It's "the emperors new clothes" school of photography.
i remember the italian artist piero manzoni & his 1961 work titled " artists sh*t " , it consisted of 90 tin cans each filled with supposedly the artists own feces (1.1 oz ) with labels in italian , english , french & german stating the following " artists sh*t contains 30 gr net freshly preserved produced & tinned in may 1961 " their is debate in the art world as to what is actually in the cans . as for the op(original posters ) question genius or insane ( maybe a little of both ? or neither ? ) i followed the link & kinda liked what i seen - a few images i really liked , interesting & something i'd like to try myself sometime .Here's my take...as I belong to to the alternative photography group on Facebook too I'm seeing lots and I mean lots of this kind of work...trying to think of the British artist who used pissed and shit to make art...well it worked and he sells art for millions...art is what it is and you either go for it or not...when I make a photograph my main concern is do I get ANY kind of reaction..that part is good..
I'm just a little overwhelmed by all these people trying to push boundaries. ..
I'm familiar with alison rossiter and her work
she collected a massive collection of old photo paper . .exposed it and did a series
It worked but to me it's what they teach you in art school . ..good clever novel??
Good to have these discussions
Best Peter
he is desperately trying to be different, yet it only seems to be desperate
I have this book and its surprisingly hard to print like that.
you can't make photographs or paintings or sculptures or whatever
just for making them?
I'm afraid you're wrong on that point.
His 'method' is to intentionally damage his rolls of film before or during the developing stage, he does not use exotic printing methods other than pseudo-solarization/sabatier.
hi larfe
sorry to ask, and i hope you don't take my remarks wrong,
but have you ever made prints using the methods he uses ?
it is anything but easy ...
i've done things similar but different, and it isn't as easy as using a
negative and printing it conventionally with split filter printing and / or buring
and dodging or using exotic developers &c ...
it takes effort and practice like everything in life worth doing
just because it looks like its "nothing hard" and a "4 year old can do "
( like people would say about a jackson pollock painting ) i would imagine
if most people on this website attempted to do that sort of work they would go back
to what they are comfortable with ...
There's nothing right or wrong, insane or genius about this work. You either like it or you don't.
What does annoy me, however, is when someone claims this kind of thing "isn't as easy as using a
negative and printing it conventionally with split filter printing and / or buring
and dodging...".
What nonsense. Making great conventional prints from conventional negatives demands as much creativity and craft/skill as making non-representational prints. It's just different, not easier.
Only if he wanted to make a non-representational image representational....the difference is that with his negatives he had to invent what the subject was...
why would he have to do that ?Only if he wanted to make a non-representational image representational.
Hi John,
there is nothing special in his printing method whatsoever, except for the sabatier effect. It's all done at the film developing stage or before (damaged film).
And yes I have tried it myself indeed, although with different results probably similar to your experience. I didn't think it was particularly hard...
michael
not really nonsense
what annoys me is someone claiming after dabbling using trying
another methodolgy that there is nothing to it ..
yes, they are different and they are both hard, that is my poorly stated point
the difference is that with his negatives he had to invent what the subject was
with a representational negative, that is already done for the printer...
if i could suggest .. take a wide sheet of mylar or similar substrate
tape it to your shoe and drag it like you have drop foot, so it gets all scratched up
then after a week or few days, un tape it from your shoe and put it in your enlarger
and interpret it .. its not as easy as printing a negative whose subject has already been
interpreted as you were depressing the shutter.
There's nothing right or wrong, insane or genius about this work. You either like it or you don't.
What does annoy me, however, is when someone claims this kind of thing "isn't as easy as using a
negative and printing it conventionally with split filter printing and / or buring
and dodging...".
What nonsense. Making great conventional prints from conventional negatives demands as much creativity and craft/skill as making non-representational prints. It's just different, not easier.
No its not damaged film. Its expired film and expired paper that i think he found in eastern europe where he was doing a month long residency at a gallery..
So you did it too but got different results...like i say not so easy.
Good grief, sounds like you're almost feeling sorry for the guy.
Do your research better, yes he was given some 120 rolls of film dating back from the soviet times by the kaunas gallery. These particular negs turned out to have nothing on them and resulted in the 'images' that look like scrambled TV screens.
It is well known that he has been using intentionally damaged film from his early days, he has said so in several interviews. Such is the case also in his zine that you mentioned earlier.
Good grief, sounds like you're almost feeling sorry for the guy
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