Title: Mapping Own Practice Against Models of Contextual Practice
1Mapping Own Practice Against Models of Contextual
Practice
2Mapping Own Practice Against Models of Contextual
Practice
3What I do
4Professional
5Enhancing creativity through the use of digital
technologies
6Digital Video
7Digital still
8Animation
9Personal
10Photography
11Input
12Output
13Publication and Sharing
14Contexts in which I work
15Formal
16Essentially working in a two-dimensional medium,
the outcomes of photography can be much broader
than just a sheet of paper
17Materials
18Camera (input)
19Memory card (storage medium)
20Printer (output)
21Printer paper
22Fine Art
23High production values
24Expensive appearance
25Glossy
26Matte
27etc
28Fabric
29Sheet materials other than paper
30There are compositional 'rules' which all
photographers learn to apply and many go on to
ignore, bend or rewrite
31Rules of composition are there to help the
photographer make a 'good' picture and the viewer
to understand it
32Rule of thirds
33Golden Section
34Point of Focus
35Leading lines
36Depth of field
37etc etc
38Describing my work
39I am a photographer, I take, print, publish and
exhibit photographs
40I take photographs of a broad range of subjects,
but specialise in reportage/street
photography/candids/environmental portraiture
41I have developed strategies for taking
photographs of people which are unobtrusive and
non-confrontational
42I like to think that I can build up a good
rapport with people who are aware of or have
consented to being photographed
43My photographs are technically good, but not
perfect
44My images are creative - I look for unusual
angles, points of view etc.
45I often shoot to crop - none of this 'what you
see in the viewfinder is sacrosanct' nonsense
46I look for the unusual, bizarre, amusing in people
47I can spot shape, form, texture and compose
around these
48I teach teachers how to make effective use of
digital technologies to enhance creativity across
the curriculum (but we won't go down that avenue
right now)
49Effect/s of my work
50On me
51Satisfying
52Frustrating
53Liberating
54Empowering
55Pride
56Embarrassment
57On peers
58Opens up dialogues
59Fosters debate
60Alters perception of me (favourably, but
erroneously in my opinion)
61On other viewers
62Who knows?
63Positive - have sold work
64Social
65"Viewing and making are influenced by the society
we operate in there is no innocent eye" SW
66Audience for my work
67Exhibition viewers/potential purchasers
68Competition judges
69Peers
70Self
71Institutional judges (eg RPS)
72Society's attitude towards photographers,
especially reportage
73All men with cameras are paedophiles or terrorists
74Go away you're invading my space!
75You've got tripod, you must be a professional
76This shopping complex is private property so you
can't take photos here
77Political
78You can't take photos here, you might be a
terrorist
79Please send us your photos - we (police, TV) rely
on the public
80Personal
81A short biography
82I am arts trained - my B.Ed was in Art and my
first MA dissertation was on creativity and IT
83I taught Art and Design for many years, heading a
department
84Particular issues/memories
85Photography was in the family. Brother and both
parents had cameras father and brother active
amateur photographers with darkroom facilities at
home.
86Early memories of the walk-in pantry being
converted into a darkroom (where did all the food
go?) and long strips of film swirling around the
bathtub. Sitting in the darkroom under the red
light, wanting to be involved with the magical
enlarge and print process but probably just
getting in the way...
87First camera (Brownie 127) at an early age (7?)
88Photography always seemed important and was
always a means of recording for me, both socially
and professionally
89Pleasures in life
90Travel
91Seeking our alternative cultures - at home or
abroad
92Good food
93Music no more
94Motivation/driving forces
95Insecurity
96Low self-esteem
97Need to rebuild and refocus
98Brain needs engaging after years of numbness
99Particular skills as a photographer
100Shooting people
101Good sense of colour
102Subconscious ability to compose well
(traditionally/creatively)
103Strategies adopted when it all goes horrible
104Open a bottle of Sancerre
105Relation of self to social, historical and
cultural forces
106Very aware that I'm part of a huge continuum in
the development of photography...
107... and at an extrememely significant time -
there has been no development like the digital
revolution since the arrival of the first 35mm
camera
108Photographic history places expectations on one
in terms of genre, technical skill etc.
109Critical/Theoretical
110Current debates
111Freedom to photograph
112Consent and ownership
113Photography as art
114The camera never lies (but Photoshop does)
115Social Constructivism
116"Constructivism is an emerging view of learning
that rests on the idea that new information is
added to existing mental frameworks... social
Constructivism is based on the assumption that
members of a given social network mutually
negotiate meanings of ideas and practices." John
W. Schell
http//www.arches.uga.edu/jschell/discovery/theor
etical_framework.htm
- Links
- http//www.arches.uga.edu/jschell/discovery/theo
retical_framework.htm
117Photographic communities are constantly defining
and redefining what a photograph is, especially
in the light of digital technologies
118Photographers' practice is influenced by current
and historical perceptions of the nature of
photography
119Transformational Learning
120"Often considered a form of constructivism,
transformational learning is based on reflection
that transforms the beliefs, attitudes, opinions,
and emotions of the learners. Mezirow believes
that transformational learning is based on
disorienting dilemmas or situations that are
outside of our usual world views. To resolve the
dissonance, the learner must create new ways of
interpreting their experiences. This leads to a
new self-view and deeper meaning based on
insight. Transformational learning encourages,
reflection and critical thought, more
receptiveness to the paradigms of others, and
acceptance of new ideas." John W. Schell
http//www.arches.uga.edu/jschell/discovery/theor
etical_framework.htm
- Links
- http//www.arches.uga.edu/jschell/discovery/theo
retical_framework.htm
121The nature of my photographic practice has
changed significantly in the last couple of years
as I have begun to consider the ethical and
political consequences of street photography
especially in the current 'terrorist aware'
climate
122Content analysis
123Iconography
124Semiotics
125Digital and design aesthetics
126Digitality Approximate aesthetics
http//www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id290
- Links
- http//www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id290
127"The digital camera allows a proximity to
material, to skin, to the surface of paint that
excels the eye's trained ability to sort and
recognise." Matthew Fuller
- Links
- http//www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id290
128Questions to ask
129What is the nature of the relationship between
the viewer and the image?
130How does the camera affect the transaction
between the subject and the viewer?
131Disruptive technologies
132"Disruptive technologies always work
democratically they allow increasing numbers of
people to have access to those things which were
previously very rare, expensive, or difficult to
produce. Photography allows anyone to own a
detailed, realistic picture of anything which can
be photographed such as a portrait. Prior to its
invention, high-quality portraiture was the
exclusive domain of the elites, due largely to
the level of technical skill required of
painters. Photography "short-circuited" this
process. It is no accident that the majority of
images from the first fifty years of photography
are portraits and other subjects well-known from
paintings. In attempting to demonstrate that it
was art by imitating painting, photography proved
to be the archetypal disruptive technology it
replaced painting by doing what painters did,
only cheaper and more often". Michael Betancourt
http//www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id336
- Links
- http//www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id336
133"Photo-colonialism"
134"According to philosopher Michel Foucault, power
and knowledge reinforce each other.
Anthropologists wield power over non-Westerners
through ways of photo-colonialism. The camera can
be seen as analogous to Jeremy Bentham's
Panopticon but non-monolithic..." Joyce Tanjuakio
http//home.utm.utoronto.ca/jmt/anthrophoto.htm
- Links
- http//home.utm.utoronto.ca/jmt/anthrophoto.htm
135Historical
136Enormous but relatively short history of
photography and photographers
137Pioneers in both processes and output
138Processes
139Daguerre
140Niepce
141Fox-Talbot
142Eastman
143etc
144Output (images)
145Cartier-Bresson
146Walker Evans
147Ansel Adams
148Mapplethorpe
149etc
150Established genres
151Landscape
152Portraiture
153Abstract
154Wildlife
155Glamour
156etc
157Photography has come from an elitist middle-class
activity to the point where everyone is a
photographer now (cameraphones, webcams...)
158Geographical
159Photography as a Western, developed-world
activity - the egocentric view
160Much excellent work goes on in Japan, India,
Africa... but we need to seek it out
161My personal practice is limited to my immediate
locality most of the time, with several
excursions out of county and occasional trips
abroad.
162Italy, Tunisia, Morocco...
163Norfolk
164Norwich
165Web-based publishing makes a nonsense of
geographical borders - it doesn't matter where
you make your images, you can share them across
the world
166Institutional
167Family background
168Professional parents
169Everyone had a camera
170Portrait sessions at home
171Darkroom in the pantry
172Photography was the norm
173Repressive upbringing
174Desire to leave home asap
175Creativity and individuality considered rebellious
176Low parental expectations of daughters
177Educational background
178Single-sex grammar school
179Arts subjects (Eng Lang., Lit, Art etc) Art 'A'
level
180Teacher Training College - B.Ed Art
181Main subject Art
182MA in Professional Studies (Education)
183Professional background
184Teaching
185Head of Art, Design Technology
186LEA Inspection and Advisory work (inc Ofsted)
187Design Technology, Information Technology
188Where did my roots go?
189Founded freelance advisory service to schools in
1997 - never looked back since
190IT advice, training and support
191Specialisation in fostering creativity through
digital technologies (video, still, animation etc)
192NSAD
193Return to my art roots
194Feeling at home in the environment
195Intellectual engagement
196Taking after a professional lifetime of giving
197Cultural
198See 'Mapping the Territory' elsewhere
199Influential photographic genres
200Reportage
201Photojournalism
202Street Photography
203Influential/admired photographers
204Walker Evans
205Stealth and ingenuity on the undergound
206Diane Arbus
207For celebrating human diversity
208Dorothea Lange
209Reportage which was influential at the time and
is now iconic
210Jeff Wall
211Recording the incidentals of life
212Don McCullin
213For bringing us the images no-one wanted to see
214Robert Mapplethorpe
215Pushing the boundaries of portraiture
216Immo Klink
217Anarchy through the lens
218Duane Michals
219For blurring the boundaries between photography
and philosophy
220Henri Cartier-Bresson