Strategies of Sharing

In this module, the focus was on strategies of sharing – the challenges of working with others and the different ways of working collaboratively. This is an important topic for me as I consider the way in which my project is progressing and whether it will become the social documentary I had always intended or whether I shall approach this from the perspective of conceptual and landscape documentary approaches.

I have looked to the work of a number of artists that have worked with various communities and individuals in different ways that have involved participation, collaboration or co-operation. I was particularly interested in Zed Nelson’s documentary film, The Street, depicting life in Hoxton Street in East London over a period of 4 years. Nelson is primarily a photographer but decided to create this documentary film and the result was a powerful, authentic and deeply moving record of a community impacted by change.

Nelson interviews members of the community and builds up rapport in ways that shows a deepening of the relationship through the course of the film and the greater sense of trust and sharing that it conveys. The interviews are revealing and at times surprising, getting to the heart of issues within the community and the impact on individual lives. The interviews are powerful and give voice to the community.

The Street, Zed Nelson – Trailer

The work Nelson has done in creating The Street, is deeply inspiring to me as it touches so closely on key themes I am working with in my own project. The idea of creating a documentary film is something I feel is a creative direction that could transform the project I am working on and take it to a different level. It will require a tremendous amount of collaboration with the communities involved and of course, it means learning new techniques in order to create a film. I am contemplating this as a creative possibility but realise that this would mean a far longer term project than the scope of the MA Photography.

Whether I choose to produce a documentary film or a photobook, as was my early intention, I know that collaborative work and participation from the community will be essential in order to represent a community that has been underrepresented and distinctly lacks a voice. Their views would be far more personal and accurate than my own view as the observer and photographer, and it is also essential to incorporate many different views, opinions and perspectives within a documentary work.

My intention in the previous term had been to begin meeting up with people from the community and exploring the possibilities of collaborative work. I had identified key community organisations that would have been a logical and natural starting point for this collaboration in order to facilitate building relationships within the community itself. The sudden and expected Covid-19 Pandemic and the resulting lockdowns prevented me from pursuing this at the time and even now I am feeling limited by the rules and regulations around social interactions.

From my perspective there is a tremendous sense of confusion around rules and social distancing, as well as a measure of anxiety, fear and mistrust that I perceive in society at the moment and this does not seem like an appropriate or suitable time to try to begin building relationships in a community I am not part of. It is a dilemma for me as I am unsure how to move this project forwards now and what direction to take.

References:

Contextual Research – Viviane Sassen

In the previous webinars discussing photography markets, I came across the work of Viviane Sassen. She is a Dutch photographer who is extremely successful in both fine art and fashion photography. Although her genre of photography seems completely unrelated to my own practice in urban photography, there was something about her work that really stood out to me and made an impact.

I was particularly drawn to her 2014 series, Umbra, in which she makes strong use of shadow, contrasts, colour, shadow and lines. When I came across the video below and heard Viviane Sassen describe how and where she discovered her photographic voice, I began to understand that I had been unconsciously drawn to the light and colours familiar to a landscape I had known most of my live, the African landscape, having grown up in South Africa. Viviane Sassen describes that it was only upon spending time in Africa that she connected to her creative voice and it is there that she learned about working with light and shadow, bright colours and sharp contrasts.

Her sensitivity to her subjects while in Africa is so clearly expressed and she acknowledges an awareness of the imbalance in power between her as the photographer and her subjects. Sassen approaches her subjects by gaining their understanding of her intention and that the photography is about concepts that are far larger and more abstract than themselves. She approached these images from a symbolic perspective and this resulted in a powerful series of portraits that made a tremendous impact on me because she has succeeded in capturing the essence of her subjects, somehow merging the present moment, with the cultural and historic inheritance of people and place.

“One of the best ways to appreciate Sassen’s work is through her photobooks. Flamboya merges documentary and fine art to find a new way of looking at Africa, one that is neither exoticising nor straightforward reportage. Parasomnia is a more dreamlike exploration of Africa that draws on those childhood memories and vivid dreams.” (O’Hagan, 2013) Sassen herself encourages photographers and artists to experiment and push the boundaries on creativity, working intuitively to create the magic . I feel truly inspired by her approach to photography and will refer to her work often as I experiment with the use of light, shadow, colour, contrast and line in my own work.

Viviane Sassen talks about her photographic process and how she discovered her creative voice.

Reference: O’Hagan, S. (2013). Fashion photographer Viviane Sassen: a different take. [online] the Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2013/oct/12/fashion-photographer-viviane-sassen [Accessed 8 Dec. 2019].

Journal Reflection – Positions and Practice,Week 2

Having explored the concept this week of photography as an interdisciplinary field, I’ve spent some time reflecting on whether my current photographic practice is interdisciplinary and how I could expand further on this.

I am already focusing on aspects of documentary photography which may have its roots in early interests in journalism and film. Social and cultural commentary are present in my work already and this draws upon earlier studies in psychology. Within my current practice I explore urban art as an integral part of the urban landscape and the social commentary it provides.

I would like to expand my practice by learning more about Fine Art photography and how this can be combined with street and documentary photography to create something more contemporary. I would like to explore surrealism, Bauhaus and expressionism as art movements that could inform, develop and deepen my photographic practice.

My interest in the urban landscape is closely linked to the architecture of places as well as the historical, cultural and geographical elements within these landscapes. Studies and research across all these areas would be extremely useful for contextual research and project development.

László Moholy-Nagy, Bauhaus balconies in Dessau, 1927.
© László Moholy-Nagy