Wednesday 2 May 2012

Final Evaluation

Even though the exhibition is still to come, I feel it is important to reflect on how the project has gone up until this point. This is my final evaluation about the process and each stage in the production of this concept. 

Final Evaluation
With the mid project evaluation only being written two months ago in March I feel, looking back now, that it was something written much further into the past than it was. In fact the project has progressed in such a way that the mid project evaluation doesn’t make much sense any more. I think that’s a good thing, the last thing I would want to do is look back 2 months and to see the same evaluation that I am writing now, where would be the sense in that?

It seems important to start the evaluation process with a look back at the transition between the productions of a book to a full blown exhibition. Several discussions about the work and how it was progressing and questions such as key aspects such as whether or not manipulations should be used, or if should continue to use street photography, or if I should stick with the housing theme - were continually brought up. And as these discussions progressed, so did the importance of how my work was changing. I started to discard the original theme of housing and manipulations in order to ‘fill the book out’. It felt as if I were only using the street photography to literally fill the book up, since the manipulations I was using were both time consuming and 30-40 of these would not have worked in the book context. I was changing the work to fit the medium and it was evident that this was a problem and my project was on the line if something did not happen to curve me back into position. Now, working towards an exhibition I feel happy in the thoughts that this will be an event to remember, an important moment in my life in which I have been able to express myself and my project in a way that merits the theme rather than the medium.

One of the main aspects in working towards this exhibition has been the fact that hasn’t just been me in the process; I had joined 3 students in the exhibition team, which was an insightful and new experience to me. We really have had to work as a team to create an event that hopefully will be successful, open up new possibilities and inspire the viewers. I’d like to say that as a group we have been successful and have worked well together, I also feel that as a group we have asserted ourselves into different roles within the exhibition process. Obviously the Gallery contact happened mainly at the beginning of the process so I couldn’t be there to help, but things like gallery diagrams, organising meetings, student contact and flyer design all became part of the role that I played within the group. I feel even though I joined the team quite late on in the process that I have been of some value and will hopefully have contributed enough in both the process and in the exhibition.

Along with the process of working within a team comes the professionalism associated with organising an event such as this. I feel the development of my professionalism has been evident through this project, both in the exhibition and through my photographic practice. My attitude towards this project has helped me greatly, I know that I have had many doubts and anxieties throughout, and I feel that without the enjoyment and enthusiasm I have for what I am doing I would not be successful in my attempts.

The development of my photographic technical skills has also been evident, along with the stages of workflow, final edit and printing. I feel this method of experimentation and development has been useful within the project and has been a good system to work with. The voyeuristic nature of my shootings has been difficult and it is something that needs work in the future, taking myself out of my comfort zone should not inhibit my work and such is an aspect in which needs attention. My workflow, however, has been an efficient journey and I feel experimentation has been the key to this project. The same goes with the manipulations, which again have developed since the start of the journey and has been an aspect of which I have enjoyed as part of the experience. The printing stages were relatively simple, although there were a few issues with banding across the first set of images which turned out to be file corruption from the USB. The printing sessions from last semester were a great help in achieving exhibition quality prints. I feel that although my professionalism in both photographic and workflow context have been developed through this project, I have found it increasingly difficult to find relating research and/or artists and photographers that tackle similar aspects of topic to mine. This can both be good and bad, meaning I can be tackling subjects that have not been delved into much before, but I do feel that my researching technique will need work and development for future projects to search deeper and find better resources for myself.

Through each of the stages of the project there have been various issues that have had to be either resolved or changed, and I feel that this whole process has been such a valuable learning curve. I have never organised an event of this scale before, and there have been difficulties with the display that I was proposing, there were some issues with other students regarding space and fundraising has been a large factor in the process. I feel that as I have joined the exhibition team quite late, I have somewhat missed some of the fundraising opportunities and would have liked to have been more involved with the money side of things.
Even though I have been working towards an exhibition, the first half of the semester was spent working towards a book, and the time invested in the book I feel has not gone to waste at all. Aspects such as text formatting, image selection, spacing, position and layout are valuable tools in photography and are skills in which I have learnt a lot about with the tutorials that have been given. I would say that the main thing that I have learnt through this project is that I shouldn’t necessarily find a medium to suit the topics, rather I should work with the experimentation towards the subject to find a suitable way of communicating my intentions.

Tutorials, peer group sessions and tutor contact have been very useful in the process, and although I understand that as a second year student there is a lot riding on myself in the project, it has been an effective contribution to my work, especially the group sessions. I feel these are valuable and it is always good to have further input into the projects, as well as contributing to other students discussions. It has been evident in the tutorials that I have found it difficult to explain the concept, to which I am working towards, and I feel the language and discussion about my subject needs attention and development. I believe that through further projects such as this and in depth research will contribute greatly to achieve a level of understanding and discussion skills worthy of the subjects I am involving myself with.

Finally, it seems I should look at how successful I feel the project has been. When I think about successfulness there are many aspects of which I can consider. Of course the main aspect to consider would be the final exhibition, however since this will not be determined until after the deadline, things such as themes, images, display and group work will have to be considered. When I look back to the beginning and read the intentions of my main theme, I find that there has been a progressive development that has both risen and fallen during the process. Working with subjects such as status, wealth, power and success has been both on a personal level to me, and something which I intended to be related to by the general public. It seems important to use my medium to talk about issues that relate to myself but that raise points and questions on a much wider context. This has been the intention of this work and I hope with the images and contributing display will be successful in this way. Looking back at the project now I feel that it isn’t finished, there were aspects such as house walk-ins and interviews which would continue this project forward, bringing new concepts and ideas into it.

As the project has progressed I feel my intentions as an artist have too. I have had various discussions during the process, about where I would really like to continue in the future. One particular aspect became apparent in these discussions. I feel like through the project I have been looking for something else, I have wanted to become part of the process and be connected to it somehow. For example I had plans to start the process with a fictional narrative and be a key aspect in the project. It is difficult to pin down this feeling of a search, but it all seems to connect to the wanting of being part of a narrative, to be inside the project rather than to take the images and manipulate from afar. I feel that although this concept has been successful in communicating both my anxieties as an individual and raising questions about society today – there is a void in the project that would benefit so greatly if I were to tackle it. As a second year student I feel this point is something that should be taken into third year as a valuable learning experience, and that in future projects I can use this search for a connection and create new, better and deeper projects for me to handle.

Tuesday 1 May 2012

Title

With only a few days left until the opening night, there has been a niggle about the title that has been evident for a while now. It has been difficult to pin down something in which I can associate with the work and the social aspect in which it speaks. After another read through of most of the work file, and careful considerations I feel that the word 'Condition' just seems so apt for what I am talking about. The dictionary's definition of condition is as follows:

con·di·tion

  [kuhn-dish-uhn]  Show IPA
noun
1.
a particular mode of being of a person or thing; existingstate; situation with respect to circumstances.
2.
state of health: He was reported to be in critical condition.
3.
fit or requisite state: to be out of condition; to be in nocondition to run.
4.
social position: in a lowly condition.
5.
a restricting, limiting, or modifying circumstance: It canhappen only under certain conditions.
6.
a circumstance indispensable to some result; prerequisite;that on which something else is contingent: conditions ofacceptance.
7.
Usually, conditions. existing circumstances: poor livingconditions.



The definition of which I have associated this with is that of many conditions. Condition of life, progressive condition, condition of finances, housing, social position and family. Having to be very careful with the title has made it difficult but then it is expected with such a large project, with such a tough subject. Condition feels right,  it is informative, yet vague, it holds the statement but is open. I don't want this to a be a project that is left entirely upon the viewer to determine the themes and subjects, that doesn't feel right, I didn't spend time and effort making sure this is a project worth doing to put it up and let the viewer decide what it is about, so I believe that this title is suitable for both the project and the viewer, along with the statement and the work. 

Draft statement 3

So after contemplating whether or not the statement should or shouldn't be a lyrical quote, or a very short statement for more interpretation, or whether I should us the draft and re work some of the ideas that I have written I've come to the conclusion that to really appreciate the work I have done I should use a statement that is both informative and uses the lyrical quote from the moral sentiments that I really like.

I've had a go with In Design with the text since it seems to be able to handle more than Word. (Book sessions have come in handy!)

Here is what is written in the file:


Condition

“To what purpose is all the toil and bustle of this world? What is the end of avarice and ambition, of the pursuit of wealth, of power and pre-eminence? Is it to supply the necessities of nature? The wages of the meanest labourer can supply them. What then are the advantages of that great purpose of human life which we call bettering our condition?”
Adam Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments (Edinburgh, 1759)

There is an anxious nature which surrounds today’s society; of status, wealth, power and value. Provoked by redundancy, recession, retirement, promotions and housing, this anxiety is real. “Condition” explores one fundamental aspect of this anxiety - housing. Using societies search for a reality that does not exist as a theme through the images; an augmented reality that we thrive for to progress and make our lives ‘complete’, ‘better’.

“We want houses to shelter us of course, but there’s also a desire to show that we can do more than just survive, that we’re ‘better’ than this - and use property to show off power and influence.”
Alain De Botton

The house, the home - are spaces of shelter associated with security and ownership, yet this worry, that we are in danger of not conforming to the success laid down by society is a frightening reality that effects the population. The notion of the surreal, uncanny and the unseen are main themes in this project. I have explored what is not visible, yet holds society hostage in so many ways.

Sunday 29 April 2012

Progressive Fulfilment


Today I was reading Thomas Troward's "The Creative Process in the Individual" (below) and came across this paragraph, something which seems highly relatable to that of my own project, again talking about self expectation and success - even if we are successful in our conditions and fortunes, our self expectation may be higher and even then our lives will not be good enough. What then will we do? Lower our expectation or thrive to be more successful? And it is in the process that we may have feelings of doubt and worry, but for what? Better conditions?

"Well, the general direction in which we all want to go is that of getting more out of life than we have ever got out of it - we want to be more alive in ourselves and to get all sorts of improved conditions in our environment. However happily any of us may be circumstanced we can all conceive something still better, or at any rate we should like to make our present good permanent; and since we shall find as our studies advance that the prospect of increasing possibilities keeps opening out more and more widely before us, we may say that what we are in search for is the secret of getting more out of life in a continually progressive degree. This means that what we are looking for is something personal, and that it is to be obtained by producing conditions which do not yet exist, in other words nothing less than the exercise of a certain creative power in the sphere of our own particular world."

Getting more out of life in a continually progressive degree, when would it finish? Do we then mark our own fulfilment, tick the boxes as we have achieved and succeeded? Would there be an end?

Condition seems like a possible title to his project?

Proposal 2

Susie's proposal, again to be discussed along with other proposals at the gallery.



Concept:
This work explores something that I have still yet to fully understand. It documents a journey with no end, no conclusion, no understanding. As there is no final chapter, this piece of work is open for interpretation. I want the viewer to form their own concepts, their own ideas, and their own world within what is presented. To me, this represents the ambiguity I feel regarding photography on different levels. From what attracts me to photography to the state of photography to the theory of photography.

Display Requirements:
To display this piece of work in its full book content, the pages pulled out is 5.328 metres in length with a possible addition of 0.3 for the artist statement (at your discretion). The pages will be stuck to the wall, page by page in a long line. However there is another option to print individual images with the same/similar placement.

I would like the statement to be placed at the end of work as this will work with my concept.

The page option: the whole thing is 198mm in height and 5238mm in length. Individual option: The sizes of the images vary and as they are square and low-res images they will only be small.




Thursday 26 April 2012

Summary of this week

Just a few summarising points that arose from our meeting on Tuesday and from the work that has been done this week:


Image: After debating over the images I want to exhibit, I have been thinking why they are being chosen and what I am trying to say, or ask. I don't want this display to patronise, which I feel I may be in danger of so I feel the use of a2 images strongly reduce this risk. So although it is based on the displays used in estate agents, it is not completely obvious and I do not regard the display as a main factor, only a contribution to the images. I feel the images I have chosen represent my theme well, and hope that with a short lyrical statement they will provide a thought provoking display. Again, I do not want this to be obvious, and that also goes with the statement, hense the lyrical option. 


Curation: There have been problems with the curation process so far, mainly with the choice and availability within the space that we have. At this point we have assigned a space for the main four contributors, but since we have opened the space up to further contributors within the course there have been some issues. With the original sort of themed exhibition it has been difficult to secure people to contribute as they felt their work would not fit in, for instance the discussion with Hayley's work at the gallery. The intentions thereafter were to take this theme away, or to make it less constricting. 
One issue that arises with this change is that the exhibition may become disjointed and messy, and there may be confrontation with the new contributors and the spaces that they would want or require. 
From Tuesday's meeting, we decided that although we will receive the proposals for the works which contained sizing and space wanted, we will be curating the whole process, meaning there will be no choice for the others as to where there work will sit in the space. This is intended to help the process run much smoother, and will help create an exhibition that will hopefully not be disjointed and won't feel 'placed'.


Printing: After the second test prints came back last week they were fine and ready for final print, which was quite a relief. When I came in this week there had been a problem with the final prints, though. there were two prints that were successful and I tested them out in the acrylics, which looks good. However, the rest had a sort of pink/red and green band that ran across each image. I went back through the process to print, and discovered that the files had corrupted between the machine and Graham's computer, so we tried again using a formatted disk to transfer the images. fortunately this problem was then solved and the prints came out fine, the new Matt paper has done really well with the vibrancy of the colours in the images and I am pleased with the results. these are now safely in the acrylics and ready to be transported at any time. 


Gallery Space: Yesterday the group went one more time to the gallery to finalise certain aspect i.e funding and furniture. I had a look at the ceiling again and had a talk with one of the staff members, and basically I can't screw my rods straight into the ceiling. This is a problem but it can be solved quite easily (I hope) there are beams that run across the ceiling which have a sort of lip on the wall, this could potentially be used as a holder for a long piece of hard wood that can be screwed into, thus eliminating any damage I do to the room. I will possibly have to cut the rods down also in case they are too long for the room height, but this can be done on the setting up day. As far as the lighting is concerned, I need simple but effective spotlights that can clip onto the lips on the beams, I have found some suppliers that do this, and I have a recommendation for a shop in Manchester that may have what I need. I plan only to use 2 lights, but will get 4 in case these are not effective enough, I don;t want this to be over bearing on the images, and equally don't want the room to be gloomy with low visibility. 

Monday 23 April 2012

Gallery space sketchup

Whilst figuring out the measurements for the space I have, I thought it would be best to make a rough 3d sketch of the whole place, that we could all use and manipulate as we wish to see our displays without visiting the gallery. Useful when considering about proposals and what space we have. Here are some screen grabs of the sketch: ( I have tried to roughly sketch out the displays, only from what I believe the plan is for the others)