Showing posts with label Lin Bee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lin Bee. Show all posts

June 14, 2009

Photographing A Thought ?, by Lin Bee




An article written by Lin Bee
From Fluffytek
UdA Art Editor



Whilst on my extended bloggie break, I found myself preoccupied with a question :

Is it possible to photograph a thought ?




I researched the matter in depth but came up with precious few answers.



Franck Petronio

"She’s quite a good photographer too."




Thought-Photography is nigh-impossible, although many have tried. In 1933 a physicist called Nikola Tesla announced “a tremendous new power which was about to be unleashed.” He declared that he would soon be able to photograph thought, which he believed would bring about a total social revolution.

He was convinced that “a definite image formed in thought, must by reflex action, produce a corresponding image on the retina,” which he believed he could read by use of an artificial retina which would receive and record the image of the object seen, and then photograph it.

Needless to say, his experiment was a spectacular failure and Tesla died several years later, his ambitions unfulfilled.







Dave Levingston

"Lani"



" This is my current favorite photo. That's why it is the cover photo on my book "The Figure In Nature" which is available here.
I had this photo in my head for a couple years and kept trying to shoot it while doing other figure shoots.
Finally I decided to just do what needed to be done to get it captured. When I get something like this in my head I have to get it recorded or it just won't go away. So I called up one of my favorite models, Lani in the mountains of North Carolina. I knew she could do what it took to get the shot and that she would know a good stream to use. I told her to find the right stream and tell me the day and I'd drive down from Ohio. The day came, we hiked around and found just the right spot. Lani got in the freezing mountain stream and looked beautiful and serene.
Besides being a near perfect capture of the pre-visualized image, I like this shot because it embodies much of what I try to do with the figure in nature...showing the links between the forms and including symbolism." Dave Levingston.









Grzegorz Zawadzki
"Intangible"
















Having discussed Thought-Photography with Rich at some length, he reckons that the problem is that in order to tell what someone is thinking, you have to first interpret their expression. This is not a straightforward process because people’s expressions are ambiguous.





Tom Lane -
"Ring Flash III"
Art Model Jennifer
















Study after study shows that a person’s perception of an expression is based upon what the viewer has seen moments BEFOREHAND.



There are only a certain number of human expressions and as humans have evolved, expressions have always been interpreted in the context of the actions that precede it. They don’t in themselves have an intrinsic meaning when abstracted from events.


So expressions don’t necessarily convey a thought, they just express emotion.










J Borodina (Eliara) -
"Flying in my sleep"













Insousciance -
"La femme du boulanger"




To understand a thought, it must be preceded by an event.

A filmmaker has an advantage here because he can create a series of events which may be very subtle but which allow the viewer to correctly gauge an expression and thus the thought behind it.

On the other hand, artists and photographers have to resort to props, or what Rich calls “tricks”, to transmit the context of the model’s expression and thus convey the thought to the viewer.



In order to be successful, these tricks have to be very obvious. Subtlety doesn’t work.








Scott James Prebble -
"I can see through you"
Art Model Fiona




In the case of a pure art nude portrait photograph, where there are rarely any props, I would therefore argue that it is nigh impossible to photograph a single thought and accurately convey it to viewers.

As Dr L’s excellent photograph demonstrates, expressions are misleading (even basic ones like hunger) and viewers will naturally project their own feelings, interpretations and biases into a single picture.



The model is thinking what we subconsciously want her to think,but we don’t really know the truth behind “the look.”










Nad Iksodas -
"Lela and her first love"
Art Model Lela Rae -









Perhaps this is the very reason why portraits remain so alluring, because they have that element of mystery. It’s the classic Mona Lisa question : what was she thinking ? (Nad Iksodas does this style very well.)
The problem is that with art nude portraiture, we will never really know, and I must admit that this conundrum frustrates me. I WANT to know ! Which is precisely the point of the photograph, I guess.

The element of mystery is the hook which reels the viewer in.







Dave Levingston
Art Model Jessica




I have no profound insights into Thought Photography to offer you, other than I wish I knew a sure-fire method of accurately capturing thought in a single frame.
Perhaps this is beyond the capability of the camera as a tool.

Maybe the apparatus is too limited, or perhaps the whole portraiture process is too easily influenced by viewer subjectivity to ever reliably convey real thought.



















One last (rather peculiar) nugget that I want to leave you with today is the story of the only proven occurrence of Thought Photography.



In 1973, Lawrence Fried, the then President of the American Society of Media Photographers, photographed Uri Geller in a controlled experiment which aimed to prove that Thought Photography was possible (although not in the same way that I am referring to above.)

Geller mentioned, casually, that he had once or twice before been able to project his own image on film through a completely closed camera :

By Lawrence Fried :
" Geller held the camera at arm's length, pointing it at his head and tripping the shutter. (See Plate 47.) He repeated this at various distances from his head until he had the camera pressed directly against his forehead. He did this many times until the entire roll of 35-mm exposures had been "exposed." All the time Geller was tripping the shutter, I was photographing him. My two assistants, Hank Gans and Laurel Gallagher, were present, standing on either side of me and never taking their eyes off Geller. In addition, there was also a reporter from the New York Post in the room at the time. No one else was present.
I took the camera from Geller's hands upon completion of the experiment and personally removed the roll of film. I marked it to keep it separate from the rest of the exposed film and put the roll in an inside pocket of my jacket. We packed our equipment and left Geller's apartment. At no time after I loaded the camera before the start of the experiment was I separated from that camera. It was never out of my hands until the second I handed it to Geller, from which time I never took my eyes off it and was never more than three to five feet away from it. This can be corroborated by my two assistants.
The film (high-speed Ektachrome) was sent to Berkey-K&L Laboratory, in New York, for processing, with instructions that the processor not cut the roll or mount any slides if there were any pictures on the film. Mr. Geller, incidentally, was never advised as to where my film was to be processed.
The next morning I received the processed roll from the lab and opposite frame marker number 10, on the edge of the roll, was an image of Geller. It was somewhat out of focus and slightly underexposed, but unmistakably a photograph of Geller taken at the exact spot where the experiment had been conducted. (See Plate 48.) When I finally removed the tape from the lens that Geller had used, there was absolutely no indication that it had been disturbed in any manner whatsoever."








Grzegorz Zawadzki
"Philosophy"








So… the moral of the story is that Thought Photography IS possible.

The model just needs to be psychic.
Or a genius.
Or crazy.Or all three.









Scott James Prebble
"I live in my own world"

Model Ari





Feel free to try this experiment at home with your highly psychic models.
Do let me know how you get on, won’t you ?









February 19, 2009

"How Low Can You Go ?", by Lin Bee




An article written by Lin Bee from











Everything being relative, let's open the debate !






I’ve been reading some rather pretentious literary web sites which spend a great deal of time pontificating about “high art”.

The terms "high art" and "low art" have always struck me as pretty meaningless.





IMO, trying to classify art as “highbrow” or “lowbrow” seems an entitely subjective process and ultimately rather pointless in this modern day and age. We've evolved beyond such nonsense, surely ?







Vahid Naziri -
"Chain Reaction"

Art Model NevaehLleh





The notion of brow levels came about in the early 1900’s when free public schools first started. The sudden growth of education and the spread of literature resulted in the creation of the first national newspapers, which caused great outrage amongst both artists and intellectuals who argued that all these popular rags did was to reduce literature to the lowest common denominator. Baudelaire even referred to newspapers as “satanic.”



The arguments continued to rage until eventually English culture divided into two : highbrow and lowbrow.


Each individual fell into one of the two classes, depending on his personal taste and choices in books, art and hobbies. If you liked popular “mass” culture, this meant that you were lowbrow. The chasm continued to widen until journalism and popular culture became poles apart from “high art” and literature, never again to merge.








David Winge
-
"For Freedom"

Art Model NevaehLleh





Nowadays most of us only know the differences between high art and low art by the reputation of the medium.

Broadly speaking sculpture, painting, music, poetry, cinema and classic English literature all fall into the “high art” category, whereas tattoo art, children’s stories, comic strips, video game design and so forth would all classify as “low art.”

Some modern art critics argue that with the growth of technology and the modern media, the distinction between high art and low art have now become permanently blurred. Some computer games, for example, can now be so sophisticated that they contain a detailed plot and character development, just like a good novel.




At what point does the medium cease to matter and when exactly does lowbrow evolve into highbrow ?










John Peri -
"Matter of perception"

" Some people are unable to make the distinction and will insist on calling this kind of photo an "open leg shot" (OLS). It is a question of perception.
An OLS denotes focus on a woman's anatomy. Quite apart from the fact that nothing shows here, the attention is on glamour and not sex. I maintain that someone can be dressed and look vulgar, undressed and remain elegant and refined."










Jarda Balek -
"The Break"














GW Burns -
"Field of Optimism"





IMO, nowhere do these abstract lines between high and low blur more than with the nude photographic medium, largely because it is very difficult to objectively catergorize images of naked women.

High art is seen to be spiritually moving, sophisticated and philosophically challenging, so when does a photograph meet this specification ?Low art is a derogatory term which can be classified as popular culture which may be visually entertaining, but which is nevertheless intellectually sterile, nothing more than commercial pap to feed the masses.


So what kind of nude photograph would satisfy this definition ? Which type of nude image is high culture and which is popular culture ?


Is it really as simple as :




High Art ? (B+W fine art nude)



vs.
Low Art ? (Colour erotica)









Which image is high art, if any ? Which of the two is deeper, more exciting, more sophisticated and philosophically challenging ? The medium is the same, so what’s the difference ?








François Benveniste -
"Forgive my sins"
Art Model Julia




I would suggest that the difference isn’t merely to do with lighting and composition. IMO it largely depends on intent.


What type of emotional reaction did the photographer want to generate ? What was his creative vision ? What market was the photograph aimed at ? Or does it purely come down to personal taste ?

So if we use these criteria then the first image is more tasteful, non-sexual and more likely to stimulate the intellect and is therefore more towards the "high art" category, whereas the second largely stimulates the male groin, and would be lower - very low, in fact, which is a shame because I actually prefer the second above the first, although I can't for the life of me figure out why ? Maybe I'm just a lowbrow kinda girl ?







Scott James Prebble -
"Perfection is relative"
Art Model Rosie





Frankly all this categorization seems like blatent snobbery to me.



IMO, classifying a particular type of nude photograph as “high” or “low” is pure pompous elitism. Isn't black and white “fine art” photography nothing more than lowbrow with different packaging, nekkid chix re-invented and re-wrapped for the titillation of the very same supposed highbrow intellectuals and art critics who would otherwise condemn all nude photography as non-artistic ?



Maybe we haven’t really grown that much
in a hundred years after all...









Mic Ardant -
"Quite Relative Timidity"
Art Model Brandy




October 6, 2008

Art heals the spirit, which in turn heals the body, by Lin Bee







An article by Lin Bee
Pictures by Susa Kleeberg and Friedemann Rink,
"Rot" series, Model Jenny












How effective art can be as a healing tool.


" Chris St James has realised something which not many folks figure out : just how effective art can be as a healing tool.


A recent study at the Università degli Studi di Bari in Italy showed that when a group of people were asked to contemplate a series of paintings, their pain was found to be a third less intense when they were looking at beautiful artistic imagery.


This has actually been known in the UK for some time. In another study by Dr Lee Elliot Major, research director at the Sutton Trust, it was demonstrated that paintings in hospitals really do help patients, both in terms of longevity and recovery times. I guess we are lucky here in the UK that our National Health Service thought that this research was important enough to actually do something about it as part of its national healthcare policy.











When I visited St Bart’s Hospital in London earlier this year, I noticed William Hogarth’s painting Pool of Bethesda (above) still hanging on the grand staircase, and even my local hospital (a shining beacon in free local healthcare) has a whole section of the hospital dedicated to the best and the brightest in the art world. As well as having its own art gallery, the entire corridor (which runs the entire length of the hospital and is nearly half a mile end to end) is covered in beautiful paintings donated by both talented patients and well known artists. Like many others, I have spent hours there drinking in the fantastic art (O.K. I admit the coffee there is pretty good too!)

Such exhibitions never fail to lift patients, to inspire them, to give them hope.

The opportunity to enjoy something creative offers not only a distraction from physical discomforts and endless medical procedures, but it also gives focus and the invitation to participate in something more fundamental, more important than these crappy bodies we are trapped in.








Through studying art, patients get to engage in something outside themselves, something more spiritual, and through this participation, so begins the healing process.

The body may remain broken and in pain, but the mind, the soul, is growing, expanding in the presence of beauty, reaching for the eternal.



When my body is giving me hell, when I’m feeling pretty darn awful, what do I do ? I go look at the finest that the photographic art world has to offer, and that would of course be the work of all you photographers reading this.

If I appear to be getting overly sentimental, then do excuse me. Maybe the healing power of art is something you have to experience on a personal level before you realise its potential.












But Chris and I, and thousands more like us, we know The Secret :


Art heals the spirit, which in turn heals the body.


And that makes you, the photographers and artists out there reading this, more valuable to us than you could ever know."