I created an infographic on Picktochart to explain how I will develop my ideas throughout this project.
Please find Infographic here
Neoteric Photography aims to explore photography in an age where the image is everywhere. The image has become prolific yet easily forgotten. Hoping to find something to hold onto, something that will survive longer that it takes for pixels to appear upon a screen.
I created an infographic on Picktochart to explain how I will develop my ideas throughout this project.
Please find Infographic here
Many photographers have used poetry as inspiration for their work or part of their work, PhotoPedagogy has a brief history of this practice, you can read this by clicking on the link. As can be seen from the image above there are some beautiful examples of Photography used as illustration. I am more interested in the Avant Garde works and 'Man Ray and Nusch Éluard entitled Facile (1935), a beautiful publication in which images and text create an integrated and unified design.' (Nicholls, J., Tallis, T. and Ling, K. 2022), is a wonderful example of the kind of art I would like to create for this project.
Looking further into how Photopoetry works; "In the photopoem," writes Boulestreau, "meaning progresses in accordance with the reciprocity of writing and figures: reading becomes interwoven through alternating restitchings of the signifier into text and image." [1] Poem and photograph encounter each other, and Boulestreau appears to suggest that the photopoème should be defined, not by its production, but its reception, as a practice of reading and looking that relies on the reader/viewer to make connections between, and create meaning from, text and image' (What is Photopoetry?, 2018)
I included this longer explanation here as I think this better defines what the photo should do and I want the reader/viewer to make the connection as stated here. The interpretation by the photographer should be fluid and allow for many possibilities. I spoke on John Berger in my welcome this term and in later life, he worked with the illustrator Selcuk Demirel to construct stories through text and image and I think that is possibly why this appealed to me - the connection or disconnection or perhaps gap between words and pictures that I really wanted to explore.
References
Berger, J. and Demirel, S., 2017. Smoke. [online] New York Review Books. Available at: https://www.nyrb.com/collections/selcuk-demirel/products/smoke?variant=53524062279 [Accessed 10 July 2022].
Nicholls, J., Tallis, T. and Ling, K., (2022). PhotoPoetry. [online] PhotoPedagogy. Available at: https://www.photopedagogy.com/photopoetry.html [Accessed 6 July 2022].
The Photographers Gallery. 2018. What is Photopoetry?. [online] Available at: https://thephotographersgallery.org.uk/photography-culture/what-photopoetry [Accessed 10 July 2022].
For Digital Design we are creating a Brand Story for our product as we are creating Packaging Design. Therefore I am looking at how Brand Stories are created and what the best brands do to really create customer loyalty. Bullen writes; 'Brand stories activate emotions and communicate values'. (Bullen, 2019) and this is the crux of what I am trying to do through my own brand story, I want people to believe in me and my brand, if they feel that emotional connection they will buy and buy again!
Zendesk is a great example of anti-storytelling, this company makes customer support software, already I am yawning, so what do they do? They get an indie band from Seattle who claims that Zendesk has stolen their name and creates a funny video which ends in them making a terrible jingle about customer support! You can check out their video here: Zendesk Alternative
I really like this anti-story telling as people buy into it because it does not feel like they are being sold to. It is important to realise as well that big brands don't always get it right Mcdonald's had to apologise after it used child bereavement to sell its Filet o Fish Burger and this ad below is a little disturbing - it is about a new Playstation however I am not sure that consumers would warm to this...
In this advert for Chanel No 5, Wonderhatch states is great watching and listening to Brad Pitt but what he is saying is; 'almost complete and utter nonsense when you listen to it and get through to the product itself. Sorry, what? Journey’s end but we as people go on? Plans disappearing and dream taking over? Inevitable? Chanel inevitable? '(10 Examples of Storytelling for the Wrong Ad Campaign | Wonderhatch, 2021)
Why am I looking at ad campaigns that failed as this is more instructive in what not to do! The problem with the Chanel advert is that it is incomprehensible and doesn't sell the product well at all, I don't know what the product is till the end and even then I am confused. The stories that use other people's pain or grief, have to be very careful as this kind of marketing ploy to obtain an emotional connection is full of pitfalls and in some cases ethically unsound. Ethics and Transparency are something I would like my own brand to have - as I feel that sort of integrity is essential now in a very uncertain world. I will be adding a more ethical mission as part of my product and I will (hopefully) Make something That really does have the power to sell!
Another term and so new ideas are imperative! Although last term I did not complete my book project that I was hoping to add to and still want to work on this. I also want to go back to looking at NFT's as I had started to explore this and so I would like to create some new photographic work for this purpose.
Thinking about photography and themes I would like to investigate, here are some ideas;
I am still interested in memory and remembrance so above is an example of a photographer Steve Pyke from Leicester who photographed his children growing up. Pyke states where he got his ideas; 'David Attenborough did it first, with a dead mouse that eventually had maggots in it. I thought: what an amazing thing to do with a human being, film someone on Super 8 from birth to death. When Jack was 20 minutes old, I made my first image of him, with the idea that the death at the end of the cycle would be mine, not his.' (Morrison et al., 2013) I liked this idea as I had done something very similar with my own son. When he was young I used to take him to passport booths so I have lots and lots of sets of these passport booth images. Obviously they became less frequent as he got older and I have just finished my last one as he has now finished school (he is 16 years old) and I am not sure he will let me do anymore. For this project I would need to look at memory in a different way and perhaps I could think about revisitation and recreation. Revisiting the site of old photos and recreating could be interesting.
The second idea would be to use dreams - although I often this is like going into a black hole and the work does not always come out how I expect. Joan Fontcuberta made a machine that was supposed to photograph people's thoughts, many have tried to create a dream machine that can record dreams. I have tried this before and this was the result:
This used images and photoshop to create the bleeding tears in the sky with the abstract dream images. I would like to experiment again with this as I did enjoy creating this one.
The third idea is to illustrate and interpret a poem through photography - I did something like this at university and I would not mind revisiting this idea as I could use any poem or even my own poetry. I am more inclined to use someone else's poem as then it would be fresh and the ideas would be independent of the poem itself. This is actually called Photopoetry and there are many examples of artists using this method. 'The term 'photopoetry' and its various alternatives - photopoème, photometry, photoverse, photo-graffiti etc. - attempt to describe an art form in which poetry and photography are equally important and, often, directly and symbiotically related. Michael Nott suggests that:
the relationship between poem and photograph has always been one of disruption and serendipity, appropriation and exchange, evocation and metaphor' Here are a couple of examples:
References
Morrison, B., Perry, G., O'Hagan, S., Kiss, J. and Searle, A. (2013) The power of photography: time, mortality and memory. [online] the Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/interactive/2013/may/19/power-photography-time-mortality-memory [Accessed 4 July 2022].
Jefferies, S., (2014) Joan Fontcuberta: false negatives. [online] the Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2014/jul/08/joan-fontcuberta-stranger-than-fiction [Accessed 4 July 2022].
Nicholls, J., Tallis, T. and Ling, K., (2022). PhotoPoetry. [online] PhotoPedagogy. Available at: https://www.photopedagogy.com/photopoetry.html [Accessed 6 July 2022].
This is very interesting on the views of women and how they are surveyed and survey themselves through art history and in life. The idea of the nude in an image is beautifully explained - I urge you to watch this and read the book!
Going forward I would like to share with you some thoughts Berger had on the self-portrait in relation to Albrecht Dürer. 'Dürer was the first painter to be obsessed by his own image' (Berger 1985:33). It seems in modern times people are much more obsessed with their own image with the prevalence of social media and through the constant bombardment of images on screens. Berger states; 'Why does a man paint himself? Among many motives, one is the same as that which prompts any man to have his portrait painted. It is to produce evidence, which will probably outlive him, that he once existed.' (Berger 1985:33) This is a good reason why we might wish to leave our imprint everywhere on the internet to prove we exist/existed. The difference between the painting and the screen though is the painted must be physically visited (to see it in its original form) and would be kept in a collection by the family or museum where it might live. The images we post are among so many and we don't know how long they actually might live in the virtual world or where they may end up. Berger considers what Dürer is saying through the look he creates in his self-portraits such as the one below.
Self-portrait, Albrecht Dürer, 1498, 41×52 cm
Here Dürer is still young but becoming incredibly well-known and his work is being copied. 'This new self-portrait sent a message declaring that Dürer was no longer a craftsman (in his native Nuremberg, artists were still regarded as a craft class' representatives) but an artist, and therefore God’s elect.' (Arthive.com) Here Dürer is becoming what he aspires to this his moment and here he is dressed up and 'acts the part' as Berger states. I picked this portrait as I think there is a point in youth where you may think you are now becoming what you want to be, and how fleeting this moment is, I love the idea of it captured here.
So we begin a new term, full of hope, let it remain until the end...
References
Arthive.com. (2022) Dürer: evolution of artistic self in 13 self-portraits. [online] Available at: https://arthive.com/publications/2426~Drer_evolution_of_artistic_self_in_13_selfportraits [Accessed 3 July 2022].
Berger J. (1985) The Sense of Sight, Vintage Books, New York.
Berger J. (1972) Ways of Seeing, Penguin Books, London.
Encyclopedia Britannica. (2022) John Berger | British essayist and cultural thinker. [online] Available at: https://www.britannica.com/biography/John-Berger [Accessed 23 June 2022].
When I was a young student I wrote my dissertation on Anselm Kiefer and John Heartfield. It was about art and media pre-World War II and post World War II. Kiefer's work was the aftermath, the devastation both on Germany and the mental and physical impact on the people of Germany. 'As Kiefer has said in reference to this national legacy of World War II, “[A]fter the ‘misfortune,’ as we all name it so euphemistically now, people thought that in 1945 we were starting all over again. . . . . It’s nonsense. The past was put under taboo, and to dig it up again generates resistance and disgust.”' (Aklteveer, 2008). I poured over books of his work, looked at obscure journals and watched many documentaries and films of the man and his work. I had not actually seen any of this is real life. After I had completed, years later there was an exhibition as the The Royal Academy where they were showing a large collection. Kiefer's work is massive, huge the sheer size is overwhelming and also beautiful, awe-inspiring.
References
Aklteveer, I., 2008. Anselm Kiefer (born 1945). [online] Metmuseum.org. Available at: https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/kief/hd_kief.htm [Accessed 10 May 2022].
SFMOMA. 2006. Major Survey Of Anselm Kiefer's Works At SFMOMA. [online] Available at: https://www.sfmoma.org/press/release/major-survey-of-anselm-kiefers-works-at-sfmoma/ [Accessed 10 May 2022].
Borges' Library. 2019. Anselm Kiefer: Fire in the Attic. [online] Available at: https://www.borges-library.com/2019/04/anselm-kiefer-fire-in-the-attic-.html [Accessed 10 May 2022].