Customizing the Presentation

Discussion

The standard frame size for prints in the June 2014 series is 12 x 15 inches, as stated on the gallery page. I like this presentation since it evinces an intimacy captured in the images, but also gives the prints enough space for a relaxed exhibition. I also wanted to present both vertical and horizontal images in the same frame, so they could be easily displayed together.

Recently I was asked if I could produce three of the prints from this series in a larger frame format. My response was, “Absolutely, I would be happy to”, but I realized there was actually more to it than just growing the size of the frame. I really wanted to design the new presentation, to make sure I really like the way the prints sit in the frame, as well as the way in which they continue to relate to one another. It was important to me that the essential spirit of the originally designed presentation was respected, even though the overall feeling would doubtlessly be different.

It turns out that the requested frame size, 16-1/2 x 22 inches, works well with the images in their original (and only!) dimensions. To complement the added space around the prints, I “upgraded” the mat to an 8-ply, and increased the margin between the image and the window opening. The effect is more dramatic and statelier than the standard framing, and it was actually fun for me to have the opportunity to create something new within the realm of the existing pieces. I was also pleased to be able to do something that would help the works fit in with the space and surroundings of their new home (and to make the client happy as well, of course).

Here are pictures of the completed pieces (note: I have previously written about photos of art works here):

Customized - Chicago Skylight
Customized - Bilbao Lobby
Customized - Gugg. Shadows 2



As I have stated before, the digital image is not the actual art work to me; rather, the work is the printed photo, plus the matting and framing as integral components, along with all of the choices of materials and assembly. Thus, customizing the presentation of a piece (or set of pieces) is truly a creative endeavor—a continuation of the original artistic process—, and not merely a technical finishing process.

On Revisting Prior Works

Contemplation

I was looking at my Turkey gallery the other day—that is, the real life gallery in my breakfast area, and not the digital online representation—and I realized that since I completed those works in the fall of last year, I’ve learned new ways of creating a vintage photo effect. In fact, I believe more strongly in my newer techniques than in the one I used for those prints (which was basically just invoking a “Sepia” effect in a photo editing program). I understand the technical details of the newer process and confirm its philosophical integrity, and I feel the end result has an more authentic look*. So, just for fun, I decided to go back to the source image (the captured “bits” of light) for one of the pictures in the collection and create a new version of the print based the skills I’ve more recently adopted. Here are the results, side by side (you can click on each of them to get a larger view):

Current Version

Perge Agora - final sepia

New Version

Perge Agora - test silver gel

The new version of the print has a different, more serene, toning, as well as some film-grain added (apparent if you enlarge the image). I actually think it looks more like a true vintage photo, both at normal scale as well as at closer zoom. But more importantly, I think it better captures the mood of the location (the ruins of Perge) and the conditions of my visit there, as I remember them.

So the question is, what to do about it. Do I go and update all of the prints in my gallery, because I think I have the capability now to create a more refined and genuine feeling? Or do I accept (or better yet, embrace) that the existing gallery was a set of works done at a time and a place in my life, taken to a level of completion and expression that was meaningful and fulfilling to me, and be satisfied with that?

The answer to me on this is actually pretty easy. I love the works as I created and installed them nine months ago. Even if I would do it differently now (if it were for the first time), I remember the contemplative and emotional process I went through in making the choices about the design of the gallery (including supplanting the solarized Chicago images, and then details about the margins, the framing, etc.) as well as the actual execution of it. I owe it to myself to respect that experience and that accomplishment, and to have no regrets.

I suspect that this issue of revisiting prior works, and contemplating rework of some kind, is something many artists (in any medium) must face and make decisions about at various times in their careers. Some may struggle with what to do (as well as with then doing it), whereas a clearer path (of either action or inaction) may come easier to others. For instance, I know that Hemingway careful considered what he was going write each day (generally, no more than 900 words or so), but then exhibited a commitment and loyalty to those words once set down. Fitzgerald, on the other hand, never felt like his writing was done; he would work and rework stories and chapters in his novels until his editor Max Perkins ripped the manuscript out of his hands, gave it a final edit, and took it to press. Similarly, Anton Bruckner never stopped reworking his symphonies (sometimes, substantially), even after several publications; he left behind a legacy of intense debate over what should be considered the authoritative versions of his works. There can be profound depth in artistic expressions that are ceaselessly reconsidered and redeveloped, but that disquiet is troubling to me (sez me, who often doesn’t stop editing his writing—though I’m claiming here that photos are different for me).

For all artists out there, I wish you peace in your acknowledgment and reflection of your life’s prior works.


* By “authentic”, I refer to closeness in feel with my inspiration for this Turkey gallery, which was a set of vintage photos of early 20th century exploration in Peru. The pictures were part of an exhibition at the Seattle Art Museum that I saw in October of 2013.

Solarized Chicago Collection

Annoucements

A new set of images have been uploaded to Solarized Chicago Collection. Though I am not actively working on this collection (or most of the content in the “Other Works” section of the site), I am posting this to provide a little bit of insight into the process I go through in my works (both completed, as well as abandoned). The distance between the “collections” and the “galleries”, both conceptual as well as aesthetic, is the journey I undertake in producing what I consider to be finished pieces worth publishing.

Welcome to Lumina Capta

Annoucements

I am officially kicking off the site with two (really, one-and-a-half) galleries. The June 2014 Gallery is complete, with six prints, roughly grouped into three pairs, though they can and should be viewed individually or in any other combination.  The Monochrome Gallery has two initial works. I will most likely add pieces to the gallery as I consider other images in the Monochrome Sandbox (especially if driven by interest) as well as other future work.

Moving forward, I will use the blog portion of this site to announce additions or changes to the galleries, and to periodically share thoughts on new ideas or challenges or experiences in producing these works.

Thanks for all visits, present and future.