Sunday 21 November 2010

Cinemas, beautiful forgotten cinemas...


I am currently working on a project about Islington's forgotten cinemas and its early cinematic history. These photographs are of the Carlton cinema on Essex Road. The Carlton originally opened in 1930 and operated as a cinema until 1972, then becoming a bingo hall for a number of years. It is now completely closed up awaits another life. 
The Carlton in 1963, when it was known as the ABC.
 

Thursday 11 November 2010

Shortlisted for Westphoto Photography Prize

I am happy to say one of my photographs has been short listed for the Westphoto Photography Prize; this year's competition is jointly hosted by the University of Westminster Aalto University, Helsinki and Lette Verein, Berlin.

The Private View and Awards Ceremony will take place at Ambike P3 Exhibition Space, 35 Marylebone Road, London, NW1 5LS on Thursday, 18 November - 5.30pm
The London strand of show will run from 19-24 November (11.30 - 6pm)

Monday 18 October 2010

James Benning - RUHR











 

Still from RUHR, James Benning 2010


I saw RUHR by James Benning on Saturday as part of the London Film Festival.

Comprising seven fixed frame composition that range in length from seven minutes to one hour, the film is primarily an exercise (as Benning himself proclaims) in looking and listening. The footage is all shot in the heavily industrialized region of Ruhr in Germany; however, these images could be of anywhere in the world, as the intention here is not really about place, but about the viewers relationship to observing place.

Watching the film, which at times can be challenging, (as you are watching the same scene/object/setting for up to one hour with very little change taking place) is what I can only describe as what it might be like to watch the world with your eyes closed. To explain what I mean by this it is first necessary to consider the way the philosopher Henri Bergson chose to talk not of things or appearances, but rather to speak everything in the world as ‘images’ and how images can be both matter and perceptions at the same time (see Bergson: Matter and Memory). Therefore, as I watched RUHR the line from the first page of Matter and Memory came to mind, ‘Here I am in the presence of images, in the vaguest sense of the word, images perceived when my senses are open to them, unperceived when they are closed.’ What I experienced in RHUR felt like what it might be like to see what happens in the world when my eyes are closed, in other words to perceive (to see) without perception. For Bergson perception serves action; that is, unable to take in all sensory information in the world, perception filters images that make up the external world; meaning that the images that do not concern our needs and actions pass right by us. What I see or perceive in the images on the screen in RHUR is that which is present, but without potentiality for action - in other words that which perception normally filters out.

A different way of thinking about the seven fixed framed composition that make up RUHR is to consider them as 'animated photographs'. Animated photography was the name frequently given to very early films in the period 1895 - 1906. These films normally lasted from anything from 20 seconds to 3 minutes and were fixed frame (the camera did not move) and the action, which was usually of a simple city scene, unfolded gradually in front of the camera. The movement that was witnessed by those early audiences often seemed to take place as if by magic. In these films, which were also referred to as living pictures, the movement was not the big movement that cinema would soon be so proud of as it demonstrated it’s array of techniques; instead, these were the detailed movements of smoke drifting out of a factory chimney (just as smoke drifts out of the coke quenching tower in RUHR) or leaves blowing down the road (just as in watching RUHR attention falls on the subtle rustling of a leaf blowing in The Matenastraße Tunnel). Animated photographs did not yet have the techniques of pan, zoom, edit and montage that came with the 'movement-image'. Another comparison between RUHR and animated photographs could be seen as both having durational equivalence between the time taken to film and the time taken to play back the film to audience. In many ways RUHR could be compared to animated photograph; however a big difference is technology and its ability for manipulation. Benning made it very clear in the Q&A that followed the screening that in this film small manipulations had taken place to give a truer feel of the place being portrayed. Elsewhere he has stated ‘sometimes irregular events give a false sense of reality and by removing them the truth becomes more apparent; but of course any truth is only the perception of the viewer ...’ What that perception might be brings us back to my starting point ...

Friday 15 October 2010

A Lesson in Applied Physiognomy. Drawings, Video and Text

 

If you happen to be in Sydney between 26th October - 6 November, then this show by Nick Brown should be seen: 

Tom Boyd, Victorian Working Man Both Ordinary And Peculiar: A Lesson In Applied Physiognomy. Drawings, Video and Text

 

Details to be found here.

Monday 11 October 2010

In Time @ 272 High Holborn Oct 15 & 16




In Time is a group show that explores the subject of time and is taking place this Friday and Saturday at Blueprint, 272 High Holborn, London, WC1V 7EY.

The show comprising screenings, installation and performance seeks to examine time as duration, material, and as concept and process.

RSVP: info@samnightingale.com


Olympic Changes: an inadequate document of life will be screened during the exhibition, between 5.30 - 6.30pm on Friday 15th October and again on Saturday 16th of October between 2.30 - 3.30pm.

Olympic Changes: an inadequate document of life addresses time through the relationship between the still and moving image. The film looks at the concept of time as it is first arrested in the still photographic image (as a moment that is isolated and taken out of time) and then (re)animated as a moving image in digital video. This experimental film takes the analogue photograph as its source material and transforms the still-ness of photography into the dynamic movement of film. 

Olympic Changes originates from six medium-format photographic negatives taken from a moving train. Each of the negatives were digitally scanned and repeatedly divided and cropped to make 600 separate images – each becoming a frame in the film. Movement is re-animated through digital video to reflect the play of motion present at the original moment of capture. The frames of the film are sequenced in such a way that the viewer not only journeys through the changing urban landscape, but also journeys through each of the six still photographs. Witnessed is the banality of an everyday train journey, entwined with the structural changes taking place to the urban environment around the Olympic site in East London.


Further details concerning In Time can be found at: http://intimeexhibition.wordpress.com/


Tuesday 14 September 2010

Traversal - First Passage screening at Ear Me Now

Traversal - First Passage is to be screened as part of 'Ear Me Now' an evening of performance, film, installation and conversation celebrating and investigating the dialogue between hearing and seeing. Ear Me Now takes place on Friday 17th September, at Second Floor Cafe Netil House, Bocking Street Entrance, E8 3RL, 8pm / doors open 7pm.
















In Traversal - First Passage the image is not constrained to visuality – but it attempts to utter its own existence in the sonic realm. The overarching soundtrack in Traversal is made as ‘visual sound’, an experimental procedure I use that connects with the way sound is transmitted in optical sound films – a process first developed in the 1920’s to allow sound to be synchronized to images in cinematic film. The technique of 'visual sound' that I have developed in this film translates light frequencies, read with a specially designed microphone, into sonic frequencies, which become the film’s abstract and vibrational soundtrack, and in turn offer a non-visual perception of the image.

The idea of the utterance of the image, in Traversal, is literally the graphical inscription of the image running through the projector to external speakers as a kind of activation of the material trace between sign and object. In this journey the sound goes from visible (what we see on the screen), to invisible (sound waves), to the physical (the vibration of tiny hairs in our ears to enable audition), offering a tangible trace and a material connection between object and sign. In this process, no longer satisfied to appear before the eyes, the image translates its being to the sonic realm where it presents itself in a new form of perception, one which looks to conquer the historic dominance of visuality which as Douglas Khan puts it ‘overwhelms aurality in the cultural balance of the senses’.

Wednesday 18 August 2010

30°36'53.26"S 130°24'46.88"E





















19th July 2010, 2436km from Sydney sits Cook.  A town that once had a population of over 100 now is reduced to a population of 2.  Cook is a town that once was, in a time that is no more. There are no roads in or out of this place, just iron rail.

Saturday 10 July 2010

Thursday 8 July 2010

Mail - part one












































































Having the luxury of more time on my hands than I have known for quite some time, I have been going through some of the small projects I have done in the last couple of years. The first of these is Mail. Between May and October 2008 I photographed many of the different piece of paper/plastic that dropped through my letterbox as mail. Why you may ask?
I think to start with it was a result of being amazed by the amount of recycling I was accumulating each week and I wanted to turn the camera on the cause of at least part of it. 
However, as I went on with my task of recording these banal objects I became fascinated with how I could photograph them in abstract ways that drew attention to each one’s own materiality, be this colour, texture or design. But more than anything this little project was about giving something normally very banal a little bit of attention in its own right. Maybe it is also in part referential to Brassaï’s Sculptures Involuntaires

Sunday 20 June 2010

Field Trip Magazine

This week saw the launch of Field Trip Magazine; the first of edition of which is dedicated to analogue photography and includes a small selection of photographs taken from my latest film Traversal - Third Passage. The film Traversal - Third Passage is the third instalment of a trilogy of work occupied with the Australian landscape as perceived from the train window as I travelled from Melbourne to Darwin and back again.

All elements of Traversal are in some way are concerned with exploring perception and blurring the boundaries between the still and moving image. In Third Passage, a film made from 54 single photographs, the still image is animated and gives the viewer no opportunity for the considered observation of the single image which we tend to expect from photography. Instead in the film the 54 still images flick by in a frenzy of changing patterns and rhythms that build towards an overwhelming crescendo. 

In Field Trip Magazine 12 of these images are isolated and time is frozen on the page giving opportunity for observation of these normally fleeting photographs.

The spread as it appears in Field Trip Magazine, Issue 1, Summer 2010.



































Friday 30 April 2010

Australian International Experimental Film Festival

Olympic Changes: an inadequate document of life is showing this weekend at the Australian International Experimental Film Festival, in Melbourne. The film will be presented during 'Private Space, Public Space and the Line In-Between'. For further details see: http://www.aieff.org/2010programme.html

Dust Breeding