Week 12 – Wrapping it up

I have made it through a term that was quite tough for me but do feel a tremendous sense of achievement after submitting the assignments for the term. I am particularly pleased with the website I have set up to showcase my portfolio work and current projects. My Work in Progress has been submitted as part of the assignments for this term and can be viewed here: Work in Progress.

This is my oral presentation to accompany the work in progress for the term.

Research Project – Stokes Croft

Located on the other side of the Bearpit in Bristol is an area called Stokes Croft. This is an area that is known for its street art and graffiti, but is also an area that has been allowed to fall into decline and I believe it will be targeted for re-development in the near future. I have an idea that the fate of Stokes Croft is directly linked to the events of the Bearpit earlier this year, and this is the beginning of a process that may replicate what has happened in Shoreditch, London.

Series: Stokes Croft, Bristol 2019 ©Juanita McKenzie

Journal Reflection -Sustainable Prospects Week 9

Individual Tutorial

My tutorial this week was very insightful yet again and has given another layer of meaning to my project that I feel is definitely worth exploring. in fact, it is starting to change the project slightly and this is an interesting development. Laura likes to find out more and is very good at asking the right questions that lead to deeper exploration of my motivation for my project.

We discussed the narrative around ‘walking’ and the book I have been reading by Erling Kagge, called Walking. I am starting to see that there is tremendous significance to the act of walking and the metaphorical association with a journey or quest. In many ways this is me mapping my location with my feet and this relates to the concept of psychogeography as discussed by Merlin Coverley in his book by the same name. I have observed that walking is a way that I discover the true nature of a place, mapping it in my psyche in the tradition of the ‘urban wanderer’ referred to by Coverley. This is a thread that weaves through this project and my photographic practice as a whole.

I discussed with Laura how lost I felt after Ursa the Bear had been removed from the Bearpit and discussed how some of the photographs I included in my presentation today reflected this sense of loss and emptiness. It had led me off on a tangent focusing on autumn in the city as a poignant reminder of the transient and fleeting nature of all things. Although Laura liked the autumn images, saying they make her want to touch them but she did not feel they were part of the same project as my Bearpit work.  She described them as being beautiful surfaces and beautiful things, but said that if I wanted to include them in this project then I would need to be creative about how I paired the images with others in order to capture attention.

In looking through my photographs from the Bearpit, Laura said that she felt like I was hovering in a safe space with this project and she wanted to see my going deeper with it. She has suggested that my project is becoming about looking for the bear and, in so doing, looking for my own sense of place. Laura has suggested that Looking for Ursa is potentially the name of this project and could be the central concept to it. She is definitely challenging me to connect to the emotional and psychological aspects of this project and my relationship with it.

Laura particularly loved the image of the stairs and the wall sequenced together – she says these are very decisive in their framing.  They are almost black and white in their stark contrasts, and the flatness is appealing, they could be taken anywhere – in other words we don’t know where they are from or why they are there – making it intriguing.  She said that as the viewer she is almost unsure if they are outdoors or indoors shots and there is a feeling of the outdoors being indoors or vice versa. This is why the sequencing of work is important, as it creates an experience for the viewer.

Most importantly, Laura wants me to really go looking for Ursa, and an idea was to go about finding her origins and history, looking at archival material.  The project is about finding her, anything I can find out about Ursa is important to the project and would be interesting to the work. It may turn out to be less about actually find Ursa but perhaps about what I find out, or find along the way.  

References: Coverley, M. (2018). Psychogeography. Chicago: Oldcastle Books.

Journal Reflection -Sustainable Prospects Week 5

Individual Tutorial

This week I had my first individual tutorial with my tutor, Laura. I have not been able to attend many webinars so I do feel as though I have not been able to benefit fully from her experience and guidance through the weeks so far. Laura has, however, been brilliant in getting to know me and developing an understanding of my photographic practice and current work.

Laura observed that although I don’t believe I have yet found my creative voice, that I have already developed my own style which is consistent across the images I have presented to her. We talked about how I am grouping and sequencing my images and exploring ways to create a narrative through clever use of sequence. I mentioned that I think this project may lend itself to becoming a photography book and Laura has suggested I think about how I would incorporate some text and to research ways of doing a creative layout for a book.

Through questioning, Laura extracted that I spend a lot of time walking and exploring my environment to discover the things I photograph. She quickly identified that this is a core part of my photographic practice and she has suggested I do some reading on the subject of walking and try to reach a deeper insight around why this is so important to me and how this shapes my photographic practice. She has recommended a book that I have now added to my list of reading for contextual research.

I felt the tutorial was very encouraging and supportive, and I particularly liked that Laura asked a lot of questions which led me to some important insights about my practice. She is definitely getting me to explore a different layer of meaning within my current project and this is leading me to explore why I do what I do, why I have chosen this particular project and what it really means to me.

Fallen ©Juanita McKenzie