This is the first Creative Media project of the term 'Object Lesson'. In this project we are choosing an object and using this as a starting point for a short one week project. As I was starting this prior to the class I have a rather large postcard collection at home and the postcard I was drawn to, and the object that I am choosing is this one..
Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin (2012) ALIAS: Dora Fobert (1925-1943) Image 5 from the Archive of Adela K ca 1942/2011. Fibre Based Negative
I had to scan this in as this is not available on the internet - I found other images from this series but not Image 5. I chose this image as it emphasises the dark and shadows, it was framed behind handmade red glass. My previous post was about the Fayum Portraits the artist of these portraits worked from dark to light. This looks like a negative or infrared image, a negative shows the dark parts light and vice versa. An infrared image explained by Adobe;
'The human eye cannot see infrared light. It lies beyond the visible light spectrum. But you can take photographs with an infrared filter or infrared film, which produces intriguing effects' (www.adobe.com, n.d.) however although I have not yet found a definitive answer I believe this image maybe one that was edited in Photoshop and used a dodge tool. The image came from an exhibition titled 'To photograph the details of a dark horse in low light' and the article about this states that; '
The awkward yet rather poetic phrase camouflages an underlining dilemma for the photographic industry as film stock historically performed poorly in capturing black skin. A photograph of Kodak’s ‘Shirley’ vividly illustrates the industry’s racial bias as the film was calibrated to capture the white skin of an imaginary proto-subject. Here, the ‘dark horse’ is in reference to the film’s supposed ability to transcend this bias and photograph black skin with equal detail.' (Bohr, 2012). I found this interesting and the process maybe what will come into play later. I was not thinking of racial bias or the Fayum portraits as such but more about some lines I read in John Berger's that had began by discussing the imprint of Christ's face on cloth;
'the image now celebrates the existence which is beyond reach. it offers a substitute for tangibility. The imprint is like the footprint of a creature that is elsewhere..' (Christie 2017:28). I am thinking of the absence of things, the darkness before the light and here continuing with these thoughts of the imprint. So I began by tracing the image to feel the contours of the image
I enjoyed the idea so I printed further images of myself that I changed to infrared and then traced to see their imprint
Here is the imprint, the simple lines make this more interesting, removing the photographing and reverting to just the lines is a thought-provoking process, through this I can feel the image more clearly.
In class, I worked further on my ideas and created a thought board. This gave me further ideas about perhaps using a passport photo as a base image or take photos like police photos as base images for drawings.
Following this I had further ideas about photobooth images, as I have many photobooth images and I thought I could use these as a base for the drawing as I like the structure and format of the images. Andy Warhol took many of these enjoying the instantaneity of the images as it fed into his own philosophy of making art. The photobooth 'format allows for instantaneousness and spontaneity within the fixed setting of the booth and a controlled time frame. In this strip of four images, Warhol played with the notion of disguise through gestures and props while the camera automatically exposed each frame.' (Warhol, 2025)
While looking at other artists who had used the photobooth I had found The Photobooth Journal a blog online dedicated to the format and I particularly enjoyed the found images that had been posted these were discarded photobooth pictures. Here is one such example..
I will now start to experiment with blowing these up and drawing the outlines as above to see if I can create a credible final piece that explores making marks and through these traces giving a new life and identity to the shots.
For my final piece I chose these images from a photobooth I blew they up and then scanned these to show here.
I then traced the images as before with the idea that they would be a trace of a memory and then scanned these in
I really liked these images but then going back to the idea of just light in the darkness I put these in Photoshop, I opened the image and copied the layer then I added Black through the paintbucket and then moved this below the original image. I then selected, copied and pasted each image into a new black canvas that I had created in A4 (I did it his size so I could frame this in physical form) I then added a title using a text layer and used Centaur font at 18pts. The final result is below...
Reflection
I enjoyed the process of this piece exploring the ideas and seeing what I ended up with, the idea did evolve in my mind and the pieces came together. I like the idea of the trace of the original and this (sort of) reverse drawing element at the end that links back to the original image I have now framed the image in a wood frame, it is printed on smooth pearl paper and as I created this at high resolution the print really works and it of good quality. I am pleased with the final result as it is a good outcome for a short project. If this had been a longer project I would have gone much father with the drawing aspect and created my own drawings on Japanese paper which I experimented with but could not execute in the time frame.
References
www.adobe.com. (n.d.). An introduction to infrared (IR) photography | Adobe. [online] Available at: https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/photography/discover/infrared-photography.html [Accessed 5 Jan. 2025].
Bohr, M. (2012). TO PHOTOGRAPH THE DETAILS OF A DARK HORSE IN LOW LIGHT. [online] Broomberg & Chanarin. Available at: https://www.broombergchanarin.com/text-to-photograph-the-details [Accessed 5 Jan. 2025].
Christie, J. (2017) Seeing Through Drawing: A Celebration of John Berger. Objectif, Suffolk.
Griffiths, K. (2020). Found Photobooth Photos – Photobooth Journal. [online] Photobooth Journal. Available at: https://photoboothjournal.com/category/found-photobooth-photos/ [Accessed 8 Jan. 2025].
Warhol, A. (2025). [Photo Booth Self-Portrait]. [online] Getty.edu. Available at: https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/object/104AFT [Accessed 8 Jan. 2025].