Scan from a darkroom print, on Ilford MGRC Satin, 18x24cm. Developper is Adox MCC, dilution 1:4.
The sign above the building: USED AUTO PARTS was the inspiration.
The print is multiple exposures on the same sheet of paper, the negative first under-exposed so that a ghost image of the slightly cropped negative formed the base for the rest.
That sheet was put in the paper safe while I got on with the next part of the printing process.
The head of the enlarger was raised and refocused before returning the sheet of pre-exposed paper.
It was swivelled 180°, so upside down relative to the first exposure.
The easel was then shifted around under the enlarger head, with areas dodged while exposing areas that interested me.
I wanted to fill the spaces that were empty, and move those vehicles around in space.
Four separate areas were exposed this way, et voilà le résultat.
This is a very simplified description of two separate days in the darkroom and of all the trial and error that went on!
Four prints were done this way, each one different, and unique.
None can be duplicated, at least in a darkroom.
It's not simple to describe what my mental process was, that took me from a straight work print of the negative to the final print.
It was a matter of facing the complexity of a rather dense negative, an image with strong graphic elements in the central horizontal area, and empty space in the sky and textured space on the grassy foreground. The more I looked at all the details in the store front, the cars, etc, the more fascinating those became. A form of mosaic seemed most appealing to me, but not as a collage compiled from the work prints and test strips. Rather, a mosaic formed under the enlarger lens. Which is what I ended up with, and am quite happy with it.
This was my soundtrack to the project, and it suits the image, I think.