Showing posts with label polaroid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label polaroid. Show all posts

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Killing time with Goya and Levinthal

The Charge of the Light Brigade
© Julian Tennant - Polaroid Spectra, Artists Proof print

I took this Polaroid earlier in the week. The end result of procrastination and my usual attempts to avoid doing any meaningful work. I should have been doing prep for my classes at TAFE, but as usual I became distracted. At least it wasn't porn this time. I was looking at some of Francisco Goya's  Disasters of War and Otto Dix's Der Krieg prints. Disturbing stuff ... powerful images that convey to me, the same level of horror, pitiful waste and sadness as much of the hardcore war photography that came out of the latter half of the twentieth century.

And as I meandered through the net looking at pix and thinking about stuff I rediscovered David Levinthal, a photographer whose style has been defined through his use of elaborate miniature sets to explore concepts and ideas. Probably best known for his Hitler Moves East series, I found his Mein Kampf body of work to be quite powerful in how it caused me to respond to what are essentially pictures of toys. He uses models paying careful attention to light, composition and depth of field control to create  scenes of drama, tension and narrative. In his photographs, the harmless children’s toys’ that society uses to socialise it’s young take on much darker connotations as he addresses issues in his personal life and the world around him.

Inspired by his work and with the prints of Goya and Dix fresh in my head, I dragged out my beloved Minolta Spectra Pro which still has one of my last remaining (and long expired) packs of Polaroid film sitting in it's belly. The figures are some models that I have from the Hong Kong based company King & Country, not quite relics of my childhood and... well, this is my feeble attempt anyway.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

The Khmer Legacy

The Khmer Legacy - Polaroid Spectra instant prints
(click on image to see a larger view)

A small body of work that I shot in Cambodia with my Minolta Pro camera which uses the, now defunct, Polaroid Spectra film. I really like the imperfections and color casts that Polaroid Spectra produced. Generally I prefered using it for night shots but for some reason the film I was using when I was at Angkor (and then in Phnom Penh) had a bit of a green cast. Probably due to it being expired and  then fried at several airport x-ray machines.


These images were all taken either at Angkor, home of the mighty Khmer empire , which at its peak stretched across Laos, Thailand, Burma, Southern Vietnam and Malaysia. Others were taken in the notorious Khmer Rouge interrogation centre housed in what was once Tuol Sleng Prey High School, but is better known as S-21. Of the between 17 000 to 20 000 suspects that went into S-21 between 1975 and 1979, only a dozen are known to have survived.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Pic of the week

                             Wat Po, Bangkok - Polaroid triptych

This week, another polaroid triptych from the edit for my upcoming Polaroid book. 


Friday, May 7, 2010

Pic of the week







Angkor Wat, Cambodia - Polaroid triptych (click to see enlarged version)


OK, so it has been a while and many things have happened, photographically speaking, since my last post. Time to take this blog more seriously and be more active here, particularly whilst I rebuild my website. I'm using a Lightroom plug-in called the Turning Gate, which seemed like a good idea at the time. But after running into problems editing content in pages that are added to the provided template and getting no support or help from the creator/distributor despite having paid for their product, I wonder whether I made the right choice.