Monday 18 February 2013

The Genius of Photography- Part 1 ,,Fixing the shadows''


1) What is photography’s “true genius”?

Throughout 170 years photography has served us, delighted us, moved us, intrigued us and sometimes disappointed us by showing the secret strangeness that lies beneath the world of appearance. It’s about what frame you put around the image, what comes in and what is cut off,  it tells its own story. Yet the story doesn’t end, is told beyond the frame... That is the true genius of photography.

Andre Kertesz 1928


2) Name a proto-photographer.
Henry Fox Talbot was one of the first proto-photographers. He was a British inventor of calotype process who also experimented with paper covered by silver salts. He also contributed to the concept of  negatives and positives (many positive copies can be made from negative).
 


Another proto-photographer worthy of mention is Louise Daguerre who was using copper plates to fix the images. A downside of this type of photography was that the image could not be reproduced like a Polaroid picture.



3) In the 19th century, what term was associated with the daguerreotype?
19th century term refers to “A mirror with a memory”, which gives a very precise description as to what daguerreotype is.  Fixed images were done on mirror metal plate and reflected a highly detailed picture with impregnable sharpness. Tones of grey within the image and subject which seats on the background creates a very unique visual experience, almost like a 3D effect.



4) What is the vernacular?
Vernacular is a genre of photography which refers to unknown or amateur photographers work. Its subcategory contains journalistic, touristic, scientific photography. All media such as postcards, snapshots, passport photos and every kind of photography used except art. It contains some of photography’s greatest natural accuracy, a gift of the media itself rather than the genius of the individual photographer.




5) How do you “Fix the Shadows”?
Henry Fox Talbot experimented using chemistry, paper coated with silver salts and shoe box size cameras, which were nicknamed mouse traps. All of his images were paper based. Another photographer who found different way of fixing the shadows was Louis Daguerre. Basically “Fix the Shadows” is the process of stopping a picture from disappearing by overexposing to create permanent image.  


6) What is the “carte de visite”?
It was a type of photography which stood for the portraiture in 1854, patented by Andre Disderi. A person was photographed 8 times in rapid sequence by a camera with multiple lenses (8 poses in a space of few minutes). Cards were small and handy ie easy to send by post. It has turned photography into a true industry.



7) Who was Nadar and why was he so successful?
Nadar (Gaspard-FĂ©lix Tournachon) was a French celebrity photographer who photographed upper coming stars in the style that has changed the rules of portratuire. He photographed people as equals, they were standing in his daylight studio, plain background, looking authentic and wonderful. That is why they are considered to be the best portraits ever. Nadar had a specific way he looked at people. There was nothing to indicate what was the background or profession of the photographed person. It was the force of personality alone that was to convey the character of the person.


8) What is pictorialism?
Pictorialism is the era of an international style and aesthetic movement that dominated photography in late 19th and early 20th century. It refers to the style where the photographer deliberately manipulated the object to create this imagined photograph. It was a little bit like painting, creating the image rather than recording it.   

Edward Stychen