Text and Images

I don’t know what it is about images placed next to text that creates polarization among people, but that’s the experience I had in my second critique last night. Is it a good thing? I don’t know. My experience with images next to text has been in a completely editorial way, where the text is supposed to guide the viewer through the images. Tell the viewer how to think about them. The pieces I showed in critique were meant to do the opposite of that. The text was meant to reveal and hide information about the island. I wanted to create a tension that makes whoever views them think about a possible meaning in it all. Perhaps I will begin to reorganize and re-edit the body of work in order to convey this more effectively. But for now, here are a couple images to meditate on.

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Galleries, Galleries, Galleries

©Sarah Greenberger Rafferty

This weekend I decided to hit up some photo shows that my Crit and Theory professor suggested I see. The goal was to hit up LES then Chelsea then the Upper East Side. Galleries: Rachel Uffner, Wild Project, Julie Saul, Aperture, Gagosian and the Whitney. Well, it didn’t exactly go as planned. The Lower East Side went smoothly. I saw Sarah Greenberger Rafferty’s show “Tears”, a body of manipulated images. Her process is as follows; she dripped water on digital printouts (of comedians) in order to manipulate the inks. After the manipulation was finished, she scanned and reprinted. The outcome is a twisted image, almost clown-like in effect. It’s a neat idea, which hearkens back to the early pictorialists like Frank Eugene.

The second gallery I hit up was the Wild Project. It had another process-oriented photo show on display, Wildlife Analysis by Brian Graf. Instead of manipulating the print, Graf sandwiched fogged color film onto his black and white images in order to create an ethereal feel to his photos of New Jersey. After experiencing both these artists, I began to think a theme was beginning to emerge. Finding ways to manipulate imagery without photoshop? A tribute to older ways of manipulating? I decided to make a move to Chelsea in order to see if this trend is in all the galleries.

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Class Syllabus

Susan Sontag ©Jill Krementz

The first assignment in my Criticism and Theory class this fall is to write the syllabus for the class. Twelve topics on contemporary issues in the theory of photography. Seems like it could be fun right? Wrong. This has been one of the most taxing assignments yet. The first thing that comes to mind when thinking about contemporary issues in photography are contemporary issues in general. The environment, war, politics, etc., all start to leap out to me as issues I can apply to photography and art in general. Then I begin to think about how photographs are treated in the present context of the internet, Flickr, Facebook, etc. and all these questions about what photography is as a medium come to mind. This leads me back to issues in objectivity and post-modernism. After all of this thinking, I have come up with 11 topics. But what is my twelfth? What is the topic to end it all? Does anyone out there have their thumb on the most contemporary idea in the realm of photography? I would be interested to know. My list of topics to come after the assignment is due. Added 9/16: The syllabus I came up with….I never got a 12th topic btw. Continue reading

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Critique

©Jason Hannasik

Yesterday I had my first critique at SVA with Penelope Umbrico. It was like jumping into a cool swimming pool on a hot summer day. The class was fully engaged with my work and had some great suggestions for me. The doubt I have been feeling all summer about the direction I am taking in my work has been lessened, and I think that it will continue to fade away as the semester progresses. It has only been my first week and I am already feeling a sense of community with my fellow peers and the professors. On another note, I will be at Kris Graves Projects tonight to help with Jason Hannasik‘s opening. It’s going to be a great show. Stop by and say hi!

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