This photo is from an early morning photo shoot at Hayborough, Victor Harbor in South Australia. It is looking west to Granite Island. Rosetta Head, or The Bluff, is in the background.
This photo is from an early morning photo shoot at Hayborough, Victor Harbor in South Australia. It is looking west to Granite Island. Rosetta Head, or The Bluff, is in the background.
I've been going through the archives looking for material for the website's various galleries and I came across some studio based work:
I had ignored this body of work because I couldn't develop it. I didn't know how to. Technically it wasn't very good and that discouraged me, especially when I saw the quality studio work on the internet done with high end DSLR cameras.
But I do like the way film can flip things--makes them odder or wilder.
I made a number of 5x4 negatives for the 2015 Magpie Springs Photography competition. This is one image that failed to make the cut, and as it didn't work in colour, I converted this underexposed negative to a black and white image using Silver Efex Pro 2 software.
Though it looks better in black and white, and I've overcoming the over sharpening problem caused by the Epson software, I still have the other problem of blown highlights caused by scanning the negative. However, looking at this image of straight photograhy makes me uneasy and this unease is over and above these technical flaws.
I cant help but feel that straight photography, exemplified by this image, appears as a rather archaic discipline—even in its digital form, let alone the chemical one. There is still the attitude in the art institution that contemporary visual artist's love for the photographic medium is because it is so “simple,” so “non-artsy,” so “direct.” Photography, in this sense, has always been an important counterpart to modern art, The corollary of this is that straight photography has gradually acquired a strange status of something not completely artistic and yet highly artistic.
I've been mulling over where to next after the Edgelands exhibition at Manning Clark House in Canberra in November 2014. What project do I pick up and start to work on? Something that is different from the topographical approach of Edgelands.
I thought that a modest exhibition of abstractions would be an easy step as I can select the images from the archives. They'd be a mixture of colour and black and white and they would include abstractions from the urban and the natural environment. I'm not sure where the exhibition would be at this stage---probably in Adelaide and possibly at the Light Gallery in late 2015.
Abstractions are a bit passé these days ---retro probably, given the current emphasis on street photography. Or its a niche, even though abstraction has been intrinsic to photography. On the other hand, there is the retrospectivity of contemporary art that is nostalgic for, or repurposes, Modernist art. We could do without modernism's main themes: the transcendental, the contemplative and the timeless.
I'm starting to think of my next exhibition project now that the project for the Dark exhibition at the Ballarat International Foto Biennale 2013 is over.
What is forming is one of black and white landscapes and abstractions of rocks from the Fleurieu Peninsula around Victor Harbor and some landscapes from Kangaroo Island
This would be a mixture of medium and large format work. I already have about six or so printed and framed. That's a good start.
Maybe some muted 5x4 colour of rocks--high tone--- as well, as these would be mostly great.
I finally managed to use the old Cambo SC monorail to make some 8x10 colour pictures of the bark of the redgum in the reserve.
I mucked up one exposure---the first one--- as I'd forgotten to take off the yellow filter on the Schneider Symmar 210 mm lens that I'd been using for my black and white exposures.
The next step is take the sheet film to Atkins Technicolour to have them to process the negatives. That service will not be cheap-- probably around $16.50 for one sheet of film. The next step is to scan the negatives myself with the Epson V700 scanner.
I did two abstractions of the peeling bark in the open shade:
I'm not sure that 8x10 colour is an economic proposition or that it is worth the expense. I had the sheet film in the fridge and I needed to use it before it expired.
I don't do portraits very often because I am not very good at them.
I also struggle with the lighting. I've been using natural lighting from a window, but I find that it is too harsh and contrasty. I don't really have the studio equipment to do diffuse the lighting; or increase the lighting from above.
I have just had the backup technology for Encounter Studio's digital suite updated. I've been forced into it, as I needed to replace an old, dysfunctional data storage device---a Lacie Quadra (500 gigabit)--- with a NetGear Nas Raid (2TB) storage device with its mirroring disc. It will take around 12 hours to back up my photos.
It's a prosumer --home-based or small business--data storage device rather than an industrial or professional photography one. Though it is a network solution to data storage, it does not have the capacity to keep adding or replacing the hard discs, or to automatically backup to a remote location. That will be the next upgrade I guess.
I'm very paranoid about backing up my photographs and data storage these days, as I have experienced hard disc failures in my computers and my Apple and Lacie data storage devices die in the last year.
The next step is to back up the data storage devices with a portable hard disc using the hard discs that we have been aale to salvage from the now useless Lacie Quadra. These portable hard discs can then be stored on the library shelf at Victor Harbor, or in another place for safekeeping.
In the meantime I've been figuring out how to continue with my table top photography using the Sinar 8x10, a standard lens (Schneider Symmar 360mm f5.6), natural light and black and white sheet film. I wanted to avoid the expense of buying an extension rail or a telephoto lens.
I've been laid low with a torn ligament in my lower back and that ends the planned 8x10 photography for this weekend. So I've been going through some of the roadside pictures on the computer that I took last year during the summer.
One area that I started in the roadside series was the summer grasses:
I had a quick look at my summer grasses photography before, just after I'd scanned them, but I didn't like the series at all. I thought the idea was misguided. So I forgot about them.
It's winter now and everything looks different. So I can see the pictures I took then at more of a distance.
This is a picture that was taken between Petrel Cove and Kings Head in the early morning using a Rolleiflex SL66 and Ilford PanF Plus 50 --a slow black and white film.
The location is difficult to access as it involves climbing down the cliffs via waterfall. So the camera gear needed to be as lightweight as possible. I did lug the Cambo 5x7 monorail down there on a latter occasion.
The picture has been posted in my Flickr stream and it was processed in Silver Efex Pro software using a gold toning filter.
The Heysen Trail starts from Petrel Cove and wanders along the cliff tops. We walk the section from Rosetta Head to Kings Head with the standard poodles when were are in Victor Harbor. It's a lovely walk.