Showing posts with label #photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #photography. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 November 2016

Southsea Ghetto

 St Judes, Portsmouth by Five Architects 

What makes a good picture? Whether it is a photograph or a painting, a sketch or a piece of embroidery, the number one litmus test has to be: does it look good? The photo above looks good.

Which leads to secondary questions.   What makes it look good? Is it the subject matter,the colours,  the composition, the message, the mood you're in right now?   Do you want to keep on looking at it? If you keep looking will you see more?

For the picture above - the subject matter is workaday: roofs, chimneys, a steeple, sky.  Every city, town, village, hamlet has those.  Colour? well the picture is monochrome but the fifty shades of grey are as expressive as a rainbow.  The composition is spot on.  How can I say that? It just looks right.  Is there a message? Is it nostalgic: this is a timeless cityscape, it could be a Victorian photograph, it could have been taken a few weeks ago. Do I want to keep looking at it? Yes, I'd like it on my wall, I'm sure I could see it anew for ever.

Here's another couple of questions.  Why do so many people buy bad postcards?  Why are they even produced?

There are technical questions too.  For some people that would be the important part. In a photography competition the criteria would be quite different to my litmus test.  I'm not really interested in the technical side of photography.  I'm a philistine. I know what I like, even if I don't know why.   The following picture had a 6 second exposure usin 2x Formatt Hitech reverse grad ND filters.  I don't know what that means but I know I like the image.

Fluid Motion by Howard Hurd

The technical trick of using a long exposure turns another potentially workaday setting into an abstract image.  The wave takes on the quality of Trump's hairpiece or the banshees escaping from the ark of the covenant or becomes a statement about impermanence in a rigid world or an example of chaos theory. Or anything you want it to be.  Even a wave breaking over a promenade.

Floating crane Canute by Grzegorz Kopacz

If we're talking about composition take a look at Canute here.  The reason that Aunty Flo's holiday snaps look rubbish is that she positions Uncle Ernest right there in the middle in the viewfinder (and waits till he looks really uncomfortable before taking the shot).  Canute is taking advantage of the Golden Ratio.  The photo is not of the tree, although that takes up a large part of the picture. Your eye is drawn to the crane.

There's something about juxtaposition too, the tree, irregular but recognisable and the crane, fixed and solid but strangely strange, looking like a post industrial dinosaur marauding the countryside.

 Last leaf of Autumn by Five Architects

With a whole world of photo art available at a mouse click or two what is the point of taking the same photo that has been taken a thousand times before?  No, seriously, I'm asking.  In one sense the photo above is totally original. Probably, no-one else took a picture of that leaf, in that tree, with that sky.  In another sense that is just another Classic Autumn Photo.  Here's a few reasons for taking it: it looks good (Litmus test passed); the photographer wanted that shot, his own version of that shot; it is a particularly good version of that shot, clarity, composition, colour are all spot on.  When I was mooching through Five Architects photos it stood out as an eyecatching image.

The photographers featured in this post are all Portsmouth based.  They all know each other,  They share interests - photography, architecture, street art, for starters.  They photograph a lot of the same things.  Southsea shore, the piers, the fairground, Portsmouth's brutalist architecture.  The challenge has to be how do you take an original picture of something that has been photographed a thousand times.  Here's a couple of answers to that:
 
Spinnaker Tower, Portsmouth by Howard Hurd

Spinnaker Tower, Portmsouth by Grzegorz Kopacz



CP Fastenings by  Five Architects 

Explanatory note: I asked Five Architects, Howard Hurd and Gregorz Kopacz if I could use their photos in this blog.  I didn't ask for specific photos or say what I was going to do with them.  All three graciously gave permission, for which I thank them.  The very simple reason I wanted to use the pictures is because over the past few months I have seen their work on Twitter and thought how powerful many of the images are and how well they would fit on a Corn Poppy blog

Portsmouth Catherdral by Howard Hurd

The pictures I chose are not necessarily the images that the photographers themselves would have chosen.  My criteria was images I liked.  Full stop.  All of the images used have already been shared by the photographers on Twitter @fivearchitects, @HowardHurd, @G3Kopacz.  Find them and follow them for more excellent work.

 Hot Walls studio, Southsea by Gregorz Kapocz

 This is the closest I found to a group photo.  Thanks you guys.

Picture of Five Architects and Howard Hurd  by Gregorz Kopacz


Friday, 14 October 2016

New York, Shanghai, Stoke-onTrent - My Dog Sighs, Flora Borsi and Jimmy Cauty

New York Loneliness, My Dog Sighs, 2016

The last few posts here have been pretty negative about the state of both Art with a capital A and the sort of art you find on bus shelters.  The good news is there is still plenty of good stuff around.  Here's three of the best, currently exhibiting around the world: New York, Shanghai and Stoke-on-Trent.

First off, our old friend My Dog Sighs. In New York. And in Southsea.

My Dog Sighs, Brooklyn, photo by @zurburan1 

 The day the world turned day-glo, My Dog Sighs

 available now from www.mydogsighs.co.uk - going, going, gone


The day my pad went mad, My Dog Sighs in the Dog House, Southsea

Next up, the very wonderful Flora Borsi, from Hungary. She's been to Austria this week picking up awards for her amazing photos.  At the same time her art has been displayed in Shanghai as part of a celebration of Hungarian culture.  Photos below are from her FB page.  Find out more at www.floraborsi.com. 





Jimmy Cauty was once half of the KLF, the K Foundation, The Justified Ancients of MuMu and all the rest with Big Bill Drummond.  For the past few years he's been working big time with small scale (1:87) figures having a riot, a riot of his own.  He has created a post apocalyptic world in miniature.

Aftermath Dislocation Principle (ADP) Riot tour, Jimmy Cauty

picture from L-13

The exhibition is housed in a 40ft shipping container, travelling around the country, visiting 36 towns and cities that have riots in their story,  Currently in Stoke on Trent, I caught up with it a couple of weeks ago in Nottingham.

ADP Riot Tour, Nottingham

Aftermath Dislocation Principle (ADP) Riot tour, Jimmy Cauty

To view Cauty's work there are peepholes strategically placed in the container.  

graffiti added by the Great British public

It is part funded by the Arts Council -

AS OF 16TH JUNE THE ADP RIOT TOUR HAS BEEN AWARDED £49,000 BY THE ARTS COUNCIL OF ENGLAND IN SUPPORT OF WHAT THEY'VE DESCRIBED AS AN OUTSTANDING PROJECT.
So, as predicted we are now FUNDED BY THE STATE FOR THE STATE or FUNDED BY THE PEOPLE FOR THE PEOPLE or maybe WASTING TAX PAYERS MONEY AT 36 HISTORIC RIOT SITES AROUND THE COUNTRY, or even: PROVIDING AN OUTSTANDING and CRITICALLY ENGAGING ARTWORK FOR FREE TO A DIVERSE RANGE OF COMMUNITIES ON A NATIONWIDE SCALE...

all pictures by The Corn Poppy unless otherwise stated

Friday, 8 January 2016

time less


Station to Station


 Everything's alright!


Kooks


Ch ch ch changes


Wild is the wind


 Word on a wing

 

"Helden"


Golden years


 Sorrow


Let yourself go!

Sunday, 17 May 2015

Not So Invisible

Betty Boop, Gary West

Eastleigh is a strange town, a railway town, but a passing through kind of place, not a terminus.

Dandelion, Gary West

The Borough of Eastleigh includes the Rose Bowl, the Home of Hampshire's cricket team; the Borough includes the village of Hamble, the Home of British Yots and Yotties; the southern parishes - Hamble, Bursledon, Netley and Botley are all well worth a visit; the Borough has quite a lot going for it.

Eastleigh, Gary West

The town on the other hand, not so much.  Not exactly a cultural desert but its greatest contribution to the world of the arts is the second rate much loved comedian Benny Hill.

Ernie, Benny Hill, c. EMI Records

There is an arts venue, The Point, and at The Point right now there's an exhibition of photos by Gary West.

Not So Invisible exhibition, The Point, Eastleigh, 2015

Gary is a local photographer who takes photos of what others might see as mundane, where he sees a twist, humour, surreality.  He works mainly in black and white (with a touch of red).  He says
I think people are going to expect to see sunsets and sunrises - that’s not gonna happen with me
Poppycock, Gary West, 2014

Poppies, Gary West


 home made Baileys, Gary West, 2015

kitchen sink drama, Gary West on the left

Reserved, Gary West



visit this exhibition