Tag Archives: Commissions

08.03.20 > The heart of the matter (on spatial and temporal representation in sculpture)

Foreword

In 2019 during my visit to the exhibition ‘Framed Landscapes: European Photography Commissions 1984-2019’ at the Fundación ICO in Madrid, I picked up a copy of the essay ‘Not to occupy a place, but to create space’, by museum director and curator Kasper König (König 2005).

Although this is an essay on sculpture, I could feel it resonating with my thoughts on how to visualize non-physical space – the subject matter I’ve been contemplating throughout my Master’s degree – as well as how I might approach my elusive and constantly evolving Final Major Project.

The Framed Landscapes exhibition was pivotal in revealing that my project could be something more than its photographic representation, its photographic existence. While writing this entry in my Critical Research Journal I’m still not sure what that ‘something more’ is.

One of the projects on display in the exhibition, the photographic commission Schlieren: Spatial Transformation in a Suburban Municipality in Switzerland (Fig.1) by Meret Wandeler and Ulrich Görlich, is a collaborative study of transformation in one specific community over nine years (Wandeler 2019). Indeed, Wandeler’s serial projects are characterized by the fact that the research constitutes the project, and not the photographs per se (Sutherland 2019).

Wendeler 2019

Fig. 1. Meret Wandeler/Ulrich Görlich, 2005, Elmar Mauch (Rephotography) 2007, Christian Schwager (Rephotography) 2009–2017, Example of overviews from ‘Long-Term Photographic Observation of Schlieren 2005-2020’ (Wandeler 2019)

This month, in search of the heart of my project and answers to my questions about space, I took König’s essay from my bookshelf.

 

Not to occupy a place, but to create space

Whilst reading König’s essay ‘Not to occupy a place, but to create space’ – which reflects on the 1977, 1987, 1997 and 2007 (at that time still to be realised) editions of the Münster Sculpture Project –  I found myself wondering about the concept of space as a three-dimensional volume.

Or rather, I started wondering about our apparent preoccupation with space as something which exists in three dimensions.

Indeed, Tate defines sculpture as an art term for “three-dimensional art made by one of four basic processes: carving, modelling, casting, constructing” (Tate n.d.).

Yet ‘space’ doesn’t necessarily have a physical dimension, such as in ‘head-space’ or ‘cyberpsace’, whilst in photography it is represented on a two-dimensional surface.

The question arises, if space doesn’t necessarily have a dimension, what is actually being represented in a photograph?

The Münster Sculpture Project is a city art project including outdoor installations, – mainly, but not exclusively – temporary, spread across the city’s public spaces.

In exploring the art works, König indirectly reveals that each of the artists identifies an elementary, or fundamental, characteristic of the place and then creates a space which represents that.

On Untitled  (Fig.2), Donald Judd’s work for Münster, König reveals that the place offered Judd the opportunity to realise an idea that he’d been considering for a while.

Donald Judd untiltled

Fig. 2 Donald Judd, 1976/77, Untitled, Lake Aa meadows below Mühlenhof open-air museum, Münster, 51°56’59.3″N 7°36’04.8″E. [Outer ring: height 0.9 m, width 0.6 m, diameter 15 m, Inner ring: height rising from 0.9 m to 2.1 m, width 0.6 m, diameter 13.5 m, Concrete sculpture] (Public collection of Stadt Münster) Photo: LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur / Hubertus Huvermann

“It’s quite simple. You have the water level, and you have the lie of the land, and you have two rings, an inner and an outer ring. The inner ring is in line with the water level and the outer ring is in line with the sloping ground.” Kasper König (König 2005: 10)

In her text on Untitled, Sophia Trollmann notes that in 1964, when commenting on approaches to volume, Judd stated “Three dimensions are real space. […] Actual space is intrinsically more powerful and specific than paint on a flat surface” (Kerber 1977, in Trollmann n.d.).

Judd in general sought an unmediated experience of his works, supporting a new American art which rejected the significance of representational space over real space, and – his works being intended as a physical experience on a human scale – “their potential interpretation does not extend beyond the object itself; they are not symbols for something else.”. The viewer creates the relationship with the artwork, and in this case, with the topography itself (Trollmann n.d.).

In Untitled, we see the fundamental element represented by the sculpture is the topography. Through the sculpture the place becomes a space, and with viewer interaction it again becomes a place.

Considering Dan Graham’s Octagon for Munster (Fig. 3),  Ronja Primke calls it “an allusion to the tradition of the so-called pleasure pavilion that since the baroque had become a standard feature of any laid-out park or palace grounds as a venue for social gatherings and festivities” (Primke n.d.). König also reflects on the theoretical implications of the pavilion as a place of public art, extending his considerations to “the park as the oldest democratic form which we have of public architecture” (König 2005: 10).

Dan Graham Octagon for crj

Fig. 3 Dan Graham, 1987, Oktogon für Münster [Octagon for Münster], Temporary installation in the avenue of the southern part of Schlossgarten, Münster, and various locations thereafter during 1988, 1997/98, 2007 and 2017. [Height 240 cm, diameter 365 cm, Octagonal pavilion with two-way mirrored glass, metal and wood] (Collection of LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur, Münster) Photo from 2017 installation: LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur / Hanna Neandar

Viewed through the lens of Foucault’s theory of control, the park -as a gift of freedom from the authorities – appears to becomes a mask. I wonder if the reflective octagon is not intended, through its reflections, to deconstruct the artificial nature of the park and reveals the park’s true nature? A demasking of place by revealing its fundamental essence of being an artificial construct.

On Michael Asher’s Trailer in Various Locations (Fig. 4), König considers it “a metaphor for mobility, and for understanding the relationships, social relationships, within a city.” (König 2005: 10).

Michael Asher Caravan large res

Fig. 4 Michael Asher, 1977, Trailer in Changing Locations, Temporary installation in various locations over 19 weeks, Münster, and on three occasions thereafter during 1987, 1997 and 2007. [rented white caravan; weekly printed handout with descriptive text, maps, nineteen locations; documentary photographs of the caravan’s placement; and viewer search or happenstance] ((Collection of LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur, Münster) Photo from 2007 installation: LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur / Roman Mensing

But it is more than a sculpture, it is an experience, and a dialogue on art, ownership, re-conceptualisation, and responsibility. Asher placed the caravan in various sites around the city. The location was changed weekly, starting from the city centre, radiating out to the suburbs and rural places, before returning to the city centre at the end of the exhibition. The installation, maintenance, and photographic documentation of the work was placed on the city’s Skulptur Projekte. The work “consists of a number of essential components. It was made up of the white caravan; the printed handout produced each week with the descriptive text, maps, nineteen locations; the documentary photographs that show the caravan’s placement within the surrounding cityscape and, of course, the viewer’s search for or happenstance stumbling upon it” (Skulptur Projekte Archive n.d.).

The sculpture was not the caravan itself, but the multi-dimensional and multi-faceted dynamic experience of the participants. A dynamic, temporary sculpture spread over a city.

Over a period of four decades the work evolved – much as the long term spatial transformation project of Schlieren (Wandeler 2019; Fig. 1) –  always with the same model of rented caravan and the same locations, although the city backdrop was changing and during some weeks of the later installations the caravan had to be stored temporarily as the sites were no longer accessible.

Asher’s work was progressive in many ways, including the concept of displacing the labour for installation and photographic documentation of the project and its successive editions onto the institution that owned the work.

 

Expanded Ecologies: Perspectives in a Time of Emergency

My thoughts on spatial representation have evolved after reading König’s essay, and after following other avenues of research on the Münster Skulptur Projekte. I wondered how I could explore the concepts of place and space within a recurring theme of my work which is ecocritical analysis.

I revisited the essays, in-situ works, and ephemeral actions of the exhibition ‘Expanded Ecologies: Perspectives in a Time of Emergency’ (Vitali 2009). The exhibition hadn’t been on my radar at that time, but being underpinned by ecocritical considerations I’d acquired the catalogue in 2017 for future reference.

As Anna Kafetsi, Director of the Greek National Museum of Contemporary Art points out in her foreword, it is in new inter-human and subjective relationships of the individual with private and public space, groups and communities, the body and time, that philosopher-psychoanalyst Félix Guattari sought the content of his three ecologies: the environmental, the social, and the mental. Kafetsi reflects that “public space and the environment, in broad terms – in which diverse potential definitions and realities meet and intersect, such as the local, natural, urban and social environment, the global community and cyberspace, nature and culture  – inspire, mobilise, provide creative opportunities …” (Kafetsi 2009).

Daphne Vitali, curator of the exhibition, notes that what is needed is a “new approach, one that considers man as part of the ecosystem, rather than treating man and nature as two concepts (Vitali 2009: 25).

For simplicity, I term this eco-egalitarianism, alternatively in the context of Guattari’s philosophy it can be considered as a perspective which embodies the concept of otherness.

“Ecological Thinking is not simply thinking about ‘the environment’ […]. It is a revised mode of engagement with knowledge, subjectivity, politics, ethics, science, citizenship, and agency that pervades and reconfigures theory and practice”

(Code 2006, in Vitali 2009:25)

Guattari’s ecosophy moves beyond the binary consideration of nature and humankind into a multifoiled consideration of physical and mental interconnectedness, where one embodies the other. To exploit nature or others, becomes self-exploitation.

It’s in this context that I identify with the artists in this exhibition who “have not created works ‘for’ the environment but, rather, works which encourage us to think over the social, political and cultural condition”. The installations do not preach, nor berate the destruction of the environment, rather they ask us “to think about the relationship of the urban and natural environment; the individual, nature and society; nature and technology; architecture and ecology” (Vitali 2009: 28).

Modern Illusion (Fig. 5), a sculptural installation by Giorgos Gyparakis, comments on the illusionistic experience of nature in cities. Nature is introduced in the urban landscape in an attempt to heal the city, but this is treating the ailment, not dealing with its underlying cause.

Gyparakis Large for crj

Fig. 5 Giorgos Gyparakis, 2009, Modern Illusion, Temporary installation in the grounds of the Athens Conservatory from June 12th until October 4th, 2009. [Sculptural installation] Photo from installation / EMST (2009)

I found it interesting that the catalogue contains digital representations of the artworks, which provided a non-dimensional spatial representation (as code) and two-dimensional digital representation on the printed page. The question arises as to which is the original artwork and which is the copy? And whether, or not, one is more ‘valid’ than the other?

I first came across Gyparakis’ work (Fig. 5) in 2017 as a digital representation accompanied by text. I was unaware if there was actually ever an installation, or only the digital concept for one. Now experiencing the installation through photographic representation in 2020, for me the original artwork remains the digital one. I find this an interesting thought within the context of expanded ecologies, which also include the reality of cyberspace and digital representation.

Modern Illusion was first and foremost an idea, a concept, then a code, then a digital spatial representation on screen and print, then an installation, then a photograph. A sculpture in multiple dimensions.

On the fundamental, or elementary characteristic of the place where it is installed, in Modern Illusion we see cohabitation of buildings and nature in the dense urban environment of Athens, but it is an uncomfortable symbiosis. Not an egalitarian one.

 

A Submissive Acknowledgement of Powerlessness

Revisting Expanded Ecologies: Perspectives in a Time of Emergency led me to explore recent work of Andreas Angelidakis, who works at the intersection of art and architecture.

In his exhibition ‘A Submissive Acknowledgement of Powerlessness’ which took place in Athens in the summer of 2019, Angelidakis continued to explore architecture as surfaces and volumes which emerge from the external forces that shape our built environment. Reflecting on the graffiti splattered buildings of downtown Athens, Angelidakis appears to be asking if nowadays the only way for a building to have something meaningful to say is to have a layer of text on it (The Breeder 2019).

“As graffiti covers weak modernist buildings shaped by petty profit margins and corrupt governance, they become reactionary, political, buildings with a voice”

(The Breeder 2019)

In the seating piece from the series ‘Domestic Ruins’, the forms are recognizable as deconstructed elements of modernist and post-modernist buildings (Fig. 6). Clear vinyl reveals the sofa padding and the surface is given a voice with the repeated statement “Ignoring Conceptual Contradictions”.

Andreas Angelidakis Ignoring for CRJ

Fig. 6 Andreas Angelidakis, 2019, Seating piece from the series of ‘Domestic Ruins’, Gallery installation at The Breeder, Athens, from 30 May until August 31, 2019 [Installation, Clear vinyl and foam padding]

Angelidakis explores fundamentals of the generic place that inspired him, the environmental impact of a construction sector based purely on short term profit, and the anti-establishment voices that rise to the surface to remind us of “the futility of our financial, environmental and social practices” (idem).

Ultimately, the question also arises, if by sitting on them in a gallery we also declare our complicity?

 

The heart of the matter

In responding to my question “if space doesn’t necessarily have a dimension, what is actually being represented in a photograph?” I’ve been guided by my consideration of three-dimensional space through the recognizable and tangible volumes of sculpture.

To the three-dimensions of sculpture, I would immediately add a fourth dimension, which is that of time. In particular temporary or moving installations allow the viewer to experience the concept of time. Each viewer also adds another dimension to the works, so they become multi-dimensional.

In each of the sculptures that I explored, the artists have identified a fundamental, or fundamentals, of the place and created a sculptural space in which the viewer can experience those fundamentals.

As such it seems that the artwork is a conceptual space which, with the viewer’s sentient interaction, becomes a new place.

In my use of photography and the recurrent motifs of cityscapes, buildings and infrastructure, it appears that I use spatial representation to create spaces within which the viewer creates and inhabits a new place.

Further, looking at my work through the lens of Guattari’s three ecologies, I realise that my Final Major Project is neither a series of photographs, nor a book, it is the creation of new places through viewer interaction with the images and myself, the photographer.

These new places are constructed from the fundamentals of my project’s theme, as embedded in the photographs.

Sources

EMST (2009) Installation shots from the exhibition Expanded Ecologies: Perspectives in a Time of Emergency. Available at http://fixit-emst.blogspot.com/2009/08/expanded-ecologies.html [Accessed 3 March 2020]

Kafetsi, A (2009) Foreword. In: D. Vitali (ed.) Expanded Ecologies: Perspectives in a Time of Emergency. Athens: National Museum of Contemporary Art. ISBN 978-9-60834-939-0

König, K. (2005) Not to occupy a place, but to create space. Proceedings of the synonymous Conference (22 February 2005). Fundación ICO. ISBN 978-84-934684-3-9

Primke, R. (n.d.) Oktogon für Münster [Octagon for Münster]. Available at https://www.skulptur-projekte-archiv.de/en-us/1987/projects/50/ [Accessed 3 March 2020]

Trollmann, S. (n.d.) Donald Judd, Untitled, 1976/77, 51°56’59.3″N 7°36’04.8″E. Available at https://www.kunsthallemuenster.de/en/collection/donald-judd-ohne-titel-197677-5156593n-736048e/ [Accessed 3 March 2020]

Skulptur Projekte Archive (n.d.) Michael Asher: Trailer in Various Locations. Available at https://www.skulptur-projekte-archiv.de/en-us/2007/projects/91/ [Accessed 3 March 2020]

Sutherland, G. (2019) On the search for new dimensions. Critical Research Journal blog post. Available at https://gordonsutherland.home.blog/2019/09/29/29-09-19-on-the-search-for-new-dimensions/ [Accessed 7 March 2020]

Tate (n.d.) Art Term: Sculpture. Available at https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/s/sculpture [Accessed 7 March 2020]

The Breeder (2019) Andreas Angelidakis: A Submissive Acknowledgement of Powerlessness (May 30, 2019 – August 31, 2019. Available at http://thebreedersystem.com/activity/andreas-angelidakis-a-submissive-acknowledgment-of-powerlessness-at-the-breeder/ [Accessed 3 March 2020]

Wandeler, M. (2019) Schlieren: Spatial Transformation in a Suburban Municipality in Switzerland. In: F. Giertsberg (ed.) Framed Landscapes: European Photography Commissions 1984-2019. Exhibition Catalogue, Museo ICO, 6 June to 8 September 2019. Madrid: Fundación ICO. ISBN 978-84-936568-9-8

Vitali, D. (2009) Expanded Ecologies. In: D. Vitali (ed.) Expanded Ecologies: Perspectives in a Time of Emergency. Athens: National Museum of Contemporary Art. ISBN 978-9-60834-939-0

 

07.10.19 > Visualising Agency through the Photographic Medium

As part of the Sustainable Prospects module, I’m collaborating with a group of fellow MA students on a ‘live brief’ for a company that develops design, information, and wayfinding solutions to integrate people, movement and places. Their main clients are city administrations and large campuses such as universities, arenas and festivals.

We are responding to the company’s brief “What does agency look like in the context of a smart city future?”

Initial discussions within our small collaborative team of four photographers [Amy Eilertsen / Christopher “Buzz” Matthews / Marco Montalto / Gordon Sutherland] provided insight into a possible vocabulary for defining or describing agency.

I chose to collaborate on this pitch because it can also directly inform the development of my research project work which explores the concept of digital space in smart cities, which started by exploring the portals in society through which we enter the datasphere and is intended to lead to documentation, representation, and probing of life in a smart city. GS

In particular, Marco – with his background in social sciences – was instrumental in seeding our early discussions with underpinning words such as intentionality, automatism, willfulness, awareness, to name just a few.

From this collaborative discussion, we concluded that advancements in information technology are expected to become prevalent in smart cities, in particular artificial intelligence, which turned our discussions towards concepts of freedom and control. Our conclusion? Whereas artificial intelligence is developed as a benefit for humankind, it is a double-edged sword.

With these discussions in mind, my personal contribution revolved around two aspects of visual language: firstly, how other forms of visualization, such as infra-red photography, can be use to represent one or other side of that sword and, secondly, how a word cloud could help us to define a starting point for a mutually agreed concept of agency for us to work with. From the concept of a word cloud, I proposed that each of us research 5-6 images which – taken from our own understanding of the photographic language which we individually speak – we personally consider as an expression of agency.

The following images and annotation describe my contribution to that group discussion.

Bad_dreams_bression_ayesta

Fig. 1 Carlos Ayesta & Guillaume Bression (2011-2016). From the series ‘Bad Dreams?’

One of the challenges of finding a visual vocabulary for agency, or indeed anything which cannot be seen or felt, is to make the invisible become visible.

In their series Bad Dreams? (Fig. 1) Carlos Ayesta & Guillaume Bression asked how they could “depict something not seen or felt” [Thessaloniki Museum of Photography 2018: 124].

“Instead of adopting a documentary approach to this project, we decided to stage the photographs using plastic bubbles and cellophane wrap to reveal the ‘invisible’. Here, fiction reveals reality, not vice-versa.” Carlos Ayesta & Guillaume Bression (idem)

With this project, Ayesta & Bression are asking former occupants of Fukushima to come face to face with the invisible barriers that prevent them from returning home, and for whom “the affected communities, countryside and forest are actually divided between those now accessible and those to which entry remains prohibited (idem).

Abstractly, however, this has connotations for agency and wayfinding, regarding where and how you are guided to where you may go, or away from areas where you cannot go.

“Considering the invisible digital blocks and nudges that could direct human flow and shape decision making processes, and hence shape human agency in the smart city, I imagined physical representation of wayfinding through installations. This concept emerged as a natural parallel to the imaginary digital cloud I had introduced for my series ‘The Broken Places’ (Sutherland 2019).” GS

 

Erickim_example_cycling

Fig. 2 Photographer uncited. Date unknown.

Contemporary street photographer Eric Kim manages to stir emotions and cause debate around both his photography and his commercial success. Kim is prolific, vocal and visible. An online search for ‘eric kim photographer’ will produce a mixture of comparisons with Gilden and Parr, accompanied by vocal rants and raves about Kim’s work and his success (Quillinan n.d.).

Kim uses social media and open source information to communicate his vision of photography and lifestyle, as well as delivering workshops at academic establishments or in global locations [Kim 2019a]. In terms of sustainable prospects, Kim makes a living from photography by commercializing a niche [Kim 2019b].

However, his work and writings are not purely commercial, but also topical, as well as philosophical.

In his article on photography and artificial intelligence he reflects on the future of humanity (Kim 2018) and what could otherwise be called a “comingled evolutionary path” (Prabhackar 2017) between humans and machines, as the distinction between humans and machines becomes imperceptible.

Kim explains that his interest lies in “how we can use computer vision (how computers see images, objects, and the real world) to augment (increase) our own human vision- to see the world more vividly, and to ultimately make better photos.” (Kim 2018). Within his post he considers the idea of image segmentation technology (Fig. 2) as one of the ways in which computers see.

In considering image segmentation, I imagined what the application of colour theory could means in terms of human agency. The breakdown of the spectrum of colour as a visual marker of individualism, collectivism, collaboration, support, ecology, health, spectatorship, participation, to name a few of the inclusive elements that can be imagined as benefits of a future smart city lifestyle. GS

Screenshot 2019-10-06 at 16.25.28

Fig. 3. Annie Tritt – The New York Times. 2012. Shotspotter Headquarters, California

Photographer Annie Tritt established herself through photojournalism, today focusing more on portraiture in entertainment and arts, corporate portraiture, as well as social and personal projects, such as ‘Transcending Self’ which explores transgender and gender expansive youth.

Tritt’s clients have included Billboard, Hollywood Reporter, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Paper, INC, Fortune, Backstage, London Guardian, London Telegraph, Fader, M Le Magazine du Monde, Wired Italy, Der Spiegel, Stern, Interscope Records, Sony Records (Tritt n.d.).

The photographer, author and publishing executive Rick Smolan orchestrated over 100 photographers and researchers to collate the images for “The Human Face of Big Data”, a book which uses photography to visualize how “life is changing in a world filled with a never-ending stream of data”. Smolan has remarked that “big data will have a bigger effect on humanity than the Internet” since data allows for anticipation and problem solving through knowledge about the world (Sloan 2012).

One of Tritt’s images for The New York Times, depicting a monitoring station for the Shotspotter system, is included in Smolan’s book (Fig. 3). Shotspotter uses acoustic sensors located around neighborhoods to record the blasts of gunshots. The system triangulates the sounds, pinpointing the sources of the blasts on a map, thus helping authorities to rapidly locate crime scenes. Using the information from the sensors, high-speed telecoms and number crunching, the staff at the company’s headquarters can remotely pinpoint the shots to a precise location in seconds, so that “instead of police arriving on the scene a half-hour later, they can be there in under two or three minutes”. (ITBusiness 2013).

Tritt’s image (Fig. 3) is representative of how authorities in highly digitally connected societies can use data flows to adapt public services and infrastructure to the dynamics of city life: it is a photo-documentary approach to raising questions around human agency and the role and responsiveness of city administrations and public authorities.

 

Tom Drahos

Fig. 4. Tom Drahos (1986). From the series ‘Paris suburbs, peri-urban spaces of the Paris region’

Photographic commissions in the form of preservation photography visually document an epoch. In a country characterized by innovation and industrial development, indeed a country which is one of the multiple birthplaces of photography, the French Délégation à l’Aménagement du territoire et à l’Action régionale (the Inter-ministerial Town and Country Planning and Regional Action Delegation) dispatched 29 photographers of different photographic slants into the field to “document the French landscape of the 1980s” (Bibliothèque nationale de France n.d.).

Commonly known as The DATAR Photographic Mission, it was a descendent of the great photography missions such as the 1851 Heliographic Mission and the 1935-1942 Farm Security Administration’s portrayal of the Great Depression (idem).

In representing the cityscapes of the Paris suburbs, Czech photographer Tom Drahos presented an alternative vision of these urban landscapes, “anchored in time, but free floating in space” (idem). His concept of framing space, but not the compositional image itself, reveals an exploded landscape that refers at once to the multi-foiled individual experiences of the urban landscape, as it does to the co-existent societal perspectives. Each of these perspectives holding its own truth. GS

This concept of co-existence of viewpoints and experience resonates closely with the dynamic promised by technology in smart cities, touching again on the key words identified such as individualism, collectivism, awareness and conscious decision making.

Down-Under-Tommy-Vohs-640x480

Fig. 5 Tommy Vohs. Date unknown. From the series ‘In Transit’

“I took to iphoneography like batter on a fish stick…a cohesive relationship only made stronger over time. It was natural and free flowing and came at a time in my life when I needed a distraction” Tommy Vohs (Carter 2012)

Vohs is a railroad careerist turned mobile photographer and has exhibited extensively in Canada where she resides (Idem). Vohs maintains her career on the railroads as well as exhibiting and selling her limited edition prints which are characterized by layers and saturated colours. Her images have been awarded in the field of mobile, iphotography and iPhoneart (Vohs n.d.).

I discovered the work of Tommy Vohs through Smart Cities Dive, part of Industry Dive (Industry Dive n.d.), a private sector business journalism platform that helps decision-makers stay ahead in competitive industries to spark innovation and growth in industry. GS

Smart Cities Dive researches visual material to “find photos that fit our content, reflect the human content of our work, and are dynamic, colorful, interactive, transformational, local, natural, and realistic, too” (SMARTCITIESDIVE n.d.).

As a business provider, Smart Cities Dive Managing Editor (formerly TheCityFix) identified the innovation in Vohs work and how it met their vision in terms of communicating the spirit of integrated mobility, a key component of smart city developments, with the likes of multi-modal integration of mass transport, cycling and walking. The use of Vohs’ work in editorial context is an example of corporate culture using art as a business media content.

“Vohs’s photography exemplifies this necessity for shared streets that cater to the needs of road users across diverse modes of transport. With an emphasis on public transport, Vohs’s work often features double exposures that juxtapose everyday scenes of urban mobility with bold color schemes.” Smart Cities Dive Managing Editor (idem)

The images presented in this post are taken from a series of images I put forward to inform our collaborative group work whilst we explored our individual ideas on the visual ‘definition’ of agency in the smart city of the future.

Each of them is representative of perspectives as seen by different practitioners, whether those working on commercial street photography, photo-documentary, art photography or commissioned preservation photography. These photographs represent the editorial use of photographic image from the perspective of research into social sciences and humanities or commercial business interests. As such, they represent aspects of the sustainable prospects of the individual practitioners.

In parallel, the images were selected to directly inform the development of my research project work exploring the concept of digital space in smart cities, which started by exploring the portals in society through which the population enters the datasphere, and is intended to lead to documentation, representation, and probing of life in a smart city.

Sources

Carter, J. (2012) A Day in the Life of Tommy Vohs – An Intriguing, Liberating and Inspiring Mobile Photographer. Available at https://theappwhisperer.com/2012/11/a-day-in-the-life-of-tommy-vohs-an-intriguing-liberating-and-inspiring-mobile-photographer/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

EMBARQ Network https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/ex/sustainablecitiescollective/friday-fun-photographer-captures-spirit-integrated-transport/219991/

Industry Dive (n.d.) About Industry Drive. Available at https://www.industrydive.com/about/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

ITBusiness (2013) 11 amazing images show ‘The Human Face of Big Data’. Available at https://www.itbusiness.ca/slideshows/11-amazing-images-show-the-human-face-of-big-data [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Kim, E. (2018) Brave New World of Photography and AI. Available at https://erickimphotography.com/blog/2018/09/24/brave-new-world-of-photography-and-ai/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Kim, E. (2019a) Eric Kim Workshops. Available at https://erickimphotography.com/blog/workshops/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Kim, E. (2019b) Photography Entrepreneurship Tips and Ideas. Available at https://erickimphotography.com/blog/2019/07/16/photography-entrepreneurship-tips-and-ideas/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Prabhakar, A. (2017) The merging of humans and machines is happening now. Available at https://www.wired.co.uk/article/darpa-arati-prabhakar-humans-machines [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Quillinan, B. (n.d.) Is Eric Kim full of sh*t? Available at https://onedgestreet.com/is-eric-kim-full-of-sht/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

SMARTCITIESDIVE (n.d.) Photographer Captures Spirit of Integrated Transport. Available at https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/ex/sustainablecitiescollective/friday-fun-photographer-captures-spirit-integrated-transport/219991/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Sutherland, G. (2019) Beyond the broken places. Available at https://gordonsutherland.home.blog/2019/06/05/05-06-19-beyond-the-broken-places/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Sloan, P. (2012) Big data gets its own book: ‘The Human Face of Big Data’. Available at https://www.cnet.com/news/big-data-gets-its-own-book-the-human-face-of-big-data/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

Thessaloniki Museum of Photography (2018). Capitalist Realism: Future Perfect, 28/09/2018 – 27/01/2019 (Curated by Penelope Petsini). Thessaloniki: University of Macedonia Press. ISBN-978-618-5196-35-6

Tritt, A. (n.d.) Website of photographer Annie Tritt. Available at (http://www.annietritt.com/ [Accessed 6 October 2019]

 

29.09.19 > On the search for new dimensions

I continue to take forward my study of spatial representation through photography, in particular the study of digital space. I’m planning to pick up more of the cinematographic, gaming and manga influences I’ve come across through my previous projects, such as ‘The Space Between’. I’m once again thinking of looking into ‘in-game’ photography as a depiction of space in the datasphere.

I plan to revise the proposal for my Final Research Project, and consider expanding my work from its current exploration of data flows in connected urban environments to an exploration, through non-anthropocentric photography, of how systems with intelligent algorithms ‘view’ the real world.

For these two avenues of exploration I’m thinking – at this stage of my research – of connecting with communities in the gaming world on the one hand, and to deepen my research into practical operations of smart city systems on the other.

Currently my final research project – The Digital Divide (Working Title) – is conceived as an exploration of human life in a digitally controlled environment, in a ‘Smart City’, for want of a better terminology, through the use of spatial representation:

The Digital Divide (Working Title) is a visual investigation of ideas, concepts, and critical theory surrounding the nature of digital space and human interaction with it. The project starts by exploring the portals in society through which we enter the datasphere and leads to documentation, representation, and probing of life in a smart city (Sutherland 2018).

In looking for new ‘dimensions’, I’m exploring research-based photography to identify methods that could inform my own approach.

Below two examples of photographers whose research approach can relate to my own project.

Artist and photographer Meret Wandeler focuses her photographic research on the transformations of urban fabric in suburban areas. Long-term photographic observation is a key approach in her practice, as is the collaborative nature of projects (Wandeler 2019a). Her serial projects are characterized by the fact that the research constitutes the final body of work.

Wendeler 2019

Fig. 1. Meret Wandeler/Ulrich Görlich, 2005, Elmar Mauch (Rephotography) 2007, Christian Schwager (Rephotography) 2009–2017, Example of overviews from ‘Long-Term Photographic Observation of Schlieren 2005-2020’ (Wandeler 2019b)

The ‘Long-Term Photographic Observation of Schlieren 2005-2020’ is an example of visual research into the ongoing processes of transformation in one specific community, located in this case in the Zurich Metropolitan Area.

Through urban transformation, initially evolving from a farming village to an industrial zone in the post-war period, Schlieren ended the 20th Century as a ‘non-place’, as globalization led to the abandonment of its industrial sites (Wandeler 2019b: 366).

Wandeler, in collaboration with Ulrich Görlich, sought to document the impact of a holistic urban redevelopment in the early 21st Century, with the pressure on land use and environmental degradation in Switzerland being high on the political agenda (idem: 368).

The project, centred around the method of rephotography (with the rephotography by Elmar Mauch and Christian Schwager), was the first photographic research project at a Swiss Art Academy in the emerging field of artistic research which became established in Europe at the turn of the millennium, mainly in Scandinavia, the United Kingdom and Switzerland (idem: 370).

Considering work of another artist, Melanie Manchot’s research-driven, lens-based artwork employs photography, video, film and sound. Manchot has stated that “Cameras, whether still or moving, are crucial devices shaping the construction of the work” and more importantly “are an organizing principle, an apparatus that becomes part of a set of relations I wish to create” (Parafin 2016).

Manchot’s methodology is built on the processes of exchange, contribution and collaboration. She often involves social groups, or communities, to create serial portraits at the boundaries of documentary and fine-art. The works constitute a discourse on the individual and social self (idem).

In ‘Tracer’ – a single channel projection and 3 channel installation, 19’45” in stereo sound – Manchot depicted the movements of parkourists as they sought out the opportunities and limits offered by constructed space to produce specific forms of physical interaction. As Manchot explains on her website

“The film draws attention to how human agency may act upon built environments and questions the authority inherent to architectural form” (Manchot 2019).

Manchot Tracer Still 2013

Fig. 2. Melanie Manchot, 2013, Still from Tracer (Manchot n.d.)

Tracer was funded by the Great North Run Moving Image Commission as part of the event’s culture programme and saw Manchot working “with a group of local parkour runners to re-imagine the architecture and spaces along the route” (Great North Run Culture 2013).

Long, slow sequences and overseeing viewpoints in the video serve as a reminder to the viewer of surveillance in public space, as well as our individual and collective role as voyeur on society. Stereo soundscapes offer alternative views into the physicality of parkouring as the impacts of human bodies on constructed space are revealed (Manchot 2013).

Sources

Great North Run Culture (2013) Melanie Manchot: Tracer. Available at http://greatnorthrunculture.org/aboutcommission198a.html?commid=63   [Accessed 29 September 2019]

Manchot, M. (2013) Tracer, 2013 – Trailer. [Video] Available at https://vimeo.com/220456235 [Accessed 29 September 2019]

Manchot, M. (n.d.) Tracer, Video Installation, HD, 19’43”. Available at http://www.melaniemanchot.net/category/tracer/ [Accessed 29 September 2019]

Parafin (2016) Artists – Melanie Manchot. Available at http://www.parafin.co.uk/artists–melanie-manchot.html [Accessed 29 September 2019]

Sutherland, G. (2018) PHO701 Research Project Proposal. Submitted for the MA Photography Module Positions and Practice, Falmouth University, December 2018

Wandeler, M. (2019a) Meret Wandeler. Available at https://www.meretwandeler.net/ [Accessed 29 September 2019]

Wandeler, M. (2019b) Schlieren: Spatial Transformation in a Suburban Municipality in Switzerland. In Framed Landscapes: European Photography Commissions 1984-2019. Exhibition Catalogue, Museo ICO, 6 June to 8 September 2019). Madrid: Fundación ICO.