Square Mile: Research

Brief

In our earliest years we know a patch of ground in a detail we will
never know anywhere again – site of discovery and putting names to
things – people and places – working with difference and similitude
– favourite places, places to avoid – neighbours and their habits,
gestures and stories – textures, smells – also of play, imagination,
experiment – finding the best location for doing things – creating
worlds under our own control, fantasy landscapes.
(Professor Mike Pearson)

The brief  is about Y Filltir Sgwar (The Square Mile) and the concept that people form an intimate connection between their childhood ‘home’ surroundings which is stronger than any other they’ll ever have.  I think the author is saying that these bonds can take on fantasy proportions.

I need to make a series of 6 – 12 photographs that examine my surroundings in a new and experimental way.  Y Filltir Sgwar is the starting point, but it asks you to consider where this concept might take you and there is no direction in terms of content.  Architecture, landscape or people could be the focus.  It should also try to communicate something about me, my interests and motivations, a kind on introduction.

initial thoughts:

  • I don’t live anywhere near where I was brought up, so can’t revisit places I knew as a kid.
  • I live in a pretty normal suburban housing estate, which I don’t have a great connection to.  I mostly drive in and out of the estate, I don’t really know it that well and am not really inspired to get to know it.
  • There are other local places I am more connected to, should I focus on one of those

 

research

In starting to consider this concept I have looked at the photographers suggested by the course book: I have annotated my thoughts under each one:

  • Keith Arnatt: http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/keith-arnatt-666
    • Self Burial:Arnatt was fascinated with works of art that are created in the natural landscape but leave no trace of their presence behind. ‘The continual reference to the disappearance of the art object suggested to me the eventual disappearance of the artist himself’, he wrote. This sequence of photographs was broadcast on German television in October 1969. One photo was shown each day, for about two seconds, sometimes interrupting whatever programme was being shown at peak viewing time. They were neither announced nor explained – viewers had to make what sense of them they could.                                 Gallery label, April 2009

      Self-Burial (Television Interference Project) 1969 by Keith Arnatt 1930-2008

      Self  Burial: Keith Arnatt

    • like a when you throw a stone into the water, there’s a ripple and then it’s gone leaving no trace, perhaphs? does art change the world can we really leave a legacy?
  • Gawain Barnard: http://gawainbarnard.com/
    • In boredom to burn, the authors photos, seem to be reminiscing about his desire to burn things as a child.  These seem very dark and ominous and which may be a reflection on his thoughts about his home town. Not really a style I’d like to emulate.
  • Tina Barney: www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/story/barney.html
    • These photos seem to more about social comment than a sense of place, they also seem to highlight relationships
  • Venetia Dearden: www.venetiadearden.com/en/somerset_stories_fivepenny_dreams.
    html

    • Really like the artistry of this photographer, she uses great light, quite a lot of back lit photos and lots of black and white.  Photos have a filmic quality.  Feel warm and nostalgic, focuses on good things happening in these places.  I like this kind of photography alot.
      Somerset Stories Fivepenny Dreams
      ‘My passion and curiosity for Somerset has been fuelled by my long-term connection with this area where I spent my childhood. I am compelled to return again and again to explore my relationship with the landscape and the people living here. It is reassuring to witness the pioneering spirit of those living on and within the resources of their surroundings, and I wanted simply to capture intimate moments in families striving to create a way of life they believe in. My journey takes me through seasons, rituals, gatherings and day-to-day life. I witness a sense of belonging and identity within these rich bonds of family and community.’ Somerset Stories, Fivepenny Dreams reflects on the sense of belonging and identity connected to Venetia’s childhood home. Exploring the haunts of her youth and the lives of the current inhabitants, the series intimately documents her surroundings and families who live there.This five year project was published in 2008 and was recently shown at the

       

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      photos by Venetia Dearden

  • JH Engström: www.jhengstrom.com/fbh1.html
  • Roni Horn: www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/roni-horn-aka-roni-
    horn/roni-horn-aka-roni-horn-explore-exhibitio-10

    • This is a photographer who has developed a connection to a place other than the one she was born and has been returning again and again to document it change, she sees the landscape as growing
  • Tom Hunter: www.purdyhicks.com/display.php?aID=10
  • Karen Knorr: http://karenknorr.com/photography/belgravia/
    • I didn’t really like these photos, the photographer wasn’t trying to present lovely portraits but social comment on the places these people inhabited both phyisically and mentally.  There was real sense of dis-ease, and a cold detachment within them, which I think is what she was trying to convey.  Perhaps it’s my lack of connection to that kind of life that sits uneasy with me?
  • Peter Mansell: www.weareoca.com/photography/peter-mansell/
  • Marc Rees: www.r-i-p-e.co.uk/
  • Jodi Taylor: www.weareoca.com/photography/photography-and-nostalgia/
    • Really liked this photographer’s work, it seemed to make sense. I understood how she might have got from this kind of brief to what she had produced.  In the video of her level 3 work, it showed how she had considered how to present the work to enhance the feeling of nostalgia that she felt from revisiting her childhood places.

 

my thoughts for reviewing these photographers’ work:

I really liked Venetia Dearden’s style and connection with the people in her photographs, as I prefer people, perhaps I should focus on the people in the place that I choose?

In my opinion many of the photographers were also portraying the sense of identity that they or the people in the photographs are getting from their connection to that place.  Do I need a personal connection with the place to do this subject justice?

Could I use places that my grandchildren go now? It would be interesting to consider that they are currently living their ‘Square Mile’ and would focusing on them bring memories for them later in life? could I create a legacy for them?

My mind is whirring right now, need sleep