Archive for the ‘Art articles...’ Category

Buying Art Online

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Fine Art Photography and Buying Art Online

We hope you find the advice here for buying art online useful. It’s true for all photo art - modern art, abstract art, contemporary art and fine art. Contemporary art and photographic art is becoming increasingly popular and we are all getting more confident about choosing pieces we like and asking for what we want. Picking the image we like and how we want it to be printed are the first steps, but knowing some of the potential pitfalls of buying modern photographic art or contemporary art help us avoid mistakes.

So, these online buying tips should give you an idea of what to look out for and bare in mind when buying fine photographic art form an artist or art consultant.

When choosing art for your walls - ‘wall décor’, consider the style of art you want. Hopefully you’ve done this and come to the conclusion that Matt Wain’s ‘Living’ collection is perfect for you and your surroundings!

The most important two issues to consider when choosing the correct piece is:
1. Do I like it? and
2. Will it fit in my home?

It really is that simple! And because we make each piece to order, you pick an image and then tell us the size it needs to be and the medium you want.  So, if the image is right and the size and medium are right it will be perfect for you.

An image and the medium used to display it are affected by fashion and contemporary taste. If you are building a collection of contemporary art or photographic art, you might want to have a few fashionable pieces in the collection, as well as modern classics. By modern classic, we are talking about traditional styles of modern art, such as abstract art, conceptual art, pop art, cubism, surrealism and so on. But modern art doesn’t have to be categorised under a particular movement it can also be individual and about the artist’s own ideas and perception. Fine art photography refers to photographs that are created to fulfill the creative vision of the artist. For Matt Wain, this is ‘Living’.

Picking an image that goes with the style of your home can seem daunting but actually isn’t. Because images can be so abstract you will find that many you personally like the look of will look right in your home, or if buying modern art as a gift, will look right in your friend’s home.

The great thing about choosing a more abstract image is it can be hugely diverse and will look right with any interior - from classically traditional country manor interiors to contemporary loft apartments.

Is Photography Art?

Monday, February 16th, 2009

© 2001 Robert Balcomb

(I have capitalized Art and Artist to speak of them as being in the true realm of Fine Art.)

We hear over and over the question as to whether photography can be considered as its own form of Art. And we see numerous treatises on yes it is and no it isn’t. The main objection seems to be that it is primarily a mechanical process that handles most of the work—that the photographer has nothing further to do with it, other than some manipulation in the printing of the picture (If indeed the photographer does his own darkroom work. For example the WWII photographers overseas snapped the shutters, but the stateside labs developed the film and printed the pictures—the photographers usually had no idea what the results, if any, would be).

Perhaps I can offer one way that might help come to some conclusion. In 1956-57 I spent upwards to a year with William Mortensen in Laguna Beach, California, learning his philosophies and techniques, both of which I have loyally practiced for over forty years as a portrait photographer. Mr. Mortensen had developed his own techniques of lighting the subject, determining the exposure, developing the film, and making the print. At every step, he ran afoul of the Group f/64 headed by Ansel Adams, who believed that there should be no “manipulation” in either developing the film or making the print. It would seem that this philosophy itself would eliminate photography from the consideration of Art, by their own arguments. The group had so much clout that they were successful in the elimination of Mortensen from virtually every history of photography for over a decade. Mortensen reversed the basic concept of “Expose for the shadows and develop for the highlights” by practicing the opposite. The concept demanded the darkroom technician to “pull” the negative at a certain point of development, guided by what’s known by the “gamma” factor. This short-changing of the negative robs it of a certain degree of its potential by stopping development before it is complete. I cannot argue the results as shown by luminaries such as the Group f/64—they have certainly produced magnificent photographs that will live on forever. But I can argue the basic concept. Mortensen said that a negative, compared with the ultimate “camera obscura,” the human eye, is restricted enough in its ability to record the complete gradations of a subject, that to further rob it of that ability makes little sense. The above concept does just that.

The Mortensen concept “Expose for the highlights and develop for the shadows” results in complete development of the film, arriving at what he called his “7-Derivative,” or “7-D” negative. He even proved it by giving the film adequate agitation during the basic time for that film to be completely developed, say five minutes, then “going out to lunch”—he left the film in the developer for upwards to 1-1/2 hours, or just up to the time when developer breakdown would stain the negatives. From the 5-minute development on, nothing else can happen; everything has been done. With a totally developed negative, only minimal exposure need be done to the paper for a fully graded print, from its whitest white to its blackest black. I have done this several times, the 1-1/2 hour bit, with no untoward effect on the negatives.

Getting to the point of the title, this practice of involving the photographer in every aspect of achieving a picture goes a long way to place photography in the halls of Art, but it has one more demand. Mortensen, a most competent artist, fulfilled that demand. Long before going into photography he studied in New York with the artists Bridgeman, Henri, and Bellows, painting mostly cityscapes,spent a year in Greece painting. Back in his home state in Salt Lake City he taught art classes in his old high school. I saw a couple of his oils that Myrdith Mortensen had in Laguna Beach—highly competent work. The point is that he was a proven artist, carrying that talent into his work with photography.

I’m sure that my own competence as an artist, albeit a technical artist as compared with a fine artist, has been behind my success at totally absorbing Mortensen’s techniques and accepting and applying his philosophies and so successfully carrying on with my own forty+year practice as a portrait photographer. I have found no other photographer that produces portraits with the same quality as mine—I’m not tooting my own horn as much as to show the Mortensen influence in my work, work that I have seen no match anywhere. My impression is that everyone learned from the same source: the works of one are indistinguishable from those of the next. My answer is that although they are good technicians, they do not have that spark of theartist. And that spark is a quality one is born with, not learned. However, an in-depth study of art history and an examination of the works of the Old Masters and successful Artists does tend to improve one’s understanding of Art and to improve his own work.

I have attended so many photo shows and have gone through so many photo magazines and books to have seen works by technicians, but few Artists. One illustration: Mortensen was invited to help judge a photo show in Santa Ana, one of the few times he was away from his Laguna Beach home and studio. He took with him his understanding of “Schnitt,” a method of determining the placement of the picture’s principle point of interest, eponymously named after a German mathematician, Schnitt—A is to B as B is to A-B, both vertically and horizontally. The prints were laid on the floor in straight lines as in a vegetable garden. The judges walked along between the lines of prints, indicating their choices. Mortensen looked at each print, muttering “Schnitt” or “No Schnitt,” picking up to too-few “Schnitts” and leaning them against a wall for further comparing. The other judges were puzzled—most of their choices were not among Mortensen’s. He explained that if a print did not have good composition, it did not matter how well it had been exposed and printed, and that the application of “Schnitt” would easily determine between a print with good composition and one without. The other judges finally agreed—Mortensen’s final choices were the ones given awards.

I have no argument with photographers showing their work in the usual displays. But when they try to pass off mediocre work as Art, work that is technically competent but without the true quality that Art demands, I raise an argument. I’m even no longer asked to judge photo shows because I’m known to refuse considering color prints that do not indicate who printed them along with who shot the pictures. Most photographers farm out their color printing to laboratories that have the expensive equipment—this I understand, but the labs should be given due credit.

So consider this: For photography to have its place in the world of Art, it must have within it that quality of having been achieved by the hand of a competent Artist, along with the hand of a technically competent. Many technical photographers do magnificent work in the way of recording what the world has, but only Artist-photographers can do work that can hold its place in Art salons and Collections.