ModernismandPhotography

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Aspects of Modernism Part One: ‘Pure’ and ‘Straight’ Photography Early 20 th Century- WWI

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Transcript of ModernismandPhotography

Page 1: ModernismandPhotography

Aspects of ModernismPart One:

‘Pure’ and ‘Straight’ Photography

Early 20th Century- WWI

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“Form follows Function”

● The mantra of modernism● For photography this means that photographs

should look like photographs● No manipulation● A move away from ‘pictorialism’ of the

middle to end of the 19th century● An exploration of the qualities specific to the

medium

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Alfred Steiglitz

● The force behind the establishment of the photograph to the status of an art in it’s own right

● Birth of ‘straight’ photography

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Flatiron building 1903

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The Steerage, 1907

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Pure photography and the f.64 group

● US group based in San Fancisco in early 1930’s● Founded by Willard Van Dyke and Ansel

Adams● Gallery in his home called 683 (Brockhurst

Oakland)● See handout for the group manifesto● Characteristics: sharp focus, detail through

print, natural forms

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Edward Weston, Nude, 1936 and Pepper No.30

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Paul Strand, Wall Street, New York, 1915

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Ansel Adams, (Yosemite), Monolith 1927

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Willard Van Dyke, still from The City, 1938

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Imogen Cunningham, Magnolia Blossom, 1925

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Visual Language of pure and straight photography

● Depth of field-as much of the image in focus as possible

● Contrast- strong use of full tonal range (black to white)

● Exquisite hand printing, no manipulation● Subject matter: Art genres eg: still life and the

nude, landscape etc.● The City, people in relation to technology

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Further Reading

● Newhall, B, The History of Photography, Chapter 10, ‘Straight Photography’

● Clarke, G, The Photograph, Chapter 9, ‘The photograph as Fine Art’