Session notes:
aim: to examine how photographic practitioners have used repetition since the 1960s as a mean to examine the structure of visual experience
John Berger - painting and reproduction
virgin on the rocks by Leonardo da Vinci
even on google images all differ slightly, quality/style of reproduction etc
Walter Benjamin says after seeing reproductions 'one can go to the national gallery to see the original and discover what the reproduction lacks, or forget about the quality of reproduction, and when you see the image reminded that it's a famous painting, of which one has seen a reproduction'
original no longer valued for what it uniquely shows
unique simply for what it is.... the original of a series of copies
rarity - confirmed by it's price
Dan Graham, photographer and makes installations
'photo conceptualism movement' project: phot essay
instamatic camera, went and made photographs of the kinds of houses people live in
mechanical limitations
almost deskilling the photograph
(but surely still skill in creating a powerful/good image based mainly on composition)
Ed Ruscha - 26 gas stations
sunset strip, milk etc
repetitive structures
Thomas Demand - relates most to Baudrillard
takes images from mass media, makes large scale models purely to photograph them
Roni Horn - you are the weather
Task:
The task for this week was to consider repetition and create our own series of images.
I decided to photograph some flowers in my room. To standardise the images I photographed the same flowers at 4pm every day. I was going to do it for a week but I did 8 days instead to make an even number, this means it could be made into a grid or displayed in another way.
I purposely didn't use a tripod, I just held the camera in roughly the same place every day. I like this because it creates subtle differences within the images.
I like the photographs as if you look through them quickly you might think they are all exactly the same but then you look closely and see little details such as more leaves have fallen onto the table, the colours of the leaves have also lightened as the week has gone on.
This was an interesting project as it meant I looked closely at how the flowers changed with time, something I wouldn't have noticed as much if I hadn't been photographing them.
This is a project that could be continued for a very long time. It would look interesting to have a vast amount of images as an individual becomes less and less important and noticable and the focus becomes simply the differences between them.
I chose to end it at this point because after this the flowers will start to really die and I didn't want to photograph this because I wouldn't have liked it aesthetically.