tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1625740493941078192008-09-03T22:41:20.652-04:00Kiwi Sun Photography: BlogWhile I am based in the Grand Rapids area I am available to service the entire state of Michigan and beyond. So if you're looking to hire a professional, on site Michigan wedding photographer, or a completely custom Michigan portrait that best represents you, your family, or your child at reasonable prices and quality at its core then you have come to the right place. If you would like to see more of my wedding photographs feel free to take a look at my wedding and portrait portfolio.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comBlogger11125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-61094734800779990682008-08-28T22:35:00.012-04:002008-08-28T23:00:44.408-04:00Why the Kiwi?<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/sdUUx5FdySs&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/sdUUx5FdySs&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object></p><p>Most Americans think of kiwifruit when they hear the name kiwi, but I am talking about the flightless little bird from New Zealand. I used the Kiwi for when renaming my business because I really like kiwi's. I am sure that everybody can agree upon the fact that kiwi's are about as unique as birds come. I love how the artist that created this animation packed so much into a this without any words. As a photographer I love the fact that my medium communicates without language. I would like to thank the artist who posted this on youtube. This amazing bird needs our help, please donate to the Bank of New Zealand Kiwi Recovery Trust and help keep the kiwi's around. Dare to be different, dare to stand out, dare to care!</p><p><a href="http://www.savethekiwi.org.nz/Donations/Donation.htm">http://www.savethekiwi.org.nz/Donations/Donation.htm</a><br /></p>Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-52614701388979523102008-07-17T14:24:00.001-04:002008-07-17T14:24:38.103-04:00The importance of PhotographySlowly as life’s journey spirals into tomorrow, we absorb everything around us. Memories involve the senses. Some of these are easy to explain and others are not so easy. Important memories are etched into our minds through chemicals and electric impulses and are not tangible. You can try to share a visual memory with a friend by explaining it through words and language; a well composed photograph can usually speak for itself.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-54433267210177026532008-04-26T11:29:00.002-04:002008-07-08T12:47:34.505-04:00Senior Thesis Idea #1In today’s society everybody hustles to the next stage in life. There is no doubt that modern marvels make things in life easier. Among so many things our automobiles are faster to get to work and we do not have to kill our food for dinner. Since the spout of industrialism our world has separated itself from so many things in so many ways. <br /><br />In the good old days one could turn ice cream all day for a treat for a family to enjoy. Then in the 1960s you could go to the local soda jerk and watch them make your soda or sundae. Today you just ask and they bring one out to you. Most of our generation doesn’t even know what a soda is or why they all them sundaes.<br />These days to get furniture a person just drives to Art Van. The consumer has no knowledge of who build the work or where it even came from. While this is easy for the consumer and costs less, what happened to the person that poured pride into making a cabinet for somebody? Now, this is mostly done in a factory and since the work is produced in so many stages few even get to see the end product. Karl Marx dubbed this “the alienation of labor”. What is also interesting is how the factory that creates it not only pays workers low wages but is in a constant state of trying to manufacture it cheaper.<br /><br />In photography, photographers use to have to buy paper, sensitize it and do everything mainly from scratch. They took pride in what they did and not everybody could do it. Over time photography has become easier for people to work with and more alien to the photographer. Even Albumen paper was produced in large factories so that people could sensitize it. Then cames the silver gelatin papers which made it so people did not have to sensitize paper. The darkroom was replaced by people sending in negatives made by the Brownies. In color photography the die transfer process was wiped out by PhotoShop and replaced with ink spitters that we call printers. Now some Kmart stores are abandoning photo processing because they can not profit with large internet digital photo producers. How alien is that? You do not even see who produces your photographs!<br /><br />What happened to the candy store, cabinet makers, and soda jerks of yesterday? Have the modern day bourgeoisie sucked them all into the proletariat positions of factories. It seems unsettling that the small businesses that produce and see the work from beginning to end are fading while factories grow. I hope that photography never falls completely into the industrial complex. For my thesis I want to defend the small businesses that are on the brink of extinction and becoming archaic with a beautiful process that is now considered extinct and archaic.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-46714131649287444632008-02-20T12:10:00.005-05:002008-02-20T12:25:59.736-05:00Working with Albumen (Introduction)Yesterday I finally got around to ordering products to start working with Albumen. I've been really excited about this project. I got my ingredients from the Photographers Formulary Inc. which is based in Montana, USA. The woman on the phone was extremely helpful she even gave me information for finding the clear film to Print the negatives on.<br /><br />To create the negatives I'll be working with my Epson 2200 and Pictorico OHP Transparency Film. Pictorico use to be owned by Olympus, but it seems that you have to order it from Mitshubishi Imaging. It is hard to imagine that I'll be cracking eggs just like they did more then 150 years ago when the process was a standard in the industry. <br /><br />The ingredients and measurement supplies are in the mail, while I'm waiting I'll be prepping the files from both my archive and some files from historic albumen images that I can download from the Library of Congress Website. I plan to use images from Roger Fenton.<br /><br />I would like to thank my friends at the Australian Photographic Society, Royal Photographic Society, and Grand Valley State University for all the help and information they have shared with me thus far. I would also like to thank my friend in Plymouth, MI who kindly donated his UV exposure unit to me. If anybody would like to make any comments or suggestions by all means do so. I'll be posting more as progress develops.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-7354906890039135272008-02-15T11:27:00.003-05:002008-02-16T11:28:55.624-05:00School Shootings & PhotojournalismIt was 10 years ago that I joined the ranks ok the American Red Cross. Being young and just out of high school it really opened my eyes to the world around me. I not only learned how to save lives but also learned how to teach others how to save lives. Through that education I have taught CPR 3 times, helped at several accidents, and taught countless students how to do the same. Before joining the Red Cross I had no idea just how much disasters affected people.<br /><br />Today as a photographer I can’t help but take in the world around me. At weddings I get to be a part of the most important day of somebody’s life, through my craft I get to etch it on paper to preserve memories for generations. Conversely when something sad or moving happens I feel it is our duty to share what has happened with the rest of the world.<br /><br />Although I have never photographed the aftermath of a school shooting and hope I never have to. I can look through the photographer’s eyes through the images he or she creates. I have photographed standing behind a police barricade and became aware of how the press is treated. I’ve also photographed a presidential funeral and know how important it is to share what I see with the rest of the world.<br /><br />What I have done however seems insignificant compared to the photographs I have seen from Columbine, Virginia Tech, or the recent school shooting in Illinois. When I attend college I feel safe and can not imagine what it would be like if a man or woman pulled out a gun in one of my classes. I can’t fathom watching my friends and professors being a target. It is so chilling to know that this has and does happen to students. The expressions on people’s faces in the photographs attempt to show us the utter terror it causes.<br /><br />Our right to photograph is secured through the constitution under the guise of the freedom of the press. That freedom is important because it acts as a system of check and balances. When bad things happen they need to be exposed and fixed. Bad things are happening, my fellow photographers, students, professors, friends, and readers. If you sense that somebody may do something like this talk with people and attempt to get the person help. These things are real and a little compassion may curve the violence that plagues our schools. I am glad photographers and the press has opened my eyes to what is going on. The press does hard work that is not easy during grim times like this.<br /><br />I would encourage anybody to join:<br /><br />American Red Cross (http://www.redcross.org)<br />Canadian Red Cross (http://www.redcross.ca)<br />Rachels Challenge (http://www.rachelschallenge.com/)Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-36950196473386785242008-02-12T12:16:00.000-05:002008-02-12T12:17:51.516-05:00Review of Behind the Masks PortraitsThe photographs discussed in Behind the Masks Portraits of Southern Gothic are interpretive. If the photographer didn’t engage his twist on the portraits when he included things such as the strange masks, broken windows, decayed houses, or the American flags coupled with not photographing them with blank stares or yawns they may be considered descriptive. Rather it is obvious that the photographer had intended for his viewers to interpret his work they gazed upon it. In a secondary sense the photographs could have also been considered slightly ethically evaluative since they went against the grain of the common portrait style that could be considered a notion it is a very strong one.<br /><br />The paper also notes some of Meatyards landscapes and portraits of which no information is discussed. Later in life Meatyard studied with Aaron Siskind and Minor White. After they taught him the “finer points of black and white” he gained the influence of Zen in his photography. When I think of Zen I gravitate to empty thinking and meditative photography. This type of photography in my eyes is aesthetically evaluative since it’s about art and making things look good without any social issues. While these photographs do not relate to the title of the work Behind the Masks, Portraits of Southern Gothic they are about the photographer and hold descriptive importance to help the reader understand the photographer.<br /><br />I sense that Grace Glueck reviewed Meatyard’s work with an open mind entered it with an expressionist mindset. While she did interpret his work you could tell she was less into it then when she described things such as the “finer points of black and white” and “he was intrigued enough by the photographic process to start a serious study in 1954 which post dates the photos talked about earlier. She also leashed out things with a negative connotation when describing his work with masks which included; most oddball, creepy, and grotesque. Although she had an open mind she likely had a preference for more of the realist and formalist images judging by what was noted above.<br /><br />Grace’s criteria must have been more implicit since she did not come out and say it directly. While she did note explicit things such as “finer points of black and white” they didn’t lend themselves in favor of the images. Perhaps the antonyms of her evaluations would imply what she has embedded in her criteria. She did however use the word memorable when evaluating something but she did not attach it to a good memory or bad one which again lead to the implicit criteria.<br /><br />Again Grace did not emphasize any theory in her writing. What I implied from the work itself was that it functioned as art that and the disguises added a sense of mystery to the images. What struck me was the thought that the masked may have implied death in death masks or a type of veil. While veils are also used in happy things such as weddings the undertone that Grace described led me to think one of the things it was about was death. People were also photographed around houses with broken windows which gravitate to decay as another subject matter. With regard to modernity the images are set up and heavily posed. By the writing it sounded like Meatyard took his time when executing the images he thought of. <br /><br />Death and Decay is not the easiest subject to photograph mainly because of the taboo our society has placed on it. Seeing a photograph of a dead body is the easiest way the depict it but photographing the dead under forms of decay shifts to a little too morbid. A decaying dead body in a gallery would have more shock value then meaning. At the year of his death Meatyard photographed himself as old with “unkempt hair” on a umkempt grass hill. He is depicted through the last two images as getting up and leaving which lets us know that he has told his story.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-34096157887372314042008-02-09T21:44:00.001-05:002008-02-09T22:08:20.159-05:00The LateFew people stop to put surrealistic concepts or ideas that exist in the mind onto a medium for others to see. The rationale behind this is because it’s generally more difficult to create something from bits and pieces then to just walk up, compose the image and click the shutter. The creative Maggie Taylor decided to do things the hard way and let her imagination run wild. Her work usually is composed of individuals acting out situations or posing in human form. Some of the forms have bird or mammal elements such as heads. What Maggie creates is usually from a vantage point looking dead on, and rarely has any dynamic angles that pop out or draw attention. Taylor’s creation titled the Late is read from right to left and hosts a childlike figure with a bird’s head traversing the mystic blue skied night on a bicycle with a light shining onward attached to the handlebars. The bird child has wings that look as if they were crafted with bright blue butterfly wings. While the ground is green the horizon fades away into a mountainous background. The green area in the foreground is sprawling with small lavender flowers. In the composition the creature has a hurried expression. This coupled with the night solidifies the title of the image which was created in 2000 with an ink jet printer.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-20821747710165197092008-02-09T21:38:00.000-05:002008-02-09T21:39:15.105-05:00New York #56In our semiotic world littered with advertisements in every avenue of our life, few people actually stop to look notably at the aesthetics and compositional elements. Over time, most advertisements are left neglected and decompose which is considered to be an eye sore by most people’s standards. While in New York Aaron Siskind went against this grain and stopped to notice the decay of forms in the city. He then went on to make compositions in New York. A brilliant work of his named New York #56 hosts a sign that without a close look would be next to unidentifiable. He chose to compose this image in an abstract way; while it is balanced it creates tension because you cannot read what the sign says. Beyond the decay with time you can distinguish an element that says “AREA”; directly above it you notice bits and pieces of a word but it is undistinguishable. Above that word a line exists then another word in a lighter shade ending with the letter “R”. The decay in the photograph is composed of organic shapes and under the decay the sign is composed in organic lines and letters. This silver gelatin print was created in 1951 with a series of many other abstract images that focus on elements and decay.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-75151746657555826072008-02-07T13:35:00.001-05:002008-02-07T13:35:53.715-05:00Daphne and ApolloThere is no doubt that Joel Peter-Witkin has had a share of life altering experiences from witnessing the decapitation of a child after an accident when he was a child, to photographing the Vietnam War. Most of the work that Peter-Witkin does is considered grotesque and morbid mainly because of his ideas, and even more with his use of human body parts and corpses. The silver print by Joel Peter-Witkin, Daphne and Apollo, c.1985 interprets a myth in which the nymph Daphne never wanted to be married but Apollo loved her and desired to have her. Later in the chase the nymph turned into a tree and while Apollo could not have her he could have the tree. The image depicts this is happening in a wooded area in front of a dark rock like figure. To the distant left atop a hill is a domelike building. The artist’s interpretation of the nymph is a nude dwarf with a tortured expression on her face and Apollo is depicted as a goat-like creature with wings. The photograph has a great deal of contrast which aids to the nightmarish feel. This is an interpretive photograph because the photographer portrays the myth of Daphne and Apollo through his imagination and etches it photographically onto something that we can all see.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-29696884365534510232008-02-07T13:31:00.000-05:002008-02-07T13:35:08.018-05:00ExcusadoMost of the fountains that surround us are in place to add a sense of elegance to a setting. While toilets are seen and used on a daily basis by most of us, very few people stop to notice its aesthetic qualities. This is because most people think of toilets as dirty and smelly. It also has to deal with the excrement process, so it’s typically taboo for discussion and most would consider preposterous for art. This is why you never hear anybody say “that is one beautiful toilet.” Edward Weston however went against the grain and photographed a toilet against a tile wall and floor from the perspective of a bug on the floor. Although his photograph was by no means normal, he was not the first; in 1917 Marcel Decamp featured a urinal in a gallery which was photographed by Alfred Stieglitz and various other photographers. While it is easy to say that the silver print Edward Weston, Excusado, 1925 was created for aesthetically evaluative purposes, one could also argue that that it is ethically evaluative since it leaves people questioning what is defined as art.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-162574049394107819.post-9146142281727013032008-01-26T14:38:00.001-05:002008-07-05T15:05:31.336-04:00Film use in DocumentariesThe Royal Photographic Society was founded in the early days of photography in 1852. Today the society remains an organization with its place etched in history around the world. A man named David Land wrote an article about Nick Danziger titled Blair at War in the Royal Photographic Society Journal.<br /><br />Nick Danziger began his career as a painter and on the side from publishing to documentary filmmaking. His books and films always had included his photographic work. What sparked Danziger’s interest was “looking at aspects of the world we rarely have access to see.” While photographing political figures he noted that at times it’s easier and some times it’s difficult. It’s easier when you have security clearance and behind the scenes access. Then it is difficult when your subjects are afraid that a simple image can destroy there reputation. He goes on to explain as you develop a report with your subjects and they start to trust you as time progresses.<br />The Times commissioned Blair at War as a project to write about the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair. At that time Danziger was asked if he was available to photograph two or three days a week over a months time. Later the photographer learned that he would be photographing Tony Blair. The photographer actually worked on the project for 30 full days including the weekends.<br />Unlike most documentary photographers Danziger prefers to use 35mm black and white film over digital. He goes on to explain that with his raw and immediate work he likes to use Kodak Tri-X film. The photographer believes that to document he must be able to blend into his surroundings and desired to be as “invisible or transparent as possible.” His style coupled with not using a flash when doing his documentary made it so some of the political figures forgot he was around from time to time.<br /><br />Danziger knows that the general public wants color but uses black and white because it helps people understand what is going on in an image without the distraction of color. He also goes on to explain the immediacy of digital and that how he would rather take a great picture of a moment rather then “several frames per minute like a video.”<br /><br />Through forums, experience and education as photographers we all learn the theories of black and white photography and the theories of color photography. We also learn the nuances of cameras and what has been the general rule throughout history. A black and white medium tends to always let people look at an image holistically and view the situation simultaneously. Color photography on the other hand is more realistic because of the simple fact that people can view the color as if they were actually there. Although color tends to be more realistic the subject of the photograph can suddenly become the colors in the photograph which can be slightly distracting.<br /><br />Different camera formats are used for different things. Since medium and large format cameras are large, clunky, and take time to focus and compose an image most people prefer the speed and choice of lenses with a SLR camera for documentation and photo-journalism. Most people prefer digital SLR cameras because they are quick and you can capture several images per second if need be to stumble upon that perfect shot when you edit your images. While this works most of the time photographers generally spend less time composing an image. A photographer using film on the other hand can only expose 32 frames before he or she has to reload the camera. This tends to make a photographer more conscientious of capturing a great photograph. With film photographers take a little more time to compose the image and wait for the perfect moment to finally capture the image. This theory however is not etched in stone, some photographers do take the time to compose an image in digital and others take random snapshots with film.<br /><br />People who photograph documentaries as a rule try there best not to affect what is going on. You would rarely see photographers with cameras photographed in a documentary. Rather you attempt to photograph things as they are without having people pose for situations. As a general rule people know when a camera is around and act differently because they know that it’s an indexical. Photography harnesses the power to communicate to the masses. They know that if they are scratching themselves or something the whole world might see it. Since this is true you either have to sneak photographs without people knowing you are there or by developing a trust with your subjects. This trust and develop by experience in that you have not released images that destroy people carriers and is heightened when people know that your carrier could be destroyed if you produce that type of images. It’s likely that a member of the paparazzi from the tabloids would do not have access and must hide out because political figures are afraid that a wrong angle or something they do in the fraction of a second will be plastered all over magazines and newspapers for the world to see.<br /><br />Reference:<br />David Land. (2007). Blair at War. The Royal Photographic Society Journal. 147 (2), 54-59.Kiwi Sun Photographyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02061125062218789387email@kiwisunphoto.com