Tuesday, 24 April 2018

500 word artefact analysis

Objective:
To complete the first stage of your written element.

Task:
Pick one of our artists that you have found during some of the earlier stages of research and then pick an image or series of images.
Write 500 words analysing an artefact from a chosen artist.  Use the link below to help.
link

Steve Pippin

Steven Pippin first experimented with temporarily transforming washing machines into cameras in 1989 after he had noticed a number of similarities in the workings of washing machines and the development of photographs. For him 'the elaborate and precise mechanism of the washing machine was a perfect system for making photographs. The eye of the machine (with the addition of an aluminium hood combining lens and shutter device) adapted to the transition of camera lens with the slightest of intervention. The pre-wash, rinse, main wash and final rinse cycles adapted to the chemical process of developer, rinse, fixer and final wash all of which were accurately temperature controlled.' (Steven Pippin, 'Pictorial Troubleshooting', in Discovering the Secrets of…, p.56.)


London-based Pippin made his first Laundromat images in 1991. In 1997, using a row of twelve commercial washing machines in a laundromat based in Bayonne, New Jersey, he made a number of more ambitious series titled Laundromat-Locomotion. The title of these series refers to the analysis of human and animal motion undertaken by pioneering photographer Eadweard Muybridge (1830-1904). Published as Animal Locomotion in 1887, Muybridge's study examined movement through sequential images using a number of cameras furnished with mechanically tripped shutters. There is a direct relationship between Muybridge's work and Laundromat-Locomotion. Pippin has written that the more he thought about Muybridge 'the more it seemed necessary to pay some kind of tribute' and added that the excessive scratching caused by the negatives being spun at 500 rpm in a washing machine unexpectedly gave his images 'some degree of authenticity by making it look like an original Muybridge from one hundred years ago. The scratches on the negative surface becoming a substitute for time, an artificial ageing process lending the pictures an accidental air of authenticity.' (Steven Pippin, 'Applied Photography', inLaundromat - Locomotion, pp.153, 154.)


Pippin's Laundromat-Locomotion series of 1997 mark the ambitious culmination of his washing machines project and Laundromat-Locomotion (Walking in Suit) is especially remarkable for the range of clarity to abstraction as the sequence progresses. It was produced in an edition of five (of which this is number one) and consists of twelve black and white contact prints made frompaper negatives which were fixed to the back of the washing machines' drums, opposite the opening. Having previously set up twelve cotton tripwires in front of the adapted washing machines, the artist triggered the shutters sequentially by walking across the tripwires. The photographs portray him in profile, wearing a suit. Pippin often wears a suit while working and in this case he purposefully wore one both to install his apparatus and in the photographs as an 'ordinary' counterpoint to his eccentric activities, in order to blend in with the laundromat's customers.
The suit worn by Pippin and clothing in general are a critical element of this work. Indeed, as the artist has stated, the idea of 'the physical mass of clothing inside the machine being replaced by the more ephemeral image of the clothes, projected inside by the action of light reflected from a suited figure walking past the outside, was the primary concept or meaning of the work, and is crucial to any understanding of it.' ('Applied Photography', p.157.)
Further reading:Laundromat - Locomotion: Mr. Pippin, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art 1998, reproduced pp.18-9
Discovering the Secrets of… Monsieur Pippin, exhibition catalogue, Fonds RĂ©gional d'Art Contemporain Limousin, Limoges 1995
Giorgia Bottinelli
June 2002

Monday, 16 April 2018

Book list



Over the next coming weeks you will need to read books in order to gain an understanding of artists and photographers that you are interested in looking at for your essay.  The more research you complete the better your essay will be.

By the end of the lesson, I want to see a list of 3 books you want to read for your essay.  The best way to find a book is to type 'books about...' in google or search for an artist you want to research in amazon. Don't worry about buying the books, in all likelihood you won't need to buy any book. At this stage just make a list of the books you want to read and include the author, publisher and year of publish.

Task 1: Create a list of 3 books, include the; title, the author, the publisher and the year of publish

Task 2: Find the books you need, first see if they are available on amazon, then see if you can get them at a library.  Use the following link for the Shropshire libraries catalogue.