Showing posts with label Gregory Crewdson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gregory Crewdson. Show all posts

Sunday 22 April 2018

dreams and nightmares - no. 83


 kitchen garden


Our homework this week is to produce a picture in homage to one of our favourite photographers.  I chose the fantastic Gregory Crewdson.

Crewdson's images are often surreal in nature, sometimes disturbing and always challenging. Their hallmark is an intricate, beautifully-lit, cinematic setting. Clearly I can come nowhere near his level, but for this series of photos I chose to focus on three elements of Crewsdon's inimitable style, namely surrealism, setting and light.

As regards the first, I decided to create a mini-garden within my kitchen - a play on words. The setting was created using a perspex sheet on the floor which I covered with grass-cuttings and leaves from the garden and compost from the potting-shed. Various pot-plants and flowers from around the house completed the background.

I wanted to use a natural light but had to wait a little while for the sun to move round the house until it provided a shaft of light through the kitchen window. You can see this on the right-hand side of the photos and it's particularly effective in the shots where it lights up the tread on my wellington boots.

I really enjoyed taking these photos and may well return to the theme at a later date. I've already spotted one or two things I would like to improve but for now, what do you think?









Tuesday 9 January 2018

dreams and nightmares - no. 1


masked






Dear Sheddists,

I'm delighted to say my photography class has started up again. This time there's a much larger group but it still retains the friendly, sharing atmosphere that made last term such a joy.

We met for the first time yesterday evening and talked about getting motivated to take photos.  Our superb course tutor, Kate Green, suggested nine top tips...

1. Always have a camera with us.
2. Maintain and heighten our sense of awareness.
3. Make the normal extraordinary.
4. There's no time like the present!
5. Keep an 'ideas log'.
6. Train our eyes to see the light.
7. Experiment and venture outside our comfort zone.
8. Stay on top of our processing and editing.
9. Annotate our pictures and capture the creative thinking and feelings behind them.

A number of us signed up for a 365 photos project, one a day for the next year. I've decided to call mine, 'Dreams and Nightmares'.  It's something I've been thinking about for a little time now.  I can't promise the photos will always be pretty, but I do hope they will be thought-provoking.

I know I can take reasonably competent portrait and reportage photographs. Family and friends, music gigs. church and the Villa are all favourite topics. However, I was challenged at the end of last term when Kate showed us some work by the American photographer, Gregory Crewdson.  Rather than finding things to photograph Crewdson creates fantastical photographic tableaux in the manner of a movie producer. It's well worth clicking on the link above to learn a little about the creative processes that lie behind his works.

I don't possess the skill, the imagination or the budget to create and shoot such scenes but I have been thinking about how I could do something similar on a much smaller scale.  I'm particularly drawn to photographs of an ambiguous nature, open to different and potentially conflicting interpretations.

The photograph above is the first in my 'Dreams and Nightmares' project. It's a simple shot combining a blue shirt and a mask I acquired whilst attending 'The Drowned Man' an immersive theatre production by the Punchdrunk company.

So by way of explanation, here are the techie bits first. I shot the photo using ambient light from a bedroom window.  In order to make the picture more atmospheric I used a wide aperture and under-exposed the photo by -1.7.

Now for the creative process and the feeling I wanted to create.  The shirt and the mask symbolise the face we put on when we get dressed.  We use clothes to create an image, be it a business suit, a party dress or a simple pair of jeans coupled with a well-worn t-shirt.

In the photograph above the shirt and the mask appear to morph into a face.  It's a psychological phenomenon known as pareidolia, in which we project images onto something we see by perceiving a familiar pattern where none exists. A good example is the regular sighting of the face of Jesus in a rich and highly diverse variety of foodstuffs!  In my shot of the day the edge of the mask and the collar of the shirt combine to produce what looks to be the jaws of a face staring out of the gloom.

Just for good measure, I've included two earlier shots I took on the way to creating the final piece.

Yours as ever,

electrofried(mr)