OCA Level 3: Body of Work/Contextual Studies

Category: Exhibitions

Classic Street Style: Side Gallery, Newcastle

As a couple entered the gallery, I heard the assistant explain what the exhibition contained: photographs by Weegee of New York, Robert Doisneau of Paris and Jimmy Forsyth of Scotswood Road, Newcastle. One of the visitors exclaimed, “New York, Paris and Scotchy Road…three great places together!” I suspect this was said only partially with tongue in cheek and detected a sense of pride that Newcastle, and the work of local amateur photographer, Jimmy Forsyth was being shown alongside renowned and famous images made by Weegee and Doisneau. Indeed, the juxtaposition of the work of these photographers invited appreciation of the similarities in their output such as their shared tenacity and drive to make photographs and focus on a particular geographical area for much of their careers. The differences are also apparent – Weegee stalked the streets of New York by night using a police radio to photograph crime scenes, often arriving before the police themselves. (The nickname Weegee derives from Ouija board as his ability to be in the right place at the right time appeared supernatural.) Doisneau focused on the everyday, seeking to shed light on those who are never in the limelight. His images are rich in poetic social realism however, and have become synonymous with our romantic notions of Paris. (For example ‘The Kiss by the Hotel de Ville‘, which despite controversial revelations that it was staged, remains iconic and full of youth, vigour, romance – and is quintessentially French.) Unlike Weegee and Doisneau, Jimmy Forsyth was an amateur who took up photography as a hobby following an industrial accident that made it difficult for him to find work. As part of the Scotswood Road community, he was able to document with both insight and intimacy the area and people at a point of change as buildings were demolished to make way for high rise flats. The exhibition notes quote Forsyth:

“When you’re taking a photograph, you’re recording something that will never happen again, catching a moment in time. I was just capturing what I knew was going to disappear…I realised someone should make a record of what was left of the community. I had nothing to do; why not make a record of Scottie Road to pass the time? It would show future generations what we looked like and how we lived.”

Jimmy Forsyth
Jimmy Forsyth

A number of thoughts run through my head about this exhibition. Firstly, this is work that could not be made today. In their own ways these photographers were separated from the people they photographed simply by owning a camera and making images. This meant that the photographs they made have a rarity that would not be possible now when virtually everyone has a camera in their pocket. The website Atelier Robert Doisneau declares his photo archive contains around 450 000 images, a figure that seems impressively large and unwieldy until you consider how many digital images are made on a daily, even hourly basis. Given time (and nostalgia is an important part of the power of each of the bodies of work by the photographers shown in the exhibition) these images from today could become just as important as the images shown in the exhibition-the question is how will anyone be able to make sense of massive digital archives in the future?

Robert Doisneau
Robert Doisneau

There is a strong argument to be made that the work of amateur Jimmy Forsyth is of equivalent importance to that of Doisneau and Weegee. In fact, in some ways it surpasses it – Forsyth not only photographed a particular geographical area and he was also part of the community which gives his photographs an intimacy, and most importantly, authenticity that arguably makes them more relevant than the work of Doisneau and Weegee. Yes, individually the two professionals may have better single images, but, I would argue Forsyth edges them when his output is considered a body of work in itself. Which brings me back to my first point – Jimmy Forsyth’s work is rare because he was one of the few people in his area at his time with a camera, and rarer still that he spent his time photographing everyday life in a way that others would not have done. This is not the case today, everyone is now a photographer and to not record our everyday life through photography would make us an outlier. Does this mean that this type of street photography has had its day? The intent of the photographer remains all important, but without the endorsement of a gatekeeper within photography it is unlikely that work would reach an audience.

Weegee
Weegee

Often I leave an exhibition feeling invigorated, motivated and inspired, I left Classic Street Style with more questions than I feel I can process at the minute. Perhaps this is due to some concerns I have currently about what photography means in the 21st century and what, if anything, I have to contribute. 

Links:

Newcastle University 2021 Fine Art Degree Show

It was great to be back in an art gallery to see the 2021 Newcastle University Degree show at the Hatton Gallery. With 56 artists on show, this was a diverse and variable experience – viewing this amount of disparate work is quite fatiguing in itself. There was very little in the way of context or artists statements available which also made navigating the work difficult, and I wonder why this was decided. Certainly there is an argument about letting the work speak for itself, however, when the conceptual nature of art is so central to understanding, not giving the reader any direction is problematic – I certainly would have appreciated some guidance as a I varied the work and suspect my enjoyment of certain pieces would have been aided immeasurably by this.

Emily Render:
 
Emily Render presents a 45x45cm cube containing a fluorescent geometric design and mirrors, which when the viewer places their head inside the installation makes them feel like they are inside a kaleidoscope. The patterns seem to move and the experience is just on the right side of overwhelming. Render says this: “the work explores the dissonance and contradiction created when a limitless, sacred space is contained within a limited 3D object. Additionally, it is a reaction to claustrophobia induced pandemic isolation.” I definitely agree with this – it is a deceptively simple, highly effective work.
Ellie-Mae:
 
I was initially turned off by Ellie-Mae’s garish, confrontational artworks which overtly confront notions of fine art legitimacy. This work ‘POSH’ however, opened things up for me with part of the work containing what appears to be feedback for the artist from their tutor. It immediately made me confront the assumptions I had made about the work, perhaps Ellie-Mae expresses this best with these statements that amount to a manifesto: “i paint for me. i do not paint for academia. especially tutors. you do not get to decide what belongs in fine art. you do not get to decide the value of my art…fine art is overrated. middle-class white cubed spaces are overrated. tradition is overrated. Fuck your ‘fine’. make what you want.”
Georgia Robinson:
 
I found Georgia Robinson’s minimal and effective small pen and ink drawings of seemingly imagined spaces intriguing and they are the works I spent most time viewing. The small paintings need close inspection and much can be gained from looking backward and forward between them and the similarities and differences they contain. Robinson says this about the work: “I have been exploring my interest of interior design by creating vague interior spaces. Inspired by dreamscapes, I have created ambiguous interiors that allow the viewer to question what the purpose of the space is and who occupies it.”
Olivia Rose-Grey:
 
Olivia Rose-Grey presented two large circular photo collages which are full of detail and distortions. The images appear to show multiple selfies and reflections of identity. They are beautiful and intriguing to view in the gallery space and perhaps my favourite pieces in the exhibition, online reproduction does not do the works justice. Rose-Grey says this about her practice: “My work explores the dynamic between the photographer and subject, the performance of identity and representation of the self in the context of diminishing truth. I am particularly interested in the traditional connotations of both camera lens and the mirror as offering ‘truth’ or reality’, and ways in which to subvert this through the repeated presentation of a female image.”

Links:

© 2024 Michael Millmore

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑