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Just settling in and looking around so far. Who knows - I might yet stay.
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Just settling in and looking around so far. Who knows - I might yet stay.
It's taken me a while, but I have finally manged to upload a member picture. I think there is a bug, in that if the picture isn't square, and one side is LESS than 50 pixels it won't upload.
Tony Blair hands over power today to Gordon Brown, so these videos from YouTube seem appropriate
Hurt (thanks Brendadada)
Having been here for a few days and tested out most of the functions, I like what I see. At first the fact that it was so quiet compared to F***** was a bit disconcerting, but after a while that became a positive factor - none of the frenetic me me me posts you see in Flickr forums. I won't go Pro for a while however, partly because I am going to get my moneysworth out of Flickr, and partly because there are still some other options I want to try out. Ning.com for example still looks very good.
In the end though, it is the community that makes even a virtual place like a photosharing site and the community at Flickr was becoming increasingly irritating - and that was without the dreadful impact on management decisions of the Yahoo acquisition. It is a shame when the old neighbourhood goes downhill, but it happens and you if have the freedom to move it would be silly not to do so.
I’m Ian, 60, semi-retired from Gateshead now living in Wiltshire - former town planner, former community activist.
I still have my first real camera. This is a Zeiss Contina 35mm I acquired in 1966 when at university in Birmingham.
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| Zeiss Contina - my first prope… |
My first SLR was an ancient Miranda D (from the days when Miranda was a real camera not a brand name owned by Dixons). The lens had to be manually stopped down to take each picture. My success rate in doing that was probably only about 50%! This shot was taken using that camera and a cheapo telephoto lens from Dixons.
I then moved on to a Minolta SRT100. I eventually sold it to buy a Canon EOS 630, but have regretted that decision ever since. It was solid, ultra reliable and by the time I sold it I knew all its quirks and characteristics.
I moved into digital via a Minolta Dimage 2330. The image quality from this was pretty good, despite the relatively low pixel count. That recently gave up the ghost – one colour channel simply isn’t registering. I replaced it with a Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX10, which so far is brilliant and half the weight.
I still have the Canon EOS but to it I have added a Canon EOS20D. While I’m happy with both the Canons, they don’t somehow feel as satisfying to use as the Minolta SRT. I think this is more to do with ergonomics – the way the Canon feels in my hand more than anything else, but it equally possible that it is misplaced nostalgia.
Anyway, I now own:
I take entirely digital images at the moment because of my interest in photomanipulation. I still have a hankering to try medium or large format film though. I borrowed a Seagull from a friend, but didn't really have the chance to use it properly. What I would really like to try is one of those great big things with rise and fall adjustments for the front and back - the sort that used to be used in architectural photography - but I don't think my back would stand up to lugging it around!
When I did take film it was almost entirely Kodacolour slide film, although I dabbled with Ektachrome too. When my daughter was born I moved to colour prints like most fond parents and never went back to slides. For B&W it was either FP4 or HP4 – which dates me I know.
I never got into processing my own film, but did some B&W printing when I was at University – probably 1973ish. This was on a home made enlarger someone gave me. It used two aluminium pudding basins for the bulb housing with a Heath Robinson arrangement beneath for the lens and condenser. I never got my own darkroom so the next printing I did was at the former Spectro Arts Workshop in Newcastle in the late 1970s. Some of the prints I did then are also on flickr and again these are likely to move over at some stage. I also did a bit of Cibachrome printing at that time, but not very successfully. This is a scan from a Cibachrome print,
Using digital of course I now don’t need a darkroom and in my case this was probably the biggest single driver for moving over. I don’t have the expense of processing and have more or less total control over what I produce.
I haven’t done with film entirely however. I still have about 10,000 negatives and slides accumulated over the past 40 years. The vast majority of these are still unscanned and in the case of the slides, they are deteriorating rapidly. I need to scan the slides in particular as quickly as possible to ensure their preservation. This image (still on Flickr) shows some of the problems.
Because of illness I haven’t taken much in the way of new images for a couple of years so I have been spent a fair time experimenting with digital manipulation. Unfortunately I can also see a time when I won't be able to get out to take new ones. If that happens, processing that ‘archive’ could also become my only involvement in photography.
EDIT: a few typos tidied up, photo of Zeiss Contina added [30th June 2007]
I have already sort of cut myself adrift from Flickr, at least in terms of new pictures. I like the way in which I can blog and post pictures, audio and video in one place here on ipernity, without the messiness of YouTube or Myspace. I don't want to give up on my main blog, though. So, for the moment, and assuming my Flickr acount eventually winds down - or out - I think the ipernity blog wil be restricted to things to do with photography and 'image making', while the main Panchromatica blog will continue to deal with community and politics and the environment. I don't suppose the split will ever be so simple as that but it gives me something to work on.
I suspect that in the art world - at least that part frequented by the likes of Brian Sewell - Photoshop is a term of abuse, but then I also suspect that in some of its more hidebound corners, photography is still viewed as an upstart medium. There is a tendency of course for people to abuse that with which they are not familiar. I imagine that when factory made paints first became available, those painters who ground their own pigments and mixed their own paint got quite sniffy about this dreadful new stuff. Similar comments were no doubt made about synthetic brushes and acrylic paint. In the early days of colour photography, many photographers rejected colour as a distraction from the core aesthetic of photography as an art.
The famous remark about photography, that 'from today, painting is dead' has of course proved untrue. Photography has established itself alongside painting and drawing as a valid form of artistic expression. As with painting however, the generic term embraces a huge range of styles and forms. Think of the imitations of old master painting by Reijlander, the soft focus portraits of Julia Margaret Cameron, the social realism of the FSA photographers or Weegee, the 'decisive moment' of Cartier-Bresson, the surrealism of Man Ray, Angus McBean or Diane Arbus. These are all photography, but with very different impacts.
Portrait photography apart, photography has conventionally however been supposed to record what is in front of the camera. The photographer's role was in selecting what to record, not in creating it. Cartier-Bresson famously refused to allow any cropping - what he saw in his viewfinder was what he printed. However, conventional darkroom chemistry is not a neutral process. Bill Brandt for instance when he returned to some of his work in later years produced images much darker than the original prints. Even photo journalism is not immune. Robert Capa's classic photograph of the dying soldier was widely suggested as being posed (although eventually proven to be genuine) while the photograph of the flag raising at Iwo Jima, now rendered into a sculpture, is a restaging of an earlier event but with a larger flag. It is the second image however, that has gained iconic status.
Man Ray's 'photograms' are another obvious exception while Angus McBean continued the tradition of Reijlander, in assembling his images as a collage - a tradition now picked up by many 'Photoshoppers'. Photoshop is of course a specific package so I will use digital manipulation or DM from now on, as a generic term for the whole range of digital manipulation tools available.
I want to start however from a slightly different perspective, with Dadaism and Marcel Duchamp.
When Duchamp signs mass-produced objects . . . and sends them to art exhibits, he negates the category of individual production. The signature is inscribed on an arbitrarily chosen mass product because all claims to individual creativity are to be mocked. Duchamp's provocation not only unmasks the art market . . . it radically questions the very principle of art in bourgeois society according to which the individual is considered the creator of the work of art. Duchamp's Ready-Mades are not works of art but manifestations.
I start here because a frequent complaint about DM work is that its output is not artistic because it is not the work of individual effort and has no ‘craft element’. I shall come back to that second point later. For now consider the question of individuality.
Typically photography is defined by its literalness. The photographic image is seen as a direct description of reality not a representation of it. In practice of course the photographer has selected from the world just as much as the painter. The image is defined as much by what is outside the frame as by what is included and is inevitably only an approximation of the real world it purports to capture. Although I took my first photograph some 40 years ago, it took me some time to recognise this. Accepting this separation however frees the photographer from the tyranny of literal representation. Since DM requires an original photographic image, there is already therefore a degree of selection from the world involved and that of itself is an artistic choice.
By representative I do not necessarily mean figurative. If the apparent parallels between the image as captured and the world in front of the lens had not distracted us, this would have been obvious anyway, as photographers explored the use of differential focus, distorted or out of focus images, solarisation and grain. Some, like Man Ray or Angus McBean, pushed the boundaries to the limits but all of these techniques met some hostility from ‘traditionalists’ before being absorbed and accepted as a part of the aesthetic of photography.
DM, obviously also involves image manipulation. This may be limited to the application of a single filter or tool. At this point some problems of terminology arise, because these filters are described so often in terms derived from painting – brushes, watercolour etc. Where packages like Corel Painter are used to originate a piece of work then this is probably useful since it allows the artist to work by analogy. At its best though, DM is not about mimicry but about creating something that cannot be created in any other way.
Statements like this - If you can score a copy of the 800-pound behemoth known as Adobe Photoshop, you can fake artistic ability with the best of them - don't help however, even when they obviously come from computer geeks rather than artists. As with any art form, there are good and bad examples - Sturgeon's Law applies here too. I suspect that the difficulties many have with it however is the ease with which images can be created which can give the appearance of having been created in ‘conventional’ media but in practice have never seen a brush. Take this image for example – derived from one of my own photographs – which has been processed in Paint Shop Pro using two ‘plug ins’.
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| Village stream and ford |
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| Jungle blooms |
It is interesting that most of these artists are not young computer geeks, but people like me, not exactly in the first flush of youth, who come to digital imaging and manipulation nevertheless with no preconceptions and in the process probably push the boundaries more than someone who has grown up with this technology.
NOTE: This post has appared in various forms on my blog, on other sites and as personal statements for shows etc. Each time I bring it forward, it grows in length and new sections this get added. I expect I will come back to the theme in the future!
Flickr/Yahoo seems perplexed that they get complaints when they change the level of service their customers are paying for, without giving advance notice, deny that anything significant has happened, and then try to offload the blame to third parties.
The basic fact is they introduced localisation in Germany without adequately researching the consequences. When they discovered they couldn't do what they wanted to, they went ahead anyway as if nothing had happened. This is bad customer service at best, and from some of the comments made in the various forums, may itself be illegal in Germany.
I'm leaving flickr when my pro account expires in January. I'm using the time between now and then to make an orderly move to a new site.
I'm leaving because of poor customer service, which in the latest example resulted in <i>de facto</i> censorship, even if that wasn't the intent.
I'm leaving because the debacle over Geman localisation is only the latest in a long series of examples of poor and declining customer service.
I'm leaving because the growth of Yahoo/Flickr has also brought with it too many people that I simply don't want to be associated with, people who make fun of posts from non-English speakers in posts that are themselves riddled with spelling and grammatical errors.
I'm leaving because Yahoo/Flickr is becoming too much a place for attention seeking show offs, whose concern is more about ratcheting up their view count than improving their photography and image making.
I'm leaving because I can't ignore these pillocks without losing a huge part of the social and community aspects of the site that drew me here in the first place. If I lose that there is no reason to stay.
I'm starting to import my images from Flickr, combining that with the work needed to prune down to 200. I know that the others won't be deleted, but I see no sense in having pictures on their servers that I can't access.
This process will mean lots of pictures coming in at once, but the boredom factor (mine that is) should keep each batch down to a reasonable size.
I will probably be blogging here on all aspects of photgraphy and what for want of a better word I call 'digital imaging', but I have also started blogging at a new group blog, "Man in the White Suit", about photography the old fashioned way with film. You can see my first post here. I haven't lost my interest in digital manipulations, far from it, and if your only interest in photography is family and holiday snaps, then digital cameras are ideal. However digital media cannot, so far, capture the subtle tones possible from medium and large format film.
I've invested therefore in a new 120 film camera - like most modern technology these days, made in China - and I'm looking forward to trying it out. For the non-photographers out there, 120 film produces negatives 6cm square, although with some cameras you can get other formats. The normal 6x6 format is about four times the size of a 35mm negative.
Actually 'invested' is probably too strong a word for spending twenty quid on an overpriced toy, but the images I've seen from Holga cameras have been captivating. There is perhaps something liberating about not having a few hundred pounds worth of high tech goods round your neck. Even taking processing costs in to account, you would have to take an awful lot of pictures on a Holga to spend the equivalent of a top of the range digital.
Given that the Holga is indeed a toy, I've also bought a S/H Lubitel 166. This also uses 120 film, but is an altogether more serious - if still cheap - camera. It is an obsolete type really, known as a Twin Lens Reflex (TLR) using one lens to focus and a second to take the picture. The two lenses are linked, so that as you focus the one, the other adjusts too.
Using cameras like this means a change of pace. Winding on the film is a process of slowly winding the knob until the number of the next frame appears in a small red window on the camera back. This takes at least 30 secs. In the same period, my digital SLR (Single Lens Reflex) can rip through 50 or 60 pictures. You can't capture rapid movement with these cameras so there is no point in trying and you begin to concentrate on the details of what is in front of you - perhaps seeing it for the first time.
I'm looking forward to the experience.
I will continue posting at my main blog on the usual range of topics, but I expect from time to time there will be some cross-fertilisation.
In the US they seem to have lots of art fairs and shows as well as craft fairs. However, if you Google Art Fairs in the UK, you get mainly shows managed and run for the benefit of galleries not individual artists.
I'm looking at creating opportunities for less well known artists, either unrepresented or representing themselves, as well as for artists from outside the conventional art school/gallery circuit. I am investigating the possibility of setting up an art fair along similar lines to UK Craft fairs, open however, only to artists (in which I include photography). Selling art at craft fairs seems to be on the increase, but I am not sure how well people are doing.
I would very much like to hear from anyone with comments and thoughts about this idea. The sort of information and comments I am looking for include:
* Comments on the idea of a dedicated art fair
* 'One-off' show or a regular event?
* Annual or more frequent
* Single venue or 'travelling'
* Issues around choosing a venue
* Issues around choosing locations
* Practical business issues around setting up and running the event
* Tips and advice on marketing and promotion to the public
* How to spread the word amongst artists.
* Issues around selection of artists - pros and cons of juried shows vs open events. If juried, how to maintain a transparent jurying process.
* Anything else you can think of!
Many of these issues apply to craft fairs too, so if you have experience there please help by sharing it.
It has always seemed to me that the point of photography, even digital photography, is the print. Holding that image in your hand, whether still damp from the darkroom or the inkjet, is the culmination of a process of exploration. So, as the proud owner of a new Holga, I was keen to see how the prints turned out.
I had the film processed commercially, but chose to scan the negatives myself and make my own prints. It was print making that always absorbed me in the days when I did wet printing in the darkroom and I find digital printing, although obviously a different process, equally enjoyable.
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| anti-static |
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| calor gas and stones |
Unfortunately my next attempt, with sepia toning (at about 15% in Paint Shop Pro) was disastrous. Colour was a dreadful green rather than the subtle brown I was aiming for and the whites for some reason were washed out. I don't know why this should happen, but I obnviously need to spend more time fine tuning the printer profile. I have to admit I do not have the monitor and printer properly matched, largely because I do not really understand the concept of 'colour space'. Instead I tweak the printer settings to maximise print quality, even if the settings viewed on screen look wrong. Any advice on a more systematic approach would be gratefully received.
[1] EDIT: I've been researching scanners and it seems that my scanner, which I thought was pretty good resolution, is way behind what is currently available. Many flat bed scanners out perform - in raw numbers at least - even my dedicated film scanner. Sigh... more money it seems.
Apropos the previous post, having investigated, it seems my shiny new scanner I bought last year has been seriously overtaken in the resolution stakes. So, a bit of research and some time on EBay brings me later this week a new(ish) Canon 9900F with holders for 35mm slides, 120 film and even 5x4 cut sheets - although I don't know if my bank balance would stand a move to that size - and a scanning resolution up to 3200dpi instead of 1200.
I'm hoping that this will both speed up the scanning of my 35mm slide collection and improve the quality of the scans. I should also be able to make even bigger and better prints from my Holga. Watch this space for more news...
I'm also looking to buy a more sophisticated medium format camera that isn't a toy, probably a Bronica SQ, but so far EBay hasn't delivered!
EDIT - some typos corrected and missing words added
I've got some of my pictures into a new gallery space. A small number will be shown in December, taking up space from someone who has dropped out, with a bigger show in January. This looks as if it will be a good place to show. They rotate the display every month, which means people keep coming back to see what is new. Reported sales also look good. I'll post more information when I get it. If you live within travelling distance of Pewsey in Wiltshire, let me know if you would like a ticket for the private viewing in December or January.
I would be interested to hear about Ipernity member's experiences in selling their pictures. I have really only just got into trying to do this and so far with limited success. I have tried EBay, but with so much on it, it is difficult to be found, let alone make an impact. I have my own website, but again with so many art sites on the Web, you need to have a killer site to stand out.
Craft fairs are another outlet I have tried, but I suspect that visitors to a craft site are not expecting to buy pictures. I have always had a lot of interest from people, but limited sales - certainly not enough to cover the real cost of attendance. I have written already about my idea for Art Fairs and I am still pursuing that.
I have a few pictures in a local shop, but it is stuffed with pictures and craft items and is primarily a 'gift shop' not a gallery, which affects both what he can sell and prices.
I'm hopeful about the new gallery that has agreed to take some pictures, but they bring in new artists every month. In this case, because I am taking up a space from someone who dropped out, I will get a two month slot, but after that I can't go back for at least 6 months. Of course, unless the pictures are out there, they can't sell. I've seen similar advice for writers. If a manuscript comes back, send it out again. It won't sell sitting on your desk or in your PC.
With all that in mind, I'm going to start calling and visiting galleries and retail shops across the region. I think it is important to have a reasonable geographic spread too. I don't want my pictures turning up everywhere people go - that would I think devalue them bit financially and visually. They would lose their impact. I don't expect to suffer from over-exposure, unless I were to saturate all the outlets in one small town.
Your views and comments are invited.
I've set up a Ning Network to talk about some of the issues that might be involved in getting such a venture going. At the moment it is closed and has only one member - me. However, if you are in the UK and seriously interested in developing ways to sell your art or photography, then contact me here and I will send you an invitation.
I have in mind two options
These are not mutually exclusive of course.
However, until the basic concept is ironed out I don't want to make public information that might later be commercially sensitive. That sounds rather grandiose I know, but once a few people have signed up, we can take a decision about going fully public.
This is a preliminary list I've put together
The Bayswater Road in London would be be a good model for what I have in mind, as would the People's Photography event in Dublin. Prom Art - Grange over Sands I didn't know about - this looks a fun event.
Armstrong Bridge - Newcastle has been going for a while - although I remember when it started.
Cluny - an art market in a pub
A link to various art and craft markets etc. on Tyneside
A Guardian article on Market Trading is also interesting.
If you know of any art markets of this type in the UK please let me know, so that I can build it into a more structured list.
In addition to my complement of digital cameras, I have now added a Zenza Bronica SQ-A to my film cameras. The whole stable now is:
Digital
Canon 20D
Panasonic DMC FX10
35mm
Canon EOS 630F
Zeiss Contina (from 1950s)
Vivitar Wide and Slim
120
Holga 120N
Lubitel 166
Bronica SQ-A
Agfa Box 44 (1930s) - 6cm by 9cm negs
...it has to stop!
A new show at The Gallery, Pewsey, Wiltshire, including digital images by Ian Bertram (that's me folks!).
The Gallery
16 The High Street
Pewsey
Wiltshire
SN9 5AQ
01672 562349
www.madeinwiltshire.org.uk
Show opens Saturday 18th August at 10 am and runs for 4 weeks.
The Gallery is open Monday to Saturday from 10 am to 4 pm.
I've sneaked into this show via a cancellation, but will have a much larger display in January next year. Watch this space.