Interview
Wednesday, October 7th, 2009Back in May of this year, Dean Brierly, a freelance writer for B&W Magazine, as well as a number of other magazines through the years, interviewed me for his blog. You can find the full interview here. Enjoy.
Back in May of this year, Dean Brierly, a freelance writer for B&W Magazine, as well as a number of other magazines through the years, interviewed me for his blog. You can find the full interview here. Enjoy.
From an academic perspective I’ve always thought that dissecting color, even organizing it in wheels only goes so far. Fundamentally, color is an emotional response-you do indeed have to feel it-it is primal, and visceral. It can make you shudder in horror, or it can make you giddy as a school girl in June, but we all need to realize that our response to color is fundamentally emotional. The way that a photographer uses color is as manipulative as it can get in our medium. Our interpretation of color is rooted in our psyche’s is therefore hard to control-it is a response on a primal level, and we are hard pressed to actually control our response to specific colors. Just consciously realizing these things changes how we choose to use color in our photography and changes how we control our color palettes in post production.
I’ve updated my site with some images that never made it into the final body of work for the Transience of Self series. I call it Periphery mainly because they always were on the edge of the main body of work and additionally because these were mostly exterior images created while I was trying to find my way back to the foundation of why I do what I do. They were necessary for bringing my work to the place it is now.
All visual artists need words. The word, whether written or spoken is the conduit that brings understanding in a deeper, more conscious way. We put photographs on the crit rail and what do we do? We talk about them. Occasionally we write about our work, in stumbling, jumbled prose we attempt to convey to others what our work means to us. Shouldn’t it be enough to let the photograph speak for itself? Do we not believe that our work has a voice of it’s own without adding ‘traditional’ language to the mix? I cannot deny that words do indeed help us clarify our own intention, but I still wonder why the photograph isn’t enough. Part of me wants to believe that there is work out there that does not require words to validate it’s existence. Some may point out the work of the great masters-that those works stand on their own, but our understanding of these works come from what has been written by others, so the question remains; is there intrinsic power inside a photograph that can negate the need for words?
I’ve been busy spreading around my most recent work. Here is a breakdown of the work that will be either in galleries or publications.
I’m working on producing a substantial body of work in the palladium process as well that I intend to show in a regional gallery. We’ll see how it progresses over the next few months. Overall I’m stoked about the direction and recognition that has come my way after all these long years of working.
The set of tools that photographer’s use today is rapidly removing the limitations that have traditionally molded the visual possibilities within the medium. What does this expansion of possibilities and the ease at which these variations can be realized do to the process of making images? I wonder why I see so many artists impose upon themselves limitations, whether conscious or unconscious, by choosing materials with defined boundaries. Why have so many people chosen a specific type of paint to work in? Why are there photographers putting the brakes on so to speak and saying “I just want to make pictures” not shoot video, not work on 3D models in Photoshop CS4? When did Photoshop become about 3D wire meshes and editing video? And of course where does the decisive moment fit when your camera can shoot 30 fps in HD-any of which are suitable for publication in many newspapers and websites around the world? Where does the still image fit into this ever changing set of photographic tools?
My old blog was deleted accidentally. Luckily the data was able to be saved, but alas, no pictures and no comments. I’ve restored the old posts and hopefully this won’t happen again.
Original Post August 19, 2008
Photography, by its very nature, is unique in the visual arts. The camera shows us all too easily the thing itself rather than a personal vision of the individual wielding the tool. It is by far the easiest and most ubiquitous device to use and therefore it’s power is often diminished. A skilled photographer, however, can show us something so much more than the thing itself-the world of the mind, of thoughts and of memory. Creating work that is deeper and more complete than what is represented takes time and dedication to the craft of photography and a desire to understand yourself and the world around you. The ability to use the physical attributes of a photograph to speak of the intangible aspects of life is a gift and a responsibility, one that I find ceaselessly fascinating.