Photography at the Edges, New York and San Francisco

Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris

Edgy may not be the first word that comes to mind describing photographs taken a century and a half ago.  But time travel is certainly an edgy prospect and it’s how I think of photography.  Arriving at the moment in history when Paris is about to leave the Middle Ages and become the city we now know is an exciting possibility.  Photography was in its infancy, 20 years old, so the confluence of art, technology and change is the theme of the show, Charles Manville: Photographer of Paris at the Metropolitan Museum Of Art in New York City, until May 4th.

Running simultaneously, also until May 4th, is Paris as Muse, Photography, 1840s-1930s.  One of our Gumbo Gurus is threatening to see both and, if so, I hope he reports back for those of us not so lucky.

Paris as Muse, Photography, 1840s-1930s. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

Paris as Muse, Photography, 1840s-1930s

7th Annual International Juried Plastic Camera Show

In San Francisco, Rayco Photo Center is currently hosting the 7th Annual International Juried Plastic Camera Show.  Low tech is the name of the game these days with a segment of the experimental photo crowd, plastic lenses along with home-made pinhole cameras and pre-1950s models, among others.

I’m very attracted to the unpredictable nature of this edge of the photographic arts, have tried an old Kodak model I found at a garage sale that takes 120 film, as well as a pinhole camera at a weekend workshop in Tucson.  I’m also the proud owner of a Holga 35mm that I have yet to test drive, and just to give a hint of the excitement ahead, the sellers offer rolls of black electrical tape for light leaks.

I plan to see the show soon and will certainly come back with a report.  For those with a similar inclination, the show will be up until April 29th.

Andrea Buzzichelli, Norway

Andrea Buzzichelli, ‘Norway’



Other interesting stuff:

Curious Camera

Michelle Bates

Kathleen Velo

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Admin
10 years ago

I did, indeed, go to the two exhibits at the Met…and they actually have a relation to the SF show that PortMoresby has described.

 

Marville, in particular, was working at the beginning of photography, without all the digital devices, or even a light meter, and with media so slow that a photograph of a relatively busy street appears to be empty of traffic—because during the 30 seconds needed to expose that plate no one stayed in front of the camera long enough to register an image!

 

The Paris as Muse exhibit also includes a series of cloud studies by Marville—the first-known successful pictures of skies, difficult because clouds move. Slightly faster emulsions and good darkroom technique made it possible and showed the way for others.

 

The largest number of photographs in the Muse exhibit are from its later part, including many images by Brassai, Cartier-Bresson, Andre Kertesz and others who were in the midst of transition from large-format cameras that more-or-less required tripods, assistants and lots of time, to the small and speedy 35mm Leica. The abrupt change is visible in both scene and subject: the casual, the unexpected, the candid become possible, and people now invade the frame, not carefully posed, but in their “natural habitat.”

 

I’ve run way off what I meant to write about (Marville and Paris); another time. Here, just one reminder that “black-and-white” photography isn’t always, well, black-and-white and that yes, photography can assert the abstract even in the midst of the pictorial. Here, from the Muse exhibit, is an Eiffel Tower image by surrealist Man Ray.

 

Man Ray Eiffel

10 years ago

I enjoy photos of local history.

Places that you can visit today with buildings that remain mostly unchanged.

This is Lord Street Liverpool around 1890.

 

LordSt….and present day Lord Street – (from a different angle)

 

LordSt2

Admin
10 years ago

Among my greatest photography influences were Matthew Brady, whose grainy and gritty images of the Civil War made it so very “real” to future generations just learning about it in history books.

 

And of course the great work of Ansel Adams.  Far from gritty and grainy.  Truly  a visionary.

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