Tuesday, June 28, 2011

One Photographic Path Taken - Part 2

The Journey

Images by Marita Gootee



The series Sand Shadows was created using the 6x9 multi-format Zero Image pinhole camera. The images were exposed at the 6x4.5 format. Exposure times ranged from 6 seconds to 15 seconds using both Ilford Delta 400 and HP5 120 film.  The subjects were located on a beach and moved with the pull of the surf. The camera was on a mini tripod braced on my hip as I stood in the surf or it was placed on the sand and removed as the tide hit the shore. The combination of both the subject and the unstable human tripod being pulled by the force of the tide created images that are mystical and dreamlike.






The final prints are small. They are 2 1/4 inches by 3 1/4 inches and
printed on 5x7 Agfa Multigrade FB118 surface photographic paper.  Each image is delicately hand tinted with Prismacolor pencils with a touch of quick drying linseed oil. The use of color adds to the formation of the dreamlike quality of the Sand Shadow imagery.



The terms such as dreamlike, memory, mystical and more have been used to describe these images. They are not images frozen in time as are so many other photographs. Rather they are a blending of time and self-reflection. Sand Shadows with its blurred imagery and hints of color are fragments of the moment. They have a touch of romance for a memory or an emotion.


The images permit travel within a memory as the viewer is swept by the visual motion and timeless quality. The images are much like the subject as it blends with the ocean and is drawn out to the sea. The surf cannot be stopped or held back by man. Neither can time.
The images span the length of time beyond the experience of the moment. This is the drama that merges with the senses that challenges the memory. Every fragment of a given day can be re-interpreted and re-examined by the mind to re-create the event being recalled. This is a dynamic mental activity that one should embrace for the experience of creating new imagery.


These images are available in a Blurb Book: SAND SHADOWS
Original Prints are available by going to my website: maritagooteephotography.com

Sunday, June 26, 2011

One Photographic Path Taken - Part 1

The Journey

Images by Marita Gootee


            Journey is defined in the Webster New World Dictionary as ‘to travel from one place to another’.
            Everyday one wakes to see meet a new day continues the personal journey through life. It is a both personal and public experience. It is filled with dreams, visions, memories and reflections – so many that subtle nuances flash by without recognition.
            The flicker of time and how one presents this fleeting memory has always been a major aspect of my work. It does not yield exactness of imagery rather the impression of a moment. I do not portray the chaos of dreams nor the non-representational design of the total abstract thought, rather I search for the mental visual; tags that convey the emotion for location and the feeling for the moment. I search to express visually the quite moments of the memory. The journey from the present to the past as one moves through the reality of the day. It is my goal to bring the moment back to the surface so others may share the experience of the mountain trail or the child in the ocean. Still it more than the obvious – it is the mood created that we all share untied to the location presented. It is the spiritual quality of nature and the whimsy of play.
            Memory is defined in the Webster New World Dictionary as 1. The power or act of remembering 2. All that one remembers 3. Something remembered 4. The period of remembering 5. Commemoration.
            Upon reflection of these definitions it seem one should go to the Webster’s New World Dictionary and define ‘remembering” for it seems one cannot define memory without a true understanding of this term.
            Remember is defined in the Webster New World Dictionary as 1. To think again 2. To bring back to the mind an effort; recall 3. To be careful not to forget  4. To mention to another as sending regards, -vi,  to bear in or call back to, mind.
            The journey I have undertaken is to have the viewer to ‘think again’ about the quite moments that are lost by the sounds and actions of the present. This is a personal journey through abstracted thoughts and emotions that I bring to the public. These are reflections of moments that should not be forgotten or lost. Although created by a single individual these images are not to be owned by one but shared by many through a reflection of the private moment.
            The journey progresses through the ethereal quality of the Shifting Landscapes Series
to the dynamic energy of the later series titled Sand Shadow. Both series could stand-alone but each draws upon the viewer to become active with the imagery and enter the page. To not permit the soul to feel the expression is to limit the experience. The use of the pinhole camera and the soft hand tinting further accents the memory and dreamlike further guides the viewer. 

Images from Shifting Landscape Series


            Often I am confronted by the concept of beauty in this work.  This work is meant to be comforting for the viewer. Yet unlike the soul-less sofa art this work draws upon the past and present dreams of the viewer for success as a work of art. It requires the imagination of the viewer to capture the moment and create life in the images.

            The landscapes were the start of the project. Each image was taken with a pinhole camera and delicately hand tinted to add to the mystery of the location.
From Nevada

From Mississippi

From North Carolina

As time progressed I became extremely interested in the recording of motion and the exaggeration of scale. The use of an 8x10 pinhole camera provided new perspective and new technical challenges. The mire processing of the large sheet film was a learning experience. The images were worth the effort and the many failures.



As I was exploring the larger format images I was still very active using the smaller pinhole camera. The smaller camera permitted more mobility that after the larger camera provide more freedom for movement. By re-experiencing total movement the thought of motion triggered new creative freedom.  I will explore this more in a later post.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

The Future of Photo?

http://mashable.com/2011/06/22/lytro/

A Camera That Could Care Less About Focus: Introducing Lytro



Remember cameras that would have to focus themselves before taking a snapshot? And how that could lose vital seconds, making a mockery of the term “point and shoot”?
Oh, right — that would describe every digital camera currently on the market. But if one Silicon Valley startup has its way, the very idea of focusing, or adjusting light levels, or having to wait before you click the shutter, will be a relic of the early 21st century — along, perhaps, with photos that only exist in two dimensions.
Lytro is the brainchild of Dr. Ren Ng, a Stanford Ph.D whose dissertation on light-field technology five years ago was showered with awards. Now, with the help of $50 million in funding, most of it from Andreessen Horowitz, Ng has built a company that’s preparing to launch a focus-free digital camera later this year.
The basic premise of Lytro’s technology is pretty simple: The camera captures all the information it possibly can about the field of light in front of it. You then get a digital photo that is adjustable in an almost infinite number of ways. You can focus anywhere in the picture, change the light levels — and presuming you’re using a device with a 3-D ready screen — even create a picture you can tilt and shift in three dimensions. (I got a demonstration of the camera’s 3-D photos on a laptop and was blown away.)
You might think that this would produce unfeasibly large digital files, but Ng insists that the files will be roughly comparable to the average size of a digital photo today. The heavy lifting is being done by the camera’s on-board processors, he says. And because its light sensor is incredibly sensitive, you can capture low-light situations like restaurants a lot more easily — even without the flash.
Although the camera itself isn’t due out until late 2011, Lytro on Tuesday unveiled a carousel of demonstration snapshots — all of them embeddable, available in Flash for the web and HTML5 for your smartphone. Here’s an example. Click anywhere on the picture to change the focus, double-click to zoom.

Remind you of Instagram‘s tilt-shift feature, perhaps? Sure — except when you realize that Instagram can only focus on one area of the screen at a time. See how the chain link fence snaps in and out of focus? That’s how you know it’s a picture with a whole lot of light field information in it.
And the cost of this camera? Ng says it will be comparable to other consumer-priced digital cameras on the market. If the end result is anything like these demonstration photos, the $40 billion camera market is about to meet a whole lot of disruption.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Fashion Photo Competition

PDN The Look
Photo credits: Yulia Gorbachenko, Lauren
Greenfield, Neil Snape.


One Grand Prize and will receive:
  • Sony A850 DSLR ($1999.99 value)
  •  + SAL-2875 Lens($699.99 value)
  • $500 B&H Gift Card
  • Milk Studios Prize Package worth $5,000.
 The package includes: one rental of
Milk's formula studio, an equipment
and lighting rental and one day of
Milk Digital Capture Services
  • PDN HDSLR Video Workshop Class 

at the New York City session;
October 29-30* during PDN's Photoplus
International Conference + Expo,
October 27-29, in New York City
* or a workshop session of their choice
Six first place winners will receive

  • Sony NEX 3 camera
  • $100 B&H Gift Card
All Winners will receive:
  • PDN Photoserve portfolio ($860 value)
A page in the October 2011 issue of PDN,
which has a distribution of over 25,000
 including over 5,000 influential art buyers,
photo editors and art directors
  • Exposure in The Look contest online gallery hosted byClickbooq and a 
  • Clickbooq annual plan ($588 value)
  • Categories
  • Advertising
  • Editorial/Celebrity
  • Still Life/Accessories
  • Personal Work/Fine Art
  • Runway/Street Scene
  • Beauty
  • Debut [Student/Emerging]

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

I am a photographer who wants to be a photographer not a computer technician!!

How much longer can photographic film hold on?

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — At Image City Photography Gallery, Gary Thompson delights in pointing out qualities of light, contrast and clarity in one of his best-selling prints — a winter-sunset view of Yosemite National Park's El Capitan peak shot with a hefty Pentax film camera he bought in 1999 for $1,700.
His wife, Phyllis, a latecomer to fine-art photography after they retired from teaching in the 1990s, favors a Hasselblad X-Pan for panoramic landscapes, such as a time-lapse shot of a harbor in Nova Scotia.
Of 11 partners and resident artists at the private gallery in Rochester — the western New York city where George Eastman transformed photography from an arcane hobby into a mass commodity with his $1 Brownie in 1900 — the Thompsons are the only ones left who haven't switched to filmless digital cameras.
But that time may be near.
"I like the color we get in film, the natural light," says Phyllis Thompson, 70, who married her high-school sweetheart 50 years ago. "But digital cameras are getting much better all the time, and there will come a time when we probably won't be able to get film anymore. And then we'll have to change."
At the turn of the 21st century, American shutterbugs were buying close to a billion rolls of film per year. This year, they might buy a mere 20 million, plus 31 million single-use cameras — the beach-resort staple vacationers turn to in a pinch, according to the Photo Marketing Association.
Eastman Kodak Co. marketed the world's first flexible roll film in 1888. By 1999, more than 800 million rolls were sold in the United States alone. The next year marked the apex for combined U.S. sales of rolls of film (upward of 786 million) and single-use cameras (162 million).
Equally startling has been the plunge in film camera sales over the last decade. Domestic purchases have tumbled from 19.7 million cameras in 2000 to 280,000 in 2009 and might dip below 100,000 this year, says Yukihiko Matsumoto, the Jackson, Mich.-based association's chief researcher.
For InfoTrends imaging analyst Ed Lee, film's fade-out is moving sharply into focus: "If I extrapolate the trend for film sales and retirements of film cameras, it looks like film will be mostly gone in the U.S. by the end of the decade."
Just who are the die-hards, holdouts and hangers-on?
Among those who still rely on film — at least part of the time — are advanced amateurs and a smattering of professionals who specialize in nature, travel, scientific, documentary, museum, fine art and forensic photography, market surveys show.
Regular point-and-shoot adherents who haven't made the switch tend be poorer or older — 55 and up.
But there's also a swelling band of new devotees who grew up in the digital age and may have gotten hooked from spending a magical hour in the darkroom during a high school or college class.
Others are simply drawn to its strengths over digital and are even venturing into retro-photo careers.
"In everything from wedding to portrait to commercial photography, young professionals are finding digital so prevalent that they're looking for a sense of differentiation," says Kayce Baker, a marketing director at Fujifilm North America. "That artistic look is something their high-end clients want to see."
Kodak remains the world's biggest film manufacturer, with Japan's Fuji right on its tail. But the consumer and professional films they make have dwindled to a precious few dozen film stocks in a handful of formats, becoming one more factor in the mammoth drop-off in film processing.
Scott's Photo in Rochester finally switched this year stopped daily processing of color print film because fewer than one in 20 customers are dropping off film. A decade ago, "we could process 300 rolls on a good day, and now we see maybe 8 or 10 rolls on the few days we actually process," owner Scott Sims says.
For the hustling masses, there's no turning back the clock.
"There's so many digital images taken every day, especially with mobile media, that never will hit a piece of paper," says Therese Mulligan, administrative chair of the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences at Rochester Institute of Technology.
Even at major photography schools, film is an elective specialty.
"Our entire first two years' curriculum is digital in orientation," Mulligan says. "Those that follow a fine-art option are the first to gravitate toward film. Other genres we teach — photojournalism or advertising or biomedical — have a stronger digital emphasis because of the industry itself."
In a rich irony, film's newest fans — not unlike music aficionados who swear by vinyl records — are being drawn together via the rise of the Internet.
"The technology that enabled the demise of film is actually helping to keep it relevant with specific types of users," says IDC analyst Chris Chute.
But with the film market shrinking by more than 20 percent annually, most other signs point downhill. Analysts foresee Kodak offloading its still-profitable film division sometime in the next half-dozen years as it battles to complete a long and painful digital transformation.
Kodak will churn out a variety of films as long as there's sufficient demand for each of them, says Scott DiSabato, its marketing manager for professional film. It has even launched four new types since 2007.
While digital has largely closed the image-quality gap, DiSabato says a top-line film camera using large-format film "is still unsurpassed" in recording high-resolution images.
"The beauty with film is a lot of wonderful properties are inherent and don't require work afterward" whereas digital can involve heavy computer manipulation to get the same effect, DiSabato says.
"In the extreme, they call it 'stomped on,'" he said. "But a lot of photographers want to be photographers, not computer technicians. And some prized film capabilities — grain, color hues, skin-tone reproduction — can't quite be duplicated no matter how much stomping goes on."
Gary Thompson, who's been exhibiting his best photos for 32 years, captured his Yosemite picture on medium-format slide film — which is 4 1/2 times bigger than 35 mm film — during one of many weeks-long photo jaunts with his wife.
In the digitally scanned, 24-by-30-inch print, the shadow from a dipping sun has climbed halfway up El Capitan. The wooded, black-and-white foreground with its lacy snow patterns stands in stark contrast to the golden glow on the granite cliff face under a blue sky.
"I don't know if I could have gotten this print that large with that kind of detail" using a digital camera without "shooting several images and blending them together in Photoshop," he says. "What attracts me to shoot in almost all instances is the quality of light and there's something about film and working with it and the way it records that I just like."
Thompson feels acutely that he's reaching the end of an era.
"As people's film cameras break down, rather than purchasing another one, they move to digital," he says. "Eventually, we'll probably be doing that. There's a certain nostalgia involved, particularly when I'm working with one of my big husky cameras. That will be sad. But hey, when it happens, I'll adjust."

Photo Competition

Everyday Lives photo competition - $6k Prizes
We are very excited to announce the launch of the Everyday Lives photo competition.
This brand new competition from photoartgallery.com asks you to submit your 
photos of 'people doing what people do'.
Enter your portrait shots - candid or posed and you could win a slice of the $6,000 prize pool.
Prizes include a Manfrotto studio set & tripod, the newly released Corel Painter 12 software,
 vouchers to print your shots at photoartcentre.com and many more prizes
 from Kata Bags, GPS4cam App and Corel.
You can enter up to 5 of your Everyday Lives shots until the 1st of July 2011.
Winners will be chosen by a panel of professionals AND by public choice! 
So get your friends and family voting for your entry and you could walk away a winner!