Monday, May 20, 2019

Natural Destruction


Natural Destruction
Introduction:
In this modern era society has been sheltered from destruction and the many forms it takes. Be it from flooding, tornadoes, tsunamis, earthquakes – air, fire, water and earth all possess the ability to inflict damage. The most interesting method of destruction is also the slowest: decay. Whether we are cremated or buried we must return to the earth along with all other organic matter in this world.
The process of breaking down the components of what was once alive is painstaking and finite, the microorganisms responsible for decomposition sit in two camps: bacteria and fungus. On a molecular level fungus is larger than bacteria and are typically multicellular. A subtype of fungus is mould which is responsible for turning food into fuzzy lumps which slightly resemble their original shape. The physical process and aesthetic have entranced humans for hundreds of years dating back to ritual sacrifices that can be found near the Geographical marvel of the Nasca lines which are some two thousand years old. 
A freelance photographer called Joe Buglwicz has completed a series of images that depict all the food that had begun to mould in his refrigerator as a statement towards the current poverty in America. Another photographer that is a beginning influence on this project is Billy Kidd a famous portrait photographer that photographed decaying flowers in low lighting resulting in an eerie beauty captured in the images.








From the beginning of time humans have been fascinated with destruction and the subsequent deaths that follow it. One of the most famous artists who was known for his drawings and art was Leonardo Da Vinci. To the right is an image of one of his anatomical drawings from 1510 that he would create while dissecting cadavers after being granted permission by the Hospital of Santa Maria Nuova, Florence and then later gained permission from hospitals in Milan and Rome. This displays humanities innate curiosity with death and the need to record a moment, some three hundred years before the creation of the first photo-etching.
Also, among his many pursuits, Leonardo Da Vinci observed the effect of sunlight from a neighbouring valley from within a cave which then projected an inverted image onto a piece of paper. He called this naturally occurring phenomenon a ‘camera obscura’.
The work photography stems from the Greek words phos meaning light and graphe meaning lines or drawing. The final product translates to drawing with light; the word photography didn’t come into international linguistics until 1980 due to the research of one Boris Kossoy into the original ‘inventor’ of the word – Hercules Florence.
During the further development of photography there will be countless other individuals that have experimented with the macabre subject of death within their images however, Irving Penn is one of the most famous photographers. Penn is known for his still life images and memento mori photographs that challenge the boundaries of which is socially acceptable as aesthetically pleasing.



The first successful colour process was created in 1907 by the Lumiere brothers, the pursuit was later developed by the company ‘Kodak’ which made the first commercially available colour film. However, this film required a complex processing procedure which was subsequently incredibly expensive, meaning the film was only realistically available to a niche market.
Taken in 1979 this platinum-palladium print (left) was favoured over colour film for the warm tones that aren’t achievable while using colour prints, while also maintaining the classic aesthetic of black and white film. Called ‘The Poor Lovers’ this image depicts two skulls nestled on top of one another.
The main connotations of skulls are death, and so two skulls would suggest two losses. However, the two skulls placement suggests a trivial atmosphere such as that of a carnival game meant for children. It is almost as if Penn was posing that for a few pennies it would be possible to attempt knocking them from their stance and win a small prize. There is deeper significance to this image due to the skulls positioning because if Irving Penn truly meant for this image to be reminiscent of a fare ground game then as soon as an individual strikes the ‘target’ then the skulls shall shatter. This may be a commentary from Penn regarding the fragility of love and attachments that will become fragments in death.

Photographer’s Research
Irving Penn:
Born in 1917 to immigrant parents, he lived in New Jersey and studies at the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Arts. One of his peers was the Russian émigré Alexey Brodovitch, who later hired Penn as his assistant in New York. In 1943 he became an assistant director at Vouge, then shortly later became one of the most famous photographers for Vogue magazine. During his sixty-year reign he revolutionised the manner in which lighting was used in commercial avenues. Irving Penn was fascinated with the macabre which in the early 1950’s resulted in him being re-directed towards advertising which he took to like a bird to water.
The below image is called ‘Red Apples’ and was taken in 1985. This would have been after Penn had re-opened a studio in Manhattan to continue with commercial photography alongside printing his own  photographs using platinum and palladium metals and hand-sensitized paper which produced a higher quality than Vouge at the time.




Depicted in the image are a dozen or more apples that are slowly rotting. There is an old proverb saying that ‘one bad apple spoils the barrel’, and this image is a witness to the truth of that statement as all of the apples in this shot are moulding. This shot is a dye destruction print, this means that the dyes embedded in the paper are removed one by one to leave a residue of the colours present in the shot. The use of the white background creates contrast between the lush colours of the fruit and the browning areas that have spoiled.
 Another interesting feature in this image is the lighting as it is diffused which is typically a technique reserved for portraits to soften the features of the face. The soft lighting is also incongruous with the subject as rotting fruits are considered unattractive and yet the apples have been lit using a technique that enhances the subject. This conveys Penn’s desire to challenge the conventionally attractive. This ties directly into natural destruction as Irving Penn is documenting the transitioning stage between edible and rotten, whole and destroyed, a feat that most individuals from 1985 would have thought of unsightly and peculiar.

Billy Kidd:

Billy Kidd is an American photographer that is widely known for his portraits of various celebrities. He completed a shoot called Decaying Flowers which uses low lighting and a small aperture to create an intense focus on their rich natural colours and the veins that run just beneath the surface.
In the image to the right there is a greying rose that has begun wilting, this is evident by the curling at the edge of the petals which implies that the moisture is slowly evaporating. The large usage of negative space creates an intense focus on the flower thus perpetuating an atmosphere of insolation and sorrow in the last legs of this dying organism. Kidd has documented the excruciating limbo that must be faced before eventual death. The rich green of the leaf is symbolistic of the life that used to inhabit the flower, never the less the leaf is also beginning to darken.





The next image from this shoot is of a lily. Typically, a flower of death present at funerals their blinding white pigment represent the innocence of individuals soul once they have departed. Due to this, the image has a sick sense of irony as the symbol of death itself has died. The once beautiful white petals have turned ashen. Consequently this links directly to natural destruction as it is documented the decaying of flowers from their once glamourous state to the shrivelled shells that are discarded once deemed unattractive.



David McNew:

Natural Destruction is present in many forms and due to climate change natural disasters are becoming a more frequent phenomenon. One photo-journalist who captures these anomalies is David McNew. As a resident of Pasadena, California, McNew was one of the first documenting the rush of wildfires that swept through America. Despite the tragedy of people losing their homes and their lives McNew was able to document the event as it happened - the flames destroying childhood homes and businesses and document the possessions people took with them.




The image above is of a Wildfire in the San Gabriel Mountains that is still burning after several weeks. The smouldering embers in the landscape reflect the stars that glint in the sky. In the foreground all of the burnt wasteland is pitch black as there is nothing left to burn, thus creating a contrast to the bright flames that continue to destroy the earth. As the image was shot at night the viewer is able to see the silhouettes of the pine trees in the foreground. This paired with the layer of mist covering the midground creates an almost fantastical atmosphere further highlighting the warm glow in the background that would be beautiful if it wasn’t so tragic. The effect of this on the viewer is a sense of amazement at the serenity of the photographer’s position and also the immense act of natural destruction that stands before them. Acres and acres of land has been scorched by the fire.

The image below is of smoke rising in front of a sunset and some 500 homes that have been destroyed by a wildfire in Sylmar, California.
The burnt trees that are left mangled by the flames and the eerie morning light creates a postapocalyptic atmosphere within the image. The effect of this is that it conveys the severity of the damage caused by the fire which had completely obliterated everything in its path. There are also a few small fires in the background of the image that suggest the chaos of the scene. The lack of people in the vicinity suggests the danger involved, further reinforcing the idea of a post – apocalyptic landscape.



Another photographer who is well versed in natural destruction is photographer Susan Meiselas. One of her more grewsome images is ‘Cuesta del Plomo’ in which half a body lays on the top of a picturesque hillside. This image was taken in 1988 while Meiselas was in Nicaragua for six weeks working as a war photographer, trying to convey how the current population were living. During Susan Meiselas visit to Nicaragua the current population were revolting against the Somoza Dynasty who had ruled the country as a dictatorship for years.


The above image is of two school children running from smoke illuminated in the night by a streetlamp. The truth behind this image is that the school children are student that were participating in a demonstration. The group was dispersed by the National Guard using tear gas, which is the smoke the children are running from in the image. Taken in 1978 the Nicaraguan revolution was rife with conflict resulting in even the young children of the community caught in the crosshairs. The effect of this on the viewer is confusion. How could a group of guards knowingly throw tear gas at children? The answer is a Government that has forgotten the value of human life. The grainy effect of the film informs the viewer that the image is aged, this hints at this being an old conflict. However, one of the main catalysts for aggression between the people of Nicaragua was the American involvement, an issue that is still prevalent in today’s society.

My research into these different photographers links directly to my shoots. My theme for this project is Natural Destruction, throughout the project this evolved into a focus on fire as a destructive force. I first began investigating fire in my fifth shoot looking at burnt matches and the way the flames spewed different colours as it consumed the wood.



After this shoot I wanted to investigate the physical effect that fire can have on photographs and so completed a series of burnt physical experiments. I then furthered the theme of fire in my work by investigating David McNew’s style of photojournalism which influenced my seventh shoot. In this shoot I documented the effect of fire on leaves and pinecones, items that would be on the forest floors of the Wildfires McNew has documented.




For this shoot I used a Macro lens and low f-stop, the opposite of camera settings and equipment that would be used by David McNew in his documentary projects. However, I feel my images link to McNew’s work as I have used the same subject matter as him in my work and demonstrated on a smaller scale what happens in his images.

Another photographer that links strongly to my body of work is Billy Kidd, usually a portrait photographer he made an exception and captured dead and dried flowers. I wanted to incorporate Kidd’s appreciation of the dead flowers despite them being past their best. To accomplish this, I conducted a Macro shoot involving dead flowers, a concept that I later revisited when I was investigating a photographer called Susan Meiselas. In this image I am using an F-stop of 3-5 allowing for a shallow; depth of field creating an intense focus on the flowers.
For Meiselas I incorporated both the dead flowers and the gruesome reminder of mortality – bones.







Destruction in any form clears the path so that new growth is able to fill the gap and so it can be said that destruction is a part of life. Living means sacrifice, something must be given before it can be taken, life must therefore end for there to be new spring buds. I believe in many ways Natural Destruction is a vital element to living, however the current damage being caused to the Earth is becoming irreversible. With new satellites being launched and different drone cameras being developed we have a better view than ever before of what we are doing to the world. More awareness needs to be spread across the Planet so that more actions can be taken to lessen the damage being caused by humans and photography is a large part of this communication. In the past photojournalism has been used as a tool to support the aid in underdeveloped countries and the starvation and water crisis that is present in third world countries. Photojournalism must be used in the same manner demonstrated by David McNew. He is raising awareness to political and environmental issues that fall inside and out the realm of Natural Destruction through thought provoking images that demand the participation of the viewer.

In the beginning of this project I was focused on Decay and how decay slowly destroys organic matter that was once alive. As I progressed in this project, I shifted my focus of organic decay to natural destruction as they are more similar than one may think, and simply work at different speed to achieve the end result. Due to this I wanted to further my investigation into Natural Destruction as this created a wider umbrella term that allowed me to investigate how forest fires are destroying America’s woodlands and how food waste decomposes, bringing morbidly interesting processes to light. For example, at the beginning of the project I investigated a portrait photographer that specialised in shooting celebrities and yet thought a vase of dead flowers was worth photographing. This moved my investigation forward to looking at organic waste by Joe Buglewicz, a photographer interested in mould and the vast amounts of food that is left uneaten and mouldy in people’s homes and how this food decomposes.
 Progressing further into my shoots inspired by David McNew I created physical experiments of burnt photographs that I then returned to the scene of the original image to demonstrate a contrast between the current environmental climate and the direction it is heading if no action is taken to prevent it. Throughout this project I have been interested in the way things decay and fall back to the Earth they came from and investigated this through looking at fire and decay. I plan to incorporate fire into my images as this will provide a better contrast than the simply the burnt and the unburnt. It will show the cause and effect of the destructive nature of fire. I would like to also create GIFs in my work to show the warmth and dangerous sway of the flames.



References:

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