Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Monday, July 18, 2011

Sandy Skoglund.

            Sandy Skoglund is a photographer famous for her elaborate photographs and attention to color. Arguably, her most memorable piece might be “Radioactive Cats,” which features a couple clad in gray, sitting in a gray room, decorated with gray furniture. The room would appear to be a very dull interior, if not overrun with dozens of lime green cats. There are cats on the table, the refrigerator, the radiator, and the floor. The couple does not react to the cats, quite unbelievable for their numbers and alien color.
“Radioactive Cats.”
            Ms. Skoglund has used this eye-catching technique to both humorous and commentative effect. She usually sculpts these repetitive, yet often distinct creatures, and places them in interactive situations with humans. She created “Revenge of the Goldfish,” where goldfish swim in a family’s room that has suddenly taken on the dual role of a human dwelling and an aquarium. She uses visual puns, such as in “Walking on Eggshells.”
“Revenge of the Goldfish.”
She has created several socio-political commentaries. “The Cold War,” depicts a cowering man and “yellow,” ceramic dog in a yellow room, cornered by legions of ruby-red militia and missiles. With “Hangers,” she raises the issue of abortion by placing coat hangers, rubber gloves, and children’s toys in the same room.
I enjoy Sandy Skoglund’s work. I like the idea of playing with color to emphasize an object or situation. I think she has a lot of stick-to-itiveness to be crafting these photos using the same visual format since she began in the 1970s, yet refreshing the images and subject matter every time. I like that fact that she creates these repetitive animals, and works with a very obsessive process. Even the most chaotic-looking photos have a set semblance of order.
I think Sandy Skoglund’s work has influenced me considerably. I like constructing colorful objects, and using color and color theory to my advantage. A lot can be said with monochromatic or dichromatic color schemes. Obsessive patterns and arrangements lend a detailed polish to scenic images. It is also refreshing to create fantastical photographs that would not be seen in day-to-day life. Photography can be realistic and documentary, but it is also exciting to use the camera as a canvas, to draw or paint ideas (without drawing or painting in the traditional sense of the media). She inspired a series of musical instrument photographs I made, with the musicians playing instruments the same color as their clothes and the rooms they were in.
"Laws of Interior Design."
In Ms. Skoglund’s “True Fiction Two” series, she explores different people’s interactions with cars, using a slightly wider color palette and a more realistic setting, yet still retaining her audiences “Can this actually exist?” belief. I would like to explore this mix of reality and created scenery in my work. Her pieces are like sculptures, but rather than present them as documented performance art, she presents them as still photographs. It seems very theatrical to me, like Atget. I like bold colors, patterns, and scenic details; so naturally, I am drawn to her images. However, I wish she had more images of her process. Each photo seems painstaking to produce, but it would be interesting to also see how she created these scenes. I like the final product, but since it takes that much orchestration, I would like to see the rehearsals and the behind the scenes moments, too.

Songs:

Brush, Brush, Brush - of Montreal (YouTube)
Wildcat - Ratatat
Fisher of Man - M. Ward

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

New Work On My Portfolio Site!

I've updated my portfolio site with some new work that I've made since moving to Chicago. There are recent drawings, a lamp, and new photographs of concerts and the city's architecture. I have added several panoramas that I'm really excited about. This city's got a great skyline! Check it out at www.carolynkassnoff.com.


Songs:

Chicago - Rachel Ries

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Concert Photography.

Since moving to Chicago, I've relished the opportunity to go to an endless number of concerts. There's always something going on in the city. I've been captivated by watching musicians play their instruments for as long as I can remember, and even did a few staged photo projects on them at school; my favorites were with duct tape instruments.

Here are my favorite photos from shows around the city.

RJD2.

Curley Taylor & Zydeco Trouble.

The New Pornographers.

Rogue Wave.

Thao & The Get Down Stay Down.

Kevin Andrew Prchal.
  
Dent May & His Magnificent Ukulele.

The Decemberists.

Songs:

Bag of Hammers - Thao & The Get Down Stay Down


Sixteen Military Wives - The Decemberists

Thursday, January 6, 2011

In Tall Buildings.

My brother came to visit Chicago & I took him to the Skydeck of the Willis (formerly Sears) Tower. It's 103 stories above the ground. I highly recommend it; the view is breathtaking. Looking through the glass floors straight down to the city below is... quite the experience.







Reminds me of the views from another fabulous city.

 It's the Empire State Building!




Songs & Videos:

Such Great Heights - The Postal Service


A Lion's Heart - The Tallest Man On Earth


The Tallest Man, The Broadest Shoulders - Sufjan Stevens


The Way To A Monster's Lair - In Tall Buildings

Friday, October 22, 2010

JR

Photo from the Big Picture.
There's been a lot of news about JR lately, the artist who is famous for posting enormous portraits on the favelas in Rio de Janiero. The New York Times reports that he is the recipient of the TED award, which helps fund global community-improving projects.


His music video work was also featured in the Wooster Collective.

Find more information on Artsy's JR page!

Here is an essay I wrote when I found out about his work, in 2008:

The photographer JR creates stunning portraits. JR has posted his images not in galleries, but directly in the public’s view in the favelas (slums) of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. By choosing to put the portraits up on buildings in some of the poorest neighborhoods, he displays the faces of the women in their hometowns. This project is meant to focus on their strength. It is called “Women are Heroes.”

This project is a continuation of the Frenchman’s photographic explorations of other weathered towns around the world, specifically, in Africa. JR has taken portraits in Kenya, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Sudan. He plans on continuing photographing women around the globe, heading back to Africa and also to Asia. He has been taking pictures of women whose families have been attacked, beaten, and killed by police and soldiers.

In an interview, he recalls how the women look dead and defeated, but come to life when they are asked to pose for his camera. Despite the gravity of his subjects’ lives and situations, his portraits are often not serious-faced, with the women giving outright silly expressions to the camera. It is interesting that throughout these women’s tribulations, they still oblige JR’s requests for bemused faces.

I like this project. I think its enlightening for JR to share these pictures around the globe. He has even put up enormous-scale prints on buildings in Europe, and perhaps he’ll display them in the US, where people here can see them and try to find out more about them. The initial impact of seeing these giant black and white eyes peering out from homes, not from windows, but from the actual favela homes people live in, is pretty dramatic. Hearing about the experiences from some of these women provides much more explanation than any artist statement could depict (
interviews here). His website shows not only the photographs, but the crowds of people observing his work everywhere he installs. Perhaps with his portraits, he can bring notice of the plights of these women to the tourists who come to Rio de Janeiro.

Upon seeing large outdoor images without words, I want to hear an explanation of what is going on. I think his project is more accessible (in more languages) without text. Text conjures the notion of advertisement, and in a fast-paced, touristy city, the meaning might be lost or merely glossed over in a rush.

I think it is gutsy for JR to introduce himself to these women and ask them to often share their most painful memories, and alternately, to give him whimsical faces to place on the side of a large building (or several) in their towns.

It makes me wonder what artwork he produces in his French hometown. Does he place the same pictures on buildings, bridges, and cars there, too? How did he first find out about the plights of these women? Does he keep in contact with the women he photographed?

I’m glad his artwork is aiming towards social reform, raising awareness within these women’s own communities and hopefully grabbing the attention of the world. 

And indeed it has.

Songs (YouTube):

Camera Talk - Local Natives

Photograph - Ringo Starr

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Pumpkinville

Every fall, as the leaves change colors, my favorite way to gear up for Halloween involves carving pumpkins. What better place to find them than in Pumpkinville? Western New York's most orange-tastic attraction.








 Pumpkin flavored, naturally.

Cider Press. 



30 years ago.

Songs (YouTube):

The Great Pumpkin Waltz - Vince Guaraldi

1979 - Smashing Pumpkins

Sunday, September 19, 2010

All Things Go, All Things Go.

A Playlist for Chicago: My Top 10.

Taste of Chicago.

The Bean. (Cloud Gate.)

Willis Tower.

In the Loop.

Seurat at the Art Institute.

Chicago - Sufjan Stevens


Lake Michigan - Rogue Wave


Twist & Shout - The Beatles (From Ferris Bueller)


The Giant of Illinois - Andrew Bird


Slow Down Chicago - Canasta (Thank you to the fine folks of CHIRP Radio for introducing me to this.)


Chicago - Lucy Wainwright Roche


Chicago Falcon - Budos Band


Chicago - Frank Sinatra


We Both Reached for the Gun - Chicago (The Musical)


Whole Lotta Losin' - Monsters of Folk

Saturday, September 18, 2010

I Know New York, I Need New York, I Know I Need Unique New York

A Playlist for New York State: My Top 10.

Lake Ontario, Webster Park Pier.

Lake Ontario, Bay Bridge.

Southern Tier Expressway.

Southern Tier Expressway.

Ellis Island.

Song For Myla Goldberg - The Decemberists

New York, New York - Frank Sinatra

New York, I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down - LCD Soundsystem
Bonus Mashup Video! (via Pitchfork)

Empire State of Mind - Jay-Z feat. Alicia Keys

Lost In New York - Emma Tricca (last.fm)


The Only Living Boy In New York - Simon & Garfunkel

The Oldest Established (Permanent Floating Crap Game In New York) - Guys & Dolls

New York, New York - On The Town (YouTube)


New York, New York - Ryan Adams

New York State Of Mind - Billy Joel

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Nature in Sepia Tones - Robert & Shana ParkeHarrison

"Burn Season."

            Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison are a married couple who create photographs about man interacting with nature. Their work is very environmentally-conscious. They often intertwine humans with nature, using sticks, dirt, water and even animals themselves.
            In the Architect’s Brother series, there are men pulling up the earth as though is stadium turf, a man with a sort of a lightening rod and wood suit gazing at distant lightning, a man with a cage and flying birds tied to his arms, and a man marching towards a fiery path armed with water balloons. There are men lighting bulbs planted in the earth, blowing and planting flower seeds across the earth, and surveying their future conquest: the Earth.
            In the Gray Dawn series, at first glance the viewer sees wallpaper with a butterfly pattern, but upon closer inspection, the butterflies are actually all nailed to the wall, as evidenced by the lower right corner’s blurry arms and hammer. The butterflies, normally a beautiful and peaceful creature, become gruesome with their dripping blood. Another photo in this series, a man is sitting across from a bird, which although not caged, is tethered to him. There is a fan between the two of them, and in the dim, dingy lighting, I can only think of an interrogation room. Does the man expect the bird to speak, or to attempt to fly in the feeble wind? Perhaps the ParkeHarrison’s are making a statement on domesticating exotic animals.
            Their newer work is no less environmentally adamant. This set seems to seal man and nature together, for better or for worse. There are people feeding bees honey, sprouts growing from a man’s arms, humans spreading pollen, and a flowers growing from a planter of a human arm.
            Some are much creepier than others. There is a photo of a man with his ear pressed to the ground and eyes glancing downward. The image is a cut-away of the earth, so we see him listening, and two feet below, we see the same man, but paler, glaring directly at the camera. Is this a prediction of his future dead self? Although buried among dirt, he does not look peaceful or at all content with his surroundings. And why does his alive self simply listen, and not attempt to connect with his dead self?
            The ParkeHarrison’s also deal with a lot of technical aspects. They make beautiful photogravure prints. They have an amazing sense of natural and studio lighting. They pay great amounts of attention to the composition of their lines. They frequently blur their figures, but it successfully conveys the mood they intended. I think their Architect’s Brother series is the most successful. The pictures are very uniform with each other with the stylistic sepia-toned photogravures, yet each one is very different by the subject and the subject matter. With their gray lighting and vast expanses surrounding each of the characters and scenes, it makes the environment look very grim and hopeless, which is precisely their point.
            With all of their warnings about human-abuse on the environment, and the rising popularity of the green movement, I wonder what their future work will show. 

"Night Garden."

Songs & Videos:

Prairie Fires that Wander About - Sufjan Stevens (YouTube)

Big Yellow Taxi - Joni Mitchell (YouTube)

Streets of Fire - The New Pornographers (HypeMachine)

Saturday, August 14, 2010

An Ode to Wood Grain

My favorite pattern is wood grain. It's a really relaxing, organic pattern to work with, & I often end up sketching it. Here's a collection of some of my past wood-patterned pieces, & my fascination with dendrochronology.

Door, 2007. Wood, Wire, Bulbs, Paper, Pen & Ink.

Door (Detail), 2007. Wood, Wire, Bulbs, Paper, Pen & Ink.

Scarf, 2008. Dye on Silk.

Stump, 2009. Fabric, EL Wire, Metal.

Piano Hands, 2004. Colored Pencil.

Bricks (Detail), 2007. Paper.

Sketches, 2010. Pen & Ink.
You can also purchase a print of this on my Etsy!

Sketchbook Notes, 2008. Pen & Ink.

The Honeoye Canoe, 2008. Digital Photo.


Songs (YouTube):

Woodgrain - Modest Mouse

Woodgrain - Wilco

Woods- Bon Iver

Ragged Wood - Fleet Foxes