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Latest revision as of 12:09, 10 October 2019
Thesis Outline - Draft @ 29 September 2019
I. Introduction
1. Background
I define myself as a photomedia artist. Guided by my fascination with the physical properties and ethereal qualities of light I explore concepts of journey, place and ecologies of time. My thesis will serve as an in-depth artist statement whereby I interrogate and attempt to deconstruct the methods, processes and motivations of my artistic practice. (give examples) I plan to situate my practice within a broader social and artistic context drawing on reference texts on contemporary (expanded) photography theory and other artistic practices. Presented in a photo book format I will have chapters that discuss the various aspects of my practice, interspersed with autobiographical journal entries accompanied by a lot of my own visual material. Although I am attracted to the idea of producing a purely analytical essay I ultimately feel that a report on my research and practice will serve me better and be more useful for my short-term future aspirations.
2. Thesis Statement (a sentence that states your argument to the reader)
A reflection and investigation into concepts of journey, photomedia, light and time and how they intertwine and form the foundation on which I build my artistic practice. (help!)
Possible reframing to consider: thesis as a critical enquiry/a critical reflection (after getting stuck on the word "argument")
The thesis is a critical reflection into the motivations of my desire to make by looking at three topics (time, light & space) and concerns of my practice which intersect...
II. Body of Thesis
1. First Topic: There’s No Such Thing as Post-Photography: on Photomedia or Light-Space-Time Structures
- Point A: Contemporary (expanded) photographic practices are defined by their use of light, rather than the camera.
- 1. A look at photography today. (too broad a topic)
- 2. A look at alternative and experimental processes e.g. cyanotypes, camera obscura, photograms, lens-less processes, (further: sun-tanning, impressioning at Hiroshima, photosynthesis).
- 3. Cite “Light and Photomedia”, “Nonhuman Photography” and related theoretical texts.
- 3. Cite “Light and Photomedia”, “Nonhuman Photography” and related theoretical texts.
- Point B: If Point A is true then the digital/analogue binary is an outdated and irrelevant marker of process Maybe this section can go into a materiality and process chapter.
- 1. The arrival of digital and the fetishisation of analogue processes.
- 2. Why I use analogue processes. Slowness, contemplation, demystification of process, use of the body in production (making).
- 2. Why I use analogue processes. Slowness, contemplation, demystification of process, use of the body in production (making).
- Point C: Installation, projection and moving image work also falls under the umbrella of Photomedia ?
2. Second Topic: Being Elsewhere: on Journey, Place and Non-Place
- Point A: Autoethnography as Method
- 1. Art as journal and tool for expression. The metaphysical potential of photography. ??
- 2. A closer look at tourism and the (amateur) snapshot.
- 2. A closer look at tourism and the (amateur) snapshot.
- Point B: Liminality: Travel is a liminoid experience, Non-places are liminoid spaces
- 1. Cite essays and “Non-Places” book
- 2. Discuss how my time in the darkroom and my process is also a liminal space.
- Point C: Pedestrianism and Walking as contemplative practices
- 1. Cite Rebecca Solnit “A Field Guide to Getting Lost” and “Wanderlust” and related texts on pedestrianism e.g. Walking as pilgrimage, leisure, fitness, protest, etc.
- 2. A look at walking practices in art. e.g. Hamish Fulton, Richard Long, Bram Thomas Arnold, (find some women, people of colour) etc.
- 2. A look at walking practices in art. e.g. Hamish Fulton, Richard Long, Bram Thomas Arnold, (find some women, people of colour) etc.
- 3. relation to my own practice.
- 3. relation to my own practice.
3. Third Topic: A counterpoint to Cartier-Bresson’s “Decisive Moment”: on Duration & Ecologies of Time
- Point A: The duration of a photograph can go beyond the opening and closing of the shutter.
- 1. Use of the darkroom as a second journey and creation of a sustained exposure.
- 2. Methods employed in my practice e.g. darkroom interventions, time it takes to think, edit and print.
- 2. Methods employed in my practice e.g. darkroom interventions, time it takes to think, edit and print.
- Point B: Cinema and Photography are simply two sides of the same coin.
- 1. Discuss how time can endure in still images and how it can be frozen in moving images. Cite essays in “The Cinematic.”
- 2. Incorporating moving image into my practice?
- 2. Incorporating moving image into my practice?
- Point C: Representing time scales in photomedia: Cosmic, Geological and Biological Time.
- 1. The landscape as a marker of time. Rocks, exposed strata = geological time, light and the sun = cosmic time
- 2. Subject matter, slowness of process and exposure as a representation of time in my practice.
- 2. Subject matter, slowness of process and exposure as a representation of time in my practice.
4. Fourth Topic: The Sublime is not a dirty word: on Materiality & Magic
Could this chapter be removed and incorporated into the preceding three chapters?
- Point A: Abstraction as method. Abstraction is one way to unravel and expose the inner workings of the photographic process and apparatus; to challenge conceptions of what constitutes a photograph.
- 1. Cite texts and other artists’ practices and their use of abstraction “Photography is Magic” “Towards a Philosophy of Photography”
- 2. Explain how I incorporate abstraction in my practice.
- 2. Explain how I incorporate abstraction in my practice.
- Point B: Physical properties of light: is another way to unravel and expose the inner workings of light.
- 1. Optics (Newton, Goethe)
- 2. methods used in my practice?
- 2. methods used in my practice?
- Point C: Why the word “Sublime” is absent from contemporary photographic discourse. ?
III. Conclusion
Other possible topics to consider:
- the other, the distant gaze
- non-criticality
- landscape as metaphor
- non-human element
- a look at materiality and process together