Tuesday, 17 October 2017

Feedback on My Body of Work

As part of Assignment 1 we were required to send out our work as a PDF for practising professionals in order to gain feedback on the work. I approached gallery owner Emma Roberts, curator and artist Linda Ingham, photographer Lee Gilby and curator Alan Raw. I was also fortunate that, whist at an excellent and inspirational exhibition, The Long View, (see blog post) in The Lake District by photographer and poet Rob and Harriett Fraser, I was able to talk to them about the similarities in our work. They also agreed to give me feedback on the work. I was delighted that I received feedback from all but Alan Raw. All were positive about the work and all provided constructive criticism which will enable me to develop the work further.

Linda Ingham
Linda picked up from my introduction that I was posing the question: which of the following options would be 'best' – create your own track,, or follow one which is already established. She felt that all of the images show evidence of a track apart from the final one whch has no foreground and no discernible way through. She feels that the question is a meitaphorical as there can be no answer until both options have been tried and even then it is subjective. She suggests that I might take more images where there are no paths and pair them with ones showing discernible tracks. This would be a viable option and to this end I am making more images of tangled undergrowth but no path so that I can try the idea. Linda feels that this might take the viewer closer to the question without being too literal an interpretation of my purpose. She does feel , though, that it is that single image with no pathway which intrigues in relation to the others. Another suggestion is that I could show images where there is no path and then either physically on the prints or digitally mark where a chosen path or track might begin. This is an interesting idea and I am currently discussing how I might mark of work on a print as part of another project I am working on with Linda. We shall see.

Linda also referred my to Robert MacFarlane, especially a particular passage in The Old Ways, a book I also find inspirational. Another author she suggests I should read is Richard Mabey's Nature Cure. She says that he does not always discern that is what he is talking about is moving through wildernesses.

Linda says that the images worked really well for her and are well-composed reminded me that I had shown them at a peer group session. In this instance, although she had viewed them upside down, they reminded her of some of the lesser-known Klimt paintings. I need to research his landscapes.

Very encouraging and ideas to take the word forward.

Emma Roberts
Emma begins her feedback by writing that the way the project has been presented and written is in a very considered way, reflective and representative of the subject of the work. She felt that the quality of images themselves (all had both the PDF and digital copies of the images) is good and consistent throughout with a strong consistent theme and obvious exploration. She enjoyed the written statement; it was concise and conveyed the project well, with enough points for thought or further exploration without spelling things out to the viewer. She felt that the Vimeo slideshow was an interesting way of presenting the work. She says that it is striking in a way fitting with the pieces and the subject. It really does the work justice and shows it off very well as well as holding onto the natural nature of the work; all the elements knit together well. She likes the meditative flow of regular footsteps as the soundtrack which also fits with the Tibetan title. She enjoyed the subtle way the images lead into one another. She felt that it might be a good idea to play with using gentler colours on the font slides and the framing of the images – colours fitting with nature such as an earthy grey, charcoal with green /brown hues. She finds the black to be wuite jarring although she agrees this is subjective. I take this point on board entirely and will experiment with the idea. She feels that the video brings the photography to another level. She could see it as a docu-photography piece working as an installation in a gallery space – a large screened piece for viewers to sit and take in.
Overall, she says, she feels that the work achieves that thing of making something flow to a high standard and making it seem effortless which is often hard to achieve. On a personal note she enjoyed it for nature coupled with a meditative/contemplative current running. A tonic to 'busy noisiness' of a highly technical world in which we live.

Lee Gilby
Lee introduces his feedback by stating that he began by taking a purely technical view rather than being influenced by personal artistic taste.
He feels that the composition of the images is thechnically sound, especially given the square format. The lack of any clear horizon line, or in most cases, sky ties in well with my statement and this forces the viewer to concentrate on the main subject. He says that the theme is consistently featured in each image and there is a repeating element – the vanishing point – in al but two of the images. The final image appears to show no shul/path and he assumes I have added this as a metaphorical 'end of the road'. He feels that the thirteenth image strays slightly from the format in that there is no vanishing point and he also feels that it is a little over exposed in comparison to the other images, although he suggests this could be his monitor. This is something I need to give thought to and I could, perhaps resolve the problem by taking on Linda Ingham's suggestion of pairing path with no path. I will give some consideration the whether I feel the image is over exposed. I thought that the print looked OK. It will be interesting to see what assessors of my BOW feel in November.
Putting technical considerations to one side Lee examined the images again. He found himself drawn into into the images as a whole and feels that each one works in that the viewer is almost challenged to find their own path. He sugests using even more subtle tracks to challenge the viewer further. A good idea and one that, again, could work with Linda's suggestion. He feels that the accompanying video work takes the concept further and the sound of footsteps is almost hypnotic adding a level of isolation and immersion for the viewer that a print wouldn't.
He feels that the artist statement explains the subject matter well, highlights my own thoughts and ideas as well as those of others who have gone before.
Lee's only concern is that the colour palette appears a little washed out and there are some subtle differences in white balance. He says this may have been a choice for me at post processing or maybe his monitor is not in sync with mine. Again it will be interesting to see what assessors think to the prints in November. However, it was a conscious choice for the colours to be quiet, muted and reflective. I chose to photograph on days of muted light and under rather than over processed.
Overall Lee feels that the work is interesting in that there is a clear concept behind it and is not just a collection of derivative woodland scenes so challenges the viewer to explore the scene. He feels that the project could run for a long time and be developed not only in the expression of the concept but in themed variations such as open country, desert, snow, looking at my own new tracks or that of animals or revisiting the tracks at different times of year. I like this thought and am in fact extending the work on the Lincolnshire coast as part of another project with which I am involved.
He finishes by saying that developing the accompanying video installation opens up a whole new world of ideas and immersive events. A possible idea would be to project different pathways on each wall of a viewing room and the viewer can take their own path by simple changing their viewing position. Taking this further, he says, maybe the installation is actually on screens in a forest. Grand ideas indeed!!

Rob Fraser
Rob's feedback was more brief as it was part of a general communication. However, I was delighted that he took the time to view my work and comment.

He enjoyed my artist statement and introduction to the work. He liked the simplicity of my woodland pictures. He was interested in my ideas of collaborative working and feels that there is a super-additivity nature of placing words next to images, as if the sum of their parts becomes stronger.

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