Showing posts with label Portraits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portraits. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 April 2012

A look at Photographer Kevin Kunishi

All photographs in this post are Kevin Kunishi’s who holds copyright to these images, you can view the rest of his work at his website here.




The grave of Benjamin Linden

I don’t remember what publication notified me of the work of Kevin Kunishi, it could of been Foam, it might have even been Vice, (in fact a google search reveals that it was Hey Hot Shot!). Now that I can recall, this photographer who studied History first 10 years prior to a MFA in Photography at San Francisco has certainly interested me a great deal. 
I begun looking at his project Los restos de la revolucion, a body of work that looks at his prolonged stay in the highlands of Northern Nicaragua, studying Sandinistas and their opposing Contra veterans.
His artist statement is as follows;
After receiving my undergraduate degree with an emphasis on U.S. foreign policy in Central America, I wanted to move beyond the broad recital of policy and ideology within textbooks and explore the personal experiences of individuals directly affected by those policies. This body of work was created between the years 2009 and 2011, during a prolonged stay in the highlands of Northern Nicaragua. These photographs are from a larger series consisting of portraits of Sandinistas and their opposing Contra veterans, as well as artifacts and landscapes significant to the civil war that took place in Nicaragua during the 1980s. In 1979, after over a decade of struggle, the socialist Sandinista movement in Nicaragua overthrew the dictator, Anastasio Somoza. The Sandinistas quickly began the work of applying their social and ideological values in the hopes of creating a better Nicaragua. Unfortunately, the United States government had other plans. In the cold war environment of the 1980s, the prospect of a socialist/communist government gaining a foothold in Central America was deemed unacceptable. The CIA began financing, arming and training a clandestine rebel insurgency to destabilize the government. These anti-Sandinista guerrillas became known as Contras. Between 1980 and 1990, Nicaragua became the battleground of conflicting political ideologies; the promise of a bright future was lost as the nation descended into civil war. Although these two sides held polarized political philosophies, their survivors are united by the burden of a war-torn history. As political ideology evolves, dilutes or disappears, the horrors of war endure.
              • Kevin Kunishi 









This is just a few from Los Restos de la Revolucion the full work is here




The photographs that came from Los Restos de la Revolucion told a narrative of exactly what was going on there. Visually Kunishi uses photography as a tool and is not held back in any way, producing and combining moving portraits, focused still life’s, and beautiful landscapes. I was very captivated from viewing Los Restos de la Revolucion that I almost missed out on some of his other projects and his portraits.




The portrait of Carlos, only has one actual portrait photograph, and the other two are still life photographs. I find the way he has documented this is 100% effective. A portrait is also about where a person lives, and what a person owns and their interests. It is hard to capture all of that in one image, Kevin Kunishi composes the portrait of Carlos in between a what could the place where Carlos sleeps and a photograph of a hand-made boat imitation. 
It made me think about the way I have been laying my own work out, something that is just as important as the content of the image. You want it to be at its most effective stage, because of the lost ownership of the work once handed over to the audience.


Here is Kunishi's feature in Hey Hot Shot!  


Sunday, 18 March 2012

Saturday, 18 February 2012

JH Engström


My current obsession comes from the work of JH Engström. Engström, who was born in Sweden has brought to my attention through a discussion with a tutor, and since then I have slowly been working my way through his archive of work. 
I select these photographs to show you. There were loads more I wanted to select that have more of a direct link to me but I will probably do that later! These photographs however, come from the book From Back Home, 2009. It begins with this quote from Engström
Maybe you can’t really go back home.
But this is where I’m from.
These images pay homage,
to the people and landscapes that are my origins.
I’ve returned to something my body and emotions recognize.
The images are photographed in Värmland between 2001 and 2008.
JH Engström, 2009









Staggered across the book these photographs capture this moment, you can feel sentimental values in the facial expressions, I particularly like that they are shot in black and white (the book conveys both colour and black and white) which enforces this nostalgic feeling that Engström already has and it reaches the viewers. The subjects in the photographs who are slow dancing also embrace this theme of thinking back to a earlier period in their lives within their faces.

Photographs by JH Engstrom

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

Thomas Struth


I have recently been directed toward the work of German photographer Thomas Struth. Just because my recent ideas found themselves lurking in to the psychological path of Struth’s work. I found this particularly interesting, during an interview given in 1988, Struth is asked to reply to a statement that describes his work “as political and social” : “Certainly, even if not, of course, in a direct manner. As far as my work on urban space is concerned, it is political and social in the sense I described before, of an analysis and a synthesis of our way of living in this society. But, I also think that my interest in portraiture, which I started to make 5 years ago, works in that direction, as a sort of testimony to people living in our age.”
Thomas Struth’s work is a testimony that ‘us’ photographers are researchers. This next extract is from James Lingwood’s Composure [or on being Still] text on Thomas Struth.
Thomas Struth’s photographs over the past 20 years constitute a sustained and concentrated inquiry into the ethics and aesthetics of seeing. Struth’s research is not motivated solely by an interest in what we can see - the surfaces of places, people and paintings - important though the subjects of his photographs are to him. He is equally preoccupied with the question of the way that we see. Because the way that we see, the manners and the models of seeing, are a powerful signifier or our social being, of the way that we are, with ourselves and with others; of the way that we negotiate our relations with people around us, with ‘Strangers and Friends’, to return to the title of an earlier book of Struth’s.
Taken from STILL by Thomas Struth

Thomas Struth has been that artist that I have always admired (from a distance), however it is only now that I feel it has become more relevant to me. With the work I am doing now and the project I am lining up to run straight off of it, I find my own mentality comparing to Struth’s.
Here are a few photographs from his portraits that analyse families. 








Sunday, 27 November 2011

Artist Statement 2.0

       Moving on from my previous work that explored themes of young male adulthood, and the physical form of body entwined within the landscape, I have now begun exploring ideas that work with and advance my own personal interests, in relationships, intimate connections, passion, trust, truth enclosure and openness. I also believe that this exploration is just as much a personal learning experience to my subjects as it will be to me. 
I have been motivated to carry out this practice work from previous experiences and the focus comes from where my own life is at the moment, the people that surround it, the relationships built and the ones lost, the obstacles and trials and other moments. There is no desire to focus on the form of the body, but the chance to be able to observe human life, and communication, to take note of opinions on areas such as monogamy, protection, ownership, censorship through male, female, old and young, and different sexual orientations. 
Through this process - which is almost like an informal ‘interview’ – In away I am psychological and mental stripping away the personal barriers placed, but also being allowed inside those barriers just for that moment.



Though, this is a single portrait, it is the perfect example of the framing involved when focusing on each couple.




Methodology 
I’ll be working to a strict methodology inspired by the likes of,
  • David Bailey (Bailey’s Democracy)
  • Rineke Dijkstra 
  • Hellen van Meene
  • Koos Breukel (Studio Portraits)
  • Richard Kern (Couples / Class Portraits)
  • Wolfgang Tillmans
Working with the 6x7 medium format, portraits take place inside my home and inside the studio.
Individual Portraits – Studio (Non-place)
Couple Portraits – Home (Place)
Reasons for the individual portraits are to look in to the person when their partner is no longer around, to see their personal character.
The Outcome
  • A series of images with no differentiation other than the people inside them
  • A realised relationship between me and each couple and individual

Friday, 28 October 2011

Monika Sur









This week I had a great chance to photograph my good friend Monika for my current work. We sat and discussed life, work and importantly relationships, her relationship with her partner Mikal and her family. 


Monika Sur, October, 2011
Photographer, Me

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Bailey's Democracy

What I enjoy about the work is the artist's strict methodology throughout the series of photographs. His 'self-imposed restrictions were severe," says Desomnd Morris, the introduction writer. The only variation was the subjects, the framing always identical to the last, with no enlargements or reductions. All produced on a large formate 10x8 plate camera.




Some scanned images from the book Bailey's Democracy. Photographs by David Bailey