Monday, March 30, 2009
Dick Laurent is dead
I watched David Lynch's Lost Highway last weekend. . I think the film is about the psychological transformation of a man whose jealousy leads him to kill his wife, though this could all be in his mind, i THINK.
The only way I manage to even make sense of the story now is to let go of conventional narrative, and think of it as a dreamlike sequence or nightmare you might have. Just snippets of time, places and people who transform into other people for no apparent reason. Its insane, brilliant, and noisy! While I was prepared for the visual masterpiece it demonstrated,(the lighting, the darkness, the colour), I was surprised by the intensity of the sound; it heightened the whole feeling of uneasiness in the film, and put you on edge right down to the last minute.
It is surreal, and wrong and confusing to say the least,
The first lynch film I've seen, and definitely not the last.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Julia Fullerton-Batten
images from her series Teenage Stories..
themes of suburban nightmare, broken childhood dreams and lost innocence
http://www.juliafullerton-batten.com/
Noah Kalina
I am inspired by Kalina's use of lighting to provoke tension. It appears as though a car is coming, or a person is standing outside the frame and shining a spotlight into the image. There's just something compelling you to look deeper and to find a story.
The top image I think works extremely well, like a portrait with the subject absent, it seems to make for a stronger suggested narrative.
More amazing photos on his website: http://www.noahkalina.com/
Commonsensual: The Works of Rut Blees Luxemburg (2009)
Cary Dolan
Some of his 'artificial twilight' images.. I love them! ...but can't find much else out about them. The artificial lighting juxtaposed against the small amount of sunlight (dawn or dusk) is beautiful.
Dolan's website- http://www.carydolan.com/home.html
Bell Soto
The Hunger (left) and Father Figure (right) by Bell Soto
Each of these is actually a montage of images used for multi-page spreads for fashion editorial StyleMonteCarlo, though I do like them arranged in this way shown here. It appears almost like a movie storyboard and emphaisizes the cinematic quality (staged action, artificial lighting, doll-like subject, disturbed quality etc).
I guess it could be described as aesthetically very 'Lynchian'*,
but I feel as if everything I see these days likes to hide under the David Lynch blanket a bit.
Soto's website under the 'film' page is quite interesting- there's a few short films which I think demonstrate the collision between art/fashion as well as cinema/photography.
http://www.bellsoto.com/
*Visit 'The City of Absurdity' for the definition of Lynchian, apparently!
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Dieter Appelt
(between life and death)
Friday, March 6, 2009
First draft Proposal
At the moment I'm working on getting back into a conceptual mindset after a long break, and revisiting my final exhibited work last year. I was overall very pleased with what I created, and while I believe the result was a resolved piece of artwork, I find myself wanting to explore the collision between photography and cinema in more in depth. In retrospective critique of my work last year, I think that the final concept wasn’t realized until near the end, and I didn’t necessarily have time to explore the different levels of subtlety. The Plot Thickens (http://emilyhlavac.blogspot.com/2008/11/plot-thickens-final-images.html) was an effective comment on the cinematic cliché in an obvious, almost comical way. While I am still thoroughly interested in the constructing of scenes and staging of action, perhaps I will see if I can create something more representative of the subtleties of cinema.
At the moment conceptually I am focusing on finding out more about the relationship between cinema and photography, and how one another influence each other.
Technically I am exploring the use of film, manipulating the camera and the image within the viewfinder (what we see, what we know). The idea of panoramic imagery also fascinates me, we are seeing more than the span of our peripheral vision in one go, which automatically disrupts the idea that a photograph is a single moment in time caught on camera.
So a few ideas that pop up..
-Symbology and iconography in cinema
-Moving image can be STILL, while a still image can suggest motion.
-Film stills as fragments of a whole?
-structural film, the film itself
-TIME/DURATION.. Non linearity
A couple of favourite photographers at the moment...
Sam Taylor-Wood
I am drawn to the panoramic style of her five revolutionary seconds firstly, but I also think that Taylor-Wood has managed to get across a sense of subtlety without dulling down the action.
Gregory Crewdson
Narrative photographer. His books Twilight and Beneath The Roses vary quite widely in content, but all have this crazy surreal aspect. The lighting, combined with the strange positioning of figures and random props gives an eerie feeling.