the 1920s. Noyer had begun to produce cards with nude women, or women in risqué poses. He also produced hand colored images of children at the time. 
Noyer Postcard I was given



 Real Photo Postcards: Snapshots of Social History

One of my favorite Real Photo Postcards, Germany 1932


The popular saying is that "a picture is worth a thousand words," and this holds true for real photo postcards-that is, they are representations of social history without any actual words. They can relay many aspects of social history and change. Through studying these photo postcards, viewers can gain a sense of what was popular during a certain year, in a certain location, to people of all different sorts. For example, there were many postcards of vacation spots and historical monuments and landmarks. Obviously, these destinations were popular, and people were buying the postcards to collect as souvenirs, or to give as gifts to friends and family. 

Postcards from the past can be viewed side by side with postcards being produced today, to observe differences in clothing, architecture, advertising, and hair styles, to name a few. Recurring themes in the past may not be the same as recurring themes in the future. For example, postcards sent as propaganda were popular during wartimes-not so much in the present. 


Sources

http://www.weirsbeach.com/Largejpgs/postcardhistory.html

http://www.pdxhistory.com/html/post_card_history.html 

http://www.metropostcard.com/publishersn.html -Noyer photos also from this site

http://www.notesonphotographs.org/images/e/ec/Ania_Michas_Report_small_for_web.pdf




Christopher (Cappy) Capozziello, Inside the clan photography

For those who may have been interested, here is the link to the "inside the clan" photographer I was talking about.

Christoper Capozziello Photographer

I urge you to explore his other works.  Especially the video about his twin brother.


Thanks for a great semester!

Sarah


To the Streets!


What is Street Photography?


Helen Levitt
New York, c.1940
Street photography is a genre of documentary photography that turns the lens on the everyday-ness of life, the typical people, places, events occurring.  Street photography seeks every emotion in the daily experience of living.  London Festival of Photography defines street photography as “un-posed, un-staged photography which captures, explores or questions contemporary society and the relationships between individuals and their surroundings.” (http://www.lfph.org/what-is-street-photography)

Vivian Maier
www.vivianmaier.com




“In one sense it can be thought of as a branch of documentary photography, but unlike traditional documentary its chief aim — or at least its chief effect — is seldom to document a particular subject, but rather to create photographs which strongly demonstrate the photographer's vision of the world.” (http://facweb.cs. depaul.edu /sgrais/street _photography.htm)








The London Festival of Photography finds it easier to define street photography as a method, rather than a genre: “Subjects and settings can vary greatly but the key elements of spontaneity, careful observation and an open mind ready to capture whatever appears in the viewfinder are essential.”

Paul Strand
Wall Street, New York, 1915
Personally, I find that I can look at street photography all day and always be amazed at the beauty, sadness and surprise of the frequent, the typical, the common goings on in the everyday world.  It is this innocent, un-staged, true feeling of these photographs that, I believe, must draw interest to such a genre of photography.

History of Street Photography        

   

Toulouse Lautrec
In beginning to think about how and why street photography came about, I was reminded of a similar switch in painting subjects, from the formal to the candid, from the staged to the happenstance.  Looking at street photographs, I immediately recalled familiar paintings of spaces and people existing in spaces, such as works by Toulouse Lautrec and Renoir.  Both of these painters were producing work around the turn of the 20th century, which is when Eugene Atget began photographing the streets of Paris.

Eugene Atget
Avenue de Gobelins, Paris, 1925



Eugene Atget (1857-1927) is considered one of the first street photographers.  Working as an architectural photographer in Paris, Atget captured about 10,000 images of Paris, its buildings and streets.  “Atget’s allegiance to outdated photographic technology, his focus on pre-French Revolutionary architecture  and ornamentation, and his utilitarian approach to photography marked him as emphatically old school.  A dedicated commercial photographer, Atget never considered the images he made to be art; they were, he insisted, simply ‘documents’- visual records that he peddled mostly to painters and libraries.” (http://www.nga.gov/feature/atget/)  Towards the end of his life, Atget did several series documenting urban lifestyles and street trades.  It is in this switch to documenting the typical lives in the city that one begins to see the very clear influence Atget’s photographs had upon later street photographers.

Eugene Atget
Parisienne Prostitute, c.1921

Street photography has perhaps always required certain spontaneity, a certain ease of movement as the photographer moves about the streets in search of a shot.  The development of the first small-bodied cameras (Kodak in 1880s and Leica in 1920s) allowed for photographers to be constantly on the move rather than the use of a stable, large format camera.   Additionally, the use of wet-plate technology required a premeditated and slow preparation process before taking photographs.  With the use of paper negatives, photographers were able to move about the streets with cameras loaded and ready for spontaneous photography.  (Bystander, 73)  Once cameras and techniques became portable and practical to carry around, photographers began photographing life as it was occurring around them.



4 Street Photographers


Henri Cartier-Bresson

1908-2004, French
Henri Cartier Bresson
Cartier-Bresson's photography combines the simplicity of the geometric forms with surrealistic images of human subjects.  His photographs are known for their human and gaiety.

Henri Cartier-Bresson
Rue Mouffetard, Paris, 1954


Paul Strand
1890-1976, American

Paul Strand
Blind, 1916



Well-known for his early 1900s photographs of New York.  In his photographs, Strand had the ability to turn architecture into mere shapes and shadows, and people into intimate and sad subjects.





















Helen Levitt
1913-2009, American


A New York City photographer, Levitt is known for her sensitive and sometimes comic photographs of  children in the city.  Levitt shot in both black-and-white and color film, rare for street photographers at that time.

Helen Levitt
New York, c.1980

Bernice Abbott
Bernice Abbott
Blossom Restaurant, 1935
1898-1901, American



Strongly influenced by Eugene Atget's photographs of the dilapidated architecture of Paris, Abbott chronicled New York city in images of its buildings and people at work.  Abbott wanted her work to illustrate the relationship and connections between the people of the city, and the physical, moving entity of New York City. 







There is something about looking at a discrete, four-sided image that forces us to see things differently than if we were to glimpse the same instant in real life.  Street photographers see the world in discrete images, capturing them for the rest of us, prompting us all to look differently at our environments, the people living around us, and our streets. 



Works Cited:

Westerbeck, Colin, and Joel Meyerowitz.Bystander: a history of street photography. Boston: Little, Brown, 1994. Print.

Scott, Clive. Street photography from Atget to Cartier-Bresson. London: I.B. Tauris ;, 2007. Print.




" The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) ." The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) . N.p., n.d. Web. 27 Apr. 2013. <http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/collection/artwork/112442##ixzz2Rd42Sb7iSan Francisco Museum of Modern Art>.

"Home - London Festival of Photography."Home - London Festival of Photography. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2013. <http://www.lfph.org/what-is-street-photography
>.

"Atget: The Art of Documentary Photography." National Gallery of Art. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2013. <http://www.nga.gov/feature/atget/>.t/

Friday, April 26, 2013

In an Instant

When I was twelve, I received one of the greatest gifts of my life, a Polaroid camera and a pack of 600 film.  In an instant, I was hooked.  I photographed all of the important elements of my twelve-year-old world: my house, my mom, my pets, my bedroom, and my friends.  I would save up my babysitting earnings to spend on more and more film.  I had a 35mm camera, but it just wasn’t the same.  There was something magical about my Polaroid, something hard to explain, but I felt it when the camera made it’s unique sound and my photo was released.    

Play for that awesome sound!


Polaroid camera



Polaroid SX-70, OneStep, and Sun 660

Examples of Polaroid Photos

I knew that my Polaroid was special, completely unaware of its history or it’s extraordinary inventor.  Polaroid instant cameras entered the consumer market in 1948.  They captivated amateur and avid photographers alike, with the amazing ability to produce instant pictures in 60 seconds or less. This incredible achievement was the pioneering invention of Edwin H. Land (May 7, 1909 – March 1, 1991). Born in Bridgeport, CT, Land was a scientist and inventor who dropped out of Harvard after his freshman year. He co-founded Polaroid in 1937, with the vision that the instant camera would become a key element in people’s daily lives; just like the telephone and the television.


Edwin Land showing off his inventions





















“I think the new camera can have an impact on the way people live. I hope it can become a natural part of people. It can make a person pause in his rush through life. It will help him to focus himself on some aspect of life, and in the process, enrich his life at that moment. This happens as you focus through the view finder. It’s not merely the camera you are focusing; you are focusing yourself. That’s an integration of your personality, right that second. Then when you touch the button, what’s inside you comes out. It’s the most basic form of creativity. Part of you is now permanent.” Land, Time Magazine 1972

How does it work?

Original process:
A negative material was exposed inside the camera, and then pulled out while being squeezed against a chemical layer and a positive material. After 60 seconds or less the layers could be separated and the negative discarded.

Current Polacolor process:
Inside the camera, light makes a series of latent images on dye layers of the film. When the picture is auto-ejected from the camera, a processing chemical activates the image in the dye layers.  After a few minutes, the final form of the print is revealed and protected by a hard plastic film. 

Land’s greatest achievement was the SX-70 and remains unmatched even by today’s most sophisticated digital camera.  The SX-70 made it possible for anyone to aim their camera, focus, press the shutter button, and instantly place a physical print in their hand. This is quite a remarkable thing.


                                                       SX-70, moominsean.blogspot.com

The SX-70 was a single-lens reflex (SLR) model, which simply means, what you saw in the viewfinder was what you got. It was the true realization of Land’s dream of creating, “absolute one-step photography.”


The fall and rise of Polaroid

Despite Land’s great achievements and the appeal of instant photography, Land would be asked to step down and Polaroid would fall out of favor with consumers. 
Polaroid filed for Chapter 11 in 2001, was bought by the Petters Group in 2003, went bankrupt again and was sold again in 2008.  Polaroid had stopped manufacturing instant cameras in 2007 and finally announced it would cease production of its instant film in 2008. Thankfully, for people like me who have a nostalgia for instant photography, there is the Impossible Project.

Impossible Project Products



“Polaroid’s end of production didn’t mark the end of interest in Polaroid photography. Actually, it helped jump-start its rebirth. What had been an unwanted commodity suddenly looked like a precious resource.” http://technologizer.com/2011/06/08/polaroid/

Excerpt from website: “In October 2008 The Impossible Project saved the last Polaroid production plant for integral instant film in Enschede (NL) and started to invent and produce totally new instant film materials for traditional Polaroid cameras. In 2010 Impossible saved analog instant photography from extinction by releasing various, brand new and unique instant films. 
Therewith Impossible prevents more than 300,000,000 

perfectly functioning Polaroid cameras from becoming obsolete, changes the world of photography and keeps variety, tangibility and analogue creativity and possibilities alive.”


I'm not twelve anymore, but I still get the same feeling when I use a Polaroid camera.  It's instant, exciting, and magical. No digital camera can give you a one-of-a-kind, direct positive image in the palm of your hand.  That's truly special.



For more information:

Polaroid official website

List of Cameras:

Timeline of Polaroid’s history.


Edwin Land

The Impossible Project

Insisting on the Impossible, Edwin H. Land biography

Polaroid’s SX-70, the Greatest Gadget of All time, Is 41

Polaroid’s SX-70: The Art and Science of the Nearly Impossible

MUST WATCH THIS VIDEO! 

Caring for your photographs

BONANOS, CHRISTOPHER. 2012. "It's Polaroid's World - We Just Live in It." Wall Street Journal - Eastern Edition, November 10. C3.

"Edwin Herbert Land." 2013. Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6Th Edition 1.