Felix/Research: Difference between revisions

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== Subject (Draft) ==
== Subject (Draft) ==
# [[Felix/Methods#S2_.2F.2F_Reviewing_self-directed_research|Links to methods from 17-10-18 (revised 6-11-18)]]
# [[Felix/Methods#S2_.2F.2F_Reviewing_self-directed_research|Links to methods from 17-10-18 (revised 6-11-18)]]
# What are you photographing? (Steve's question)
I am collecting appearances of a perceived reality in public space. For that I am making photographs of people in commercial photography (advertising) and real estate renderings found in public space as well as the public space itself by involving architectural spaces and commercial designs of public space. The photographs are fragments that describe how a certain perception of reality is produced in the public. I understand them as hyperreal simulations that again become reality through their existence or through humans’ reactions on the hyperreal’s effects. Hyperreal simulations provoke feelings and desired, that reoccur in the medial perception of the society and therefore become real.
The loose categories of imagery that I am creating are:
1) Portraits of the designed society
By re-photographing the people from the photographs visible on ad posters or retail prints that are visible in the public space, I am isolating portraits of contemporary fashion (i.e. fashion but also vogue and trend). The photographs are made on site, as seen, which results in an abstraction becoming visible caused by the sunlight or artificial lightning: The materiality of the print becomes visible but also its reflective characteristics create another layer, as does the reflection of the surrounding space in protective glasses in front of the print. Furthermore the print itself is abstracted by the close field-of-view that is making the printing-technique visible.
1.b)
A sub category of the above mentioned portraits make the portraits of people in architecture renderings („Render ghosts“, after James Bridle), that are photographed the same way. An abstraction though is rather created by the digital artifacts of the renderings and the layer of the printing technique than by reflections of glass, since the renderings are less often found behind glass in the public space.
2) Spaces for the people
The architectural public spaces photographed have artifacts created for humans in it that are „designed“ to have a specific use to them or, very broad spoken, want to create an aesthetical sojourn quality in it. Beyond spatial and architectural motifs, specific objects in the space, that are designed to add a feeling of naturalness to the constructed space, become subject of the photographs. By isolating these objects in the photographs, the opposite impact is created, they become signs of artificiality. The scenes are mostly photographed empty, without humans in it. The depicted objects though are clearly human-made and made for humans and therefore index to the existence of humans in the empty scenes.


== Readinglist ==
== Readinglist ==

Revision as of 13:44, 3 December 2018

< back to my page

Currently (and forever) this is a rough overview on the variety on thematics I am interested in and more/less working on.

Subject (Draft)

  1. Links to methods from 17-10-18 (revised 6-11-18)
  2. What are you photographing? (Steve's question)

I am collecting appearances of a perceived reality in public space. For that I am making photographs of people in commercial photography (advertising) and real estate renderings found in public space as well as the public space itself by involving architectural spaces and commercial designs of public space. The photographs are fragments that describe how a certain perception of reality is produced in the public. I understand them as hyperreal simulations that again become reality through their existence or through humans’ reactions on the hyperreal’s effects. Hyperreal simulations provoke feelings and desired, that reoccur in the medial perception of the society and therefore become real.

The loose categories of imagery that I am creating are:

1) Portraits of the designed society By re-photographing the people from the photographs visible on ad posters or retail prints that are visible in the public space, I am isolating portraits of contemporary fashion (i.e. fashion but also vogue and trend). The photographs are made on site, as seen, which results in an abstraction becoming visible caused by the sunlight or artificial lightning: The materiality of the print becomes visible but also its reflective characteristics create another layer, as does the reflection of the surrounding space in protective glasses in front of the print. Furthermore the print itself is abstracted by the close field-of-view that is making the printing-technique visible.

1.b) A sub category of the above mentioned portraits make the portraits of people in architecture renderings („Render ghosts“, after James Bridle), that are photographed the same way. An abstraction though is rather created by the digital artifacts of the renderings and the layer of the printing technique than by reflections of glass, since the renderings are less often found behind glass in the public space.

2) Spaces for the people The architectural public spaces photographed have artifacts created for humans in it that are „designed“ to have a specific use to them or, very broad spoken, want to create an aesthetical sojourn quality in it. Beyond spatial and architectural motifs, specific objects in the space, that are designed to add a feeling of naturalness to the constructed space, become subject of the photographs. By isolating these objects in the photographs, the opposite impact is created, they become signs of artificiality. The scenes are mostly photographed empty, without humans in it. The depicted objects though are clearly human-made and made for humans and therefore index to the existence of humans in the empty scenes.

Readinglist

Notes on Quotes & related

  • „Lock up a department store today, open the door after a hundert years and you will have a Museum of Modern Art“ And Warhol, 1985
  • „Shop windows are still lifes not history paintings“ Karl Ernst Osthaus, 1913
  • „Shopping malls are liquid TVs for the end of the twentieth century“ Arthur Kroker and David Cook, 1989
  • „For me, shopping is like masturbating public“ Slavoj Zizek, 2002
  • „Art in retail business serves the same function as colour for flowers and plumage for birds: it’s the means of attraction“ Friedrich Naumann, 1905
  • Walker Evans (Storefronts)
  • Gursky
  • Richard Prince (Cowboys)

Technical stuff

Light fields

Viewing/Reproducing light fields

Pi Cameras

Depth mapping

fb 3d newsfeed

360° VR

Stereo 3D photography