Showing posts with label Practice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Practice. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 August 2017

Pushing myself forward now, the Sun's coming up and Drawing at 6:30am!

The view from our cottage window down the Hetton valley is truly beautiful this morning, Dovecote field in front of us is thronging with young pheasant poults, field hares and a few adult pheasants too.
A cock pheasant in all his resplendent colours is guarding his harem. His regal pose, with upright stance, his head and neck stretched way above the other birds commands instant respect. There is a sense of piety in the way he looks, especially because of his striking reverential white dog collar surrounding his neck. Like the village parson, overseeing his flock, perhaps even giving his morning sermon? This is far too anthropocentric I know, but one does wonder!

I find it incredibly hard not to believe that certain species of animals are able to intercommunicate with one another, especially herbivores. There is a sense of sharing in mother nature's glory on the morning like today which is tangible and palpable.

The remnants of wispy mist rise slowly from the distant hills and valley basins. A quick sketch before breakfast sets me into a good mood for the rest of the day and I've started to write some further ideas down to speculatively think about representational images from the Peregrine's perspective and "the Peregrine's story".

Thinking about the clouds and the free movement of the summer swallows, I positioned myself speculatively above them or at least floating in parallel with them. I imagined how it might look from 3000 feet, as according to Baker peregrines often glide and rise on the thermal air currents to that sort of height. The classic towering cumulus clouds nearby would appear lower on the horizontal plane, whereas distant clouds would appear higher on the horizontal plane as one would be above them. This would be the reverse view that we as humans have from ground level.

A suggestion by Rowan and Richard a few weeks ago to renew some of my thoughts and remove images of the Peregrine itself has been playing on my mind. Critically thinking through what a Peregrine may see as an important object in its day-to-day activities, I feel that the inclusion of other peregrines, and particularly when in the United Kingdom, the breeding grounds of peregrines, then it necessarily follows that encounters with either the Falcon's mate, the Tercel (the male); or alternatively for the tercel to see the Falcon (the female) will occur frequently. It is perfectly appropriate therefore to include images of other peregrines and also their chicks.

This is led me to think about some speculative drawings of chicks feeding? I'm also thinking further about views from the Peregrine's scrapes too. My plan is to climb some nearby crags which are perfect Peregrine nesting points to try and find primary source material.

Conclusions:


  • The inclusion of Peregrine images in my book is absolutely verified now after thinking about this deeply. So too are parts of Peregrine anatomy of close-ups, both of the viewing Peregrine's anatomy and equally, of their mates, chicks or siblings.
  • I need to try and find some primary source images and real live views of steep cliffs and craggy outcrops and spend some time creating rough sketches that can then be digitised back in the studio.  There are plenty of spots nearby to do this so weather permitting, this will be a little expedition and adventure over the next few weeks.
  • Breeding season for peregrines is now completely over, most of the birds having fledged and probably returned to their northern hunting grounds through June and July, so the chance of seeing young juveniles this year has gone. 
  • Nevertheless, there is substantial video available from online web cams, particularly of city peregrines and their chicks. I need to make some enquiries and research around copyright before I potentially use these images as secondary sources, nevertheless, with a bit of imagination, I should be able to develop sufficient drawings that are completely independent.
  • I'm going to increase the level of my blogs a little more over the next few weeks to help with my clarity of thought, as I find that writing is particularly important to my practice.
  • As I temporarily reduced and even suspended publication of blogs during the last four weeks or so, during the academic quiet period to allow my tutors to have some breathing space during undergraduate degree marking and also during their marking and review time for ourselves.
  • I feel that it is acceptable to restart the weekly frequency of these again. And publish the backlog that I have been saving up too. I hope this meets with their approval and doesn't overload them of course!

Friday, 7 July 2017

Reflections on a one-to-one tutorial with Richard Mulhearn, 7th July 2017

The conversation started with a general question as to what my current thoughts were; In essence, I was reconfirming my intention to produce 70% of my submission in written form and 30% as practical outputs.

I felt that I was on track with the 70% written piece for a week next Wednesday, that is, for the submission date of 19 July. I am in a good position with the document, having already written a substantial part of it even though, as agreed with Dr Bailey and Dr MacDonald, I would be producing the output in a book form rather than the standard academic paper format.

Approximately 10,000 words have already been written out of the 14,000, and my intention is to lock myself away for the next week in our cottage in Northumberland to finish off the writing of this document!

I was extremely reassured when Richard provided very encouraging feedback and said that he was not at all concerned with my work. He said that I have all the material that I need and if anything, it is probable that I need to stop my research now, and just articulate and condense my findings.

As I have already indexed all of my previous blogs, which has been a great help in returning to reread them at times, has helped a great deal with the creation of the book. With approximately 110,000 to 120,000 words currently in the blog, there is a huge amount of resource that I can work with.

One of my plans today was to print out all of the blogs for easy reference.

Richard observations were that with that amount of material, I need to drill in and eject (to distil) the information, and 'that' will determine my success. I am worried about the distillation of the information, and anxious to make sure that it is correct and valid. I recognise also the need to get the voice right, and I bounced the idea off Richard,  that as there are so many voices within my research, the approach that I'm probably going to adopt; and the one that I think I want to go forward with, is to actually write 'within' the voices of the various players?

By anthropomorphizing, I'm giving the Peregrine a human voice, and whilst I didn't want to do this initially, having read so much with Donna Haraway, and more recently, Richard Grusin (The Nonhuman Turn (2015)) and various others, plus John Gray's Silence of Animals (2016) together with the recent book (Animals: Documents of Contemporary Art, by Filipa Ramos, 2016), I acquired from Whitechapel gallery, together with what I think is probably a classic, which is John Berger's (1980)"Why Look at Animals" (which Richard confirmed was an amazing document in itself, and surprise that this was the first time that we have mentioned it).

Getting the voice correct, with a number of messages to verbalise is critical according to Richard and I entirely agree. While I do have research material, with research methodology and so on, considered with the research strategy and my own voice needs to be clearly enveloped, included too.

In discussion with Richard, I also mentioned the social sciences idea of Grounded Theory Methodology (which Richard confirmed is familiar with), and how it may be possible, that this strategy, where there is a 'non-linear', yet a massive amount of research data can be considered and distilled?  This may be a similar process that I may be able to adopt with some variation too perhaps. The GT process is all about a kind of wandering and serendipity, in the way that things are 'found'.

To describe my own research strategy, rather than a "methodology", this Grounded Theory 'strategy' by Glazier and Strauss, (who originally discovered it, and they themselves describe it as a "discovery"), is appealing to me as it is very 'non-linear'.

I'm currently combining this GT idea, because the more I write it seems the more that I want to research!

The distillation is critical with this approach, because while I want to say that I have a strategy that can narrow down, and focus, with a timescale set on it. In this case it is the cut-off point aiming towards a week next Wednesday (about 10 days time on 19th July). However, I feel I can make a conclusion without it being a final resolution, and there's an opportunity to leave things sufficiently open for further study should I wish.

Richard agreed that it is more than sufficient for me to say something along the lines of "at this point in time, these are the findings et cetera".   Richard also confirmed that whilst there is still work to do, it seems clear that I understand my methodology; to encapsulate the direction and wandering through the materials and theories towards findings, and in 'getting the voice correct'.

Just to recap then, my intention is to talk in terms of the Peregrine itself, to talk in terms of an anthropologist/biologist; to talk in my own voice as well.

Thinking through this, the argument of the studies perhaps could be the exploration of how voices could be linked together? Otherwise, they could end up being discreet? Do I need to think about this?

What links all of these 'voices' nicely, is the book itself "The Peregrine"... But, I need to be careful that all of the voices interact with each other, but also draw together through the book itself.

Part of the distillation process needs to be a clarity in each of the voices and how they are talking so that they can relate to each other. The central core of the work from which all of the voices emanate, and what each of them is saying in relation to the core, is what is important here?

How then, whatever it is that they are saying, relate to each other?

The book will need some careful editing. My intention is to produce an awful lot more than the final output, and possibly between 20 to 25,000 words can then be condensed down to the 14,000 words that I need in readiness for Monday 17th, as a printing day, with Tuesday 18th as a contingency. I will then be able to submit it in readiness for the Wednesday the 19th July deadline as a fully functioning 'prototype'.

At the moment the essay is very much a report style. But as mentioned earlier, the book will become a much more lyrical output combined with drawings. What I have already created is the scaffolding, which will then be stripped away within the book itself.

An observation that Richard made, was that in a lot of my writing it seems that I am searching, together with the reader, in a kind of clarification style language?  That is, I tend to say things in a certain way and then perhaps 'reword' them and repeat the substance of my conjecture or statement.
I need to watch that.
I need to be clear about the words and confident with the voice!!

How is my own story in all of this documented?
- My findings come towards the end, and what these are, are very much based on my journey.
While I introduced this idea of a journey at the beginning of the book, I've introduced the other, of the voices as narrative, as a lyricism if you like. But then at the end of the book, is a summing up using my own voice, of what I have found.

Equally, I've taken on board entirely, the idea that the 'finding' of my photograph in Helen Macdonald's book is wonderfully serendipitous, but I shouldn't make a fanfare of it. So this element is left towards the end, not presented as a final fanfare, more of a reflection of how I was, - say 12 years ago. The journey in itself is not just this year's journey but it is almost like a 12-year journey, and it lays out grounds for further study and further consideration.

This reflects on me because of how I have changed so completely as to what I was 12 years ago, and my own position 'in' the world and 'of' the world, is extremely different to how it was 10 or 12 years ago. Richard wanted to confirm if this was still part of the work? - Because if that is the case, this is less about the Peregrine and more about me? I need to think about this carefully because this is kind of satellite stuff and may distract the message.

However, in thinking about this, what I do feel, is that in many of (if not most of) the books that I've read, including The Peregrine itself (JA Baker, 1967), and Helen Macdonald's H-is-for-Hawk (2014), but also the theoretical references such as Donna Haraway, Tim Ingold, and even the great John Berger himself, is that all of these books are written around the authors themselves.

Conclusions:

The conclusion is, there is no escape from the anthropomorphising, the anthropocentric reflection. 

Despite trying to get away from this, it is simply impossible, and so this is why I feel that the philosophy of Speculative Realism is so important in this work too.  - I have to try and view the world from a completely different vantage point, the rejection of Immanuel Kant's ideas of human sovereignty over everything else. This idea of, if you like, 'domination of the universe' from a human centric point, is what is of critical importance here.

Richard observations were that, as my own observations, that the author is central to the work makes absolute sense, and tone and voice do not need to be sugared (which is something that I tend to do). I shouldn't be worried about that though.  I do need to make sure that the process, is about confidence. I should be able to say things only once, rather than three times, and that is the distillation. This takes time and I may not get it right each time, but Richard agreed that this just needs to be practised.  I suspect this schema within my own mind, that constant looking for reassurance, comes from my childhood, but also probably from the people that I live with too, as I'm always unsure of what is expected of me, or if I am being understood.

This was a great session with Richard, I'm confident in what I need to do, but with his help and guidance have been able to improve my confidence, which I struggle with a great deal. Richard's closing words were that it is not the collection of material that is important but the distillation and clarity of delivery, with beautiful elegance. Talking about extremely complex things, but making it simple is what is required.

References

Grusin, Richard A. (2015) The Nonhuman Turn
Gray, John. (2106) Silence of Animals
Ramos, Filipa (2016), Animals: Documents of Contemporary Art, by  Whitechapel Gallery, 
Berger, John (1980) "Why Look at Animals" 
Baker, JA (1967). The Peregrine, 
Macdonald, Helen (2014), H-is-for-Hawk 

Monday, 5 June 2017

Notes and further thoughts on a productive discussion with Dr Juliet MacDonald, on Friday 2nd June 2017

Dr MacDonald opened the discussion with positive feedback that my series of recent blogs, although lengthy, are sufficiently concise and making connections between lots of different things.

I am quite reflective about my processes and how I capture all of this material, and so inevitably I'm thinking through how I have encountered things. It's really good to have that reflection through my blogs, and this form of recording allows me to analyse how things are happening, but also can be disseminated with critical thinking to the tutors.

In thinking further about this, I am concerned that my brevity could be improved, and one of the ways that I believe that this may be achieved is through critical reflective conclusions as summaries from time to time. This is useful not only for my tutors but also for me as when I do take the chance to go back and review previous blogs, it is often necessary to read them in their entirety. Bulleted conclusions at the end of each blog and a disciplined production of these should continue, therefore.

To reflect properly on blogs, I recognise that some succinct 'signposts' (as Dr Bailey likes to call them), are required.
I provided Dr MacDonald with the latest update together with the feedback from Richard Mulhearn on the previous module. I confirmed that I am still thinking that the essay will be the major part of my outcome, and I'm working towards putting the scaffolding together, or a storyboard of how the essay is going to be constructed. If this storyboard can be put together coherently, I can start adding and subtracting material rather than just trying to churn it all out at once. This is my plan for the written piece.

About the practice and my actual drawings, I haven't shown Juliet too much of these in the past, but I intend to more regularly display my experiments of what we may speculatively think a Peregrine might see, and what is important to it. I have been using both hand-drawn and computer/digitally manipulated images, particular views of cliff faces, original habitat locations of where peregrines are.


The line drawings that are hand drawn have been rendered with depictions of object edges that are thicker, where these object edges are of more significance and thinner where the information is tending to be more superfluous. The thicker edges are more important for a Peregrine to either avoid or land upon. This was my original concept, but I recognise that I may be anthropomorphizing, that is, creating a human interpretation, and so perhaps a more abstracted rendering could be more active. In this case, I have used the digitally manipulated Adobe Illustrator examples of the same image.

These digitally manipulated images have been rendered through post-production techniques, by using Adobe, to efficiently create edge detection, then converting the edges to line drawings, and then turning those line drawings into charcoal style lines with trailing leads and ends. This gives a kind of lost and found line style and feeling to the line itself, and it makes it interesting because of its oddness. Dr MacDonald commented that these digitally created images were denser and textured. My concern is that this density and texture may be too much? And I am still rather undecided as to which route I should pursue. Nevertheless, these experiments are helping me to take the practice forward. The hand-drawn images are much more recognisable as a humanly interpreted scene, whereas the digitally created and manipulated images create interesting 'byproducts'. For example, the sun-rays are digitised as an edge (as discussed in a previous blog). Digitisation isn't foolproof by any means, but again this is our own human interpretation perhaps. However, Juliet did like the digitally rendered, charcoal style line drawings through Adobe Illustrator because in her own words "they activated her imagination".

There are differences in process that I'm researching here, and Dr MacDonald helped me to articulate this.  When using a camera, there is a selective process in itself, as I have chosen to go and take a particular image based on my own preferences and aesthetic predilections of a composition. I have then taken the photograph of a landscape and made it into something new through a mechanical and digital process within that capture of light and how that data is then stored in a camera. In the digitally manipulated method, there is a continuity of the computer-centric algorithms which are built into the camera, built into PhotoShop, and integrated into Illustrator.

Using this computational data approach to generate an image still has my own input in an artistic sense, because I am in control of the various parameters of how I apply the different effects, thresholds of variability through these algorithms and so on. Whilst there is a sense of these digitised versions being more of a mechanical image, they still have my own interpretation from my eye and aesthetic choices being made. There is, therefore, a significant human input to it in either case.
The reception and selection of the images are only different processes. There is a lot of opportunities to reflect and discuss how my hand /eye manipulations, in both, are hand drawn, and the digital versions can manifest themselves. The computer won't make much distinction in things that are tonally similar, whereas I, as a human can make decisions between a rock edge, and eternal side as a distinction. In my conceptual working through these experiments, it does make sense that these decisions and distinctions would also matter to a Peregrine. Although we don't necessarily know!

Overall though, it's more likely that we are closer to a Peregrine when it comes to edge perception, then we are to a computer, that with current technology (that is available to us as practitioners of course), as computers are unable to distinguish three-dimensional objects purely through tonal comparative algorithms adequately. There is a need for a stereoscopic vision for this to occur, and our ability to then reflect on images that we see in front of us, and compare them with our experiences of three-dimensional objects. How we see, read and interpret light and space and colour is a fundamental difference between ourselves as humans (as animals generally, peregrines included of course), and the mechanical and algorithmic interpretations of computers.
It is an act of imagination, as Dr MacDonald pointed out, that what a Peregrine might see. It is therefore speculative and therefore by looking at various landscapes, such as these cliff faces, is useful because it calls us to think about differences concerning propensity, - that they (birds of prey) might have or might not have. Compared to a human being, and our own propensities, a bird is more likely to be happy to jump off a cliff edge and navigate through a landscape with alternative proclivities that the bird may bring to view. A bird will see it as a possible path or a possible route to take while it is flying, whereas we would only interpret such a rapidly presented series of images almost like an impending doom!
In Dr MacDonald's terms, humans are "not exactly rooted, gravitationally challenged". We are two-dimensional in many ways in the sense that we are "gravitationally challenged", (a brilliant phrase from Dr MacDonald), and we cannot simply just leap out from a rock face and free-fall, with an expectation of ourselves successfully navigating such landscapes. We may sometimes want to emotionally, but actually, we know that we can't. Therefore because of the way that I am exploring this through the practice of drawing and photography that enables us to start to think about what the fundamental differences could be between humans and peregrines. That non-ability to fly becomes a key difference between us, through these alternative propensities. That is how we might read a landscape, through an image, and how we might navigate it, what becomes potentially navigable.
It's useful to explore the differences and use these different processes. Dr MacDonald asked for clarification from Helen Macdonald's book H is for Hawk (2014), as to what type of drawing the Hawk had been looking at. On page 137, Helen Macdonald explains that "the drawing was in ink; it was stylised and sparse: it caught the feel and form of partridges, but there was no colour or detail to it."
So the lines were edges, and it was that which I have been pursuing. And so this is all about edge, and the edge is critical, the density of edge, what level of edge: and while the Adobe Illustrator images of mechanically picking out sides through edge detection, it is a spurious detection through colour and tonal differences, rather than perceived three-dimensional object edges.

What is interesting, is that humans can detect edges (as can all animals with more than one functioning eye), through stereoscopic vision, combined with experience and memory, and also movement and moving objects. But computers are far less able to construct and imagine, (as we can in our own mind's eye) as an edge variances in tonal and colour. We are quickly able to differentiate as humans, what are physical sides and edges.
Does this mean that human beings and animals are constructing in their minds, through imagination, based on experiences what a physical object 'is' in three dimensions, even when looking at a two-dimensional image or representation? In the digitally manipulated Adobe Illustrator, black-and-white images, while there is a lot of density of information, this two-dimensionality almost becomes something even less. It can't be called one-dimensional because this would just simply be an image rendered on a single linear plane (that is up and down only, or left and right only, or any other single horizon (azimuth) and would simply not be recognisable as anything other than a single line in itself).

Dr MacDonald explained that she had come across books about the psychology of visual perception and computers, and moreover computer programmers, who want computers to be better able to cope with edge detection and so they use theories such as Gestalt psychology.  In order to look for ways in which a computer, through its algorithms can start to make more intelligent decisions of what edge detection is, and what is depth, and what is coming towards you; and what is receding, what is space, and what is flat, from photographic images. They do use Gestalt principles of psychology and visual perception to try to build more intelligence and algorithms for this kind of work. The objective is to understand two-dimensional images to reinterpret them as three-dimensional images with surface, space and depth.

This is fascinating as it is a kind of way of thinking through all of those things. We also discussed my recent acquisition of Tim Ingold's Lines: a Brief History (2007) briefly. He talks about all sorts of different lines within this book, and Dr MacDonald suggested that he may indeed talk about edges, in particular, something that I need to look out for, while I'm reading it over the next few weeks. As yet I haven't found the specific references to edges, but I've only just started reading the book and look forward to much deeper scrutiny and later review.
Dr MacDonald reaffirmed Dr Bailey's recommendations that Ingold does explore lines of connections, lines of enquiry, lines of thought, and possibly even lines of flight, all of which are relevant to my project. He also talks about the wayfaring lines of experiences and travelling. He talks about lines of text and in textiles and threads. Genealogical lines, kinship diagrams and so on as different ways of presenting information. On a personal note, I found some of the symbols that were used within the chart of genealogical lines (as depicted as a circuit diagram), which are very similar to the symbols used for electronic components in circuit diagrams.

Within Tim Ingold's book, there is also a reference to the work of John Ruskin, who Dr MacDonald made a very direct link to my project, as Ruskin was first and foremost a geologist and he regularly drew small geological specimens.  It reminded Juliet of the cliff faces that I have been rendering. Working through lines, what they might represent and how they could be interpreted are all very useful research subjects, and Juliet was very encouraging for me to continue along this thread. This seems to be very appropriate landscape to pursue.

I've also been thinking about the ideas of perception and elevation as well, and I showed some rough sketches of speculative drawing, still on the theme of what's important to a Peregrine and what a Peregrine might see. By taking an original scene at ground level and then imagining the view from approximately 40 feet above, and then redrawing through imagination. The distant perspective and horizons remain the same, but the near space alters. The idea of elevating above the objects in the foreground and mid-ground creates a different sense of the visual field. Taken too far becomes a plan view which is more architectural, and not relevant to what I'm trying to explore. Nevertheless, these ideas are worth exploring. Juliet suggested if it may be possible to animate these types of views a bit like a Peregrine taking off from the ground somehow. By starting from the flat and working upwards?

It would be great to create some panorama of the digitally rendered images in an enormous format might be interesting. I could then pick out undulations and references that I would not be able to find in a small cropped picture. Or maybe even a large laser cut image? These are great ideas that Juliet helped me to work through and consider.

Dr MacDonald had also noticed that I had an interest in William Kentridge, and his ideas of animations are what I've been exploring.
I was worried that I have been doing much of my drawings from photographs rather than from outside primary sources, which would naturally be preferred artistic method. However, Juliet reassured me that, by producing sketches from photos, this is perfectly acceptable as a method.  I am creating images by using more imagination, particularly if drawing from a photo because there is less information. So it does become more speculative as a process. These are all good research methods through drawing, and I'm testing out what edges are what is readable as edges with speculation of what might be an edge for a Peregrine. Speculation on rising above the landscape is about imagining what flight might be, and what a flight path could be. This is all useful.

Lines of flight concerning speculation, thinking, connections, the way that I'm connecting different texts et cetera the temporal sense of timelines and so on. Those serendipitous moments are connecting lines as well. A complete network visually is a map of connections, almost becomes a topology as contour lines. How I have been encountering these different things needs to be put into the narrative of my essays. There is scope about leaving things open-ended, about not knowing is as much critical about things that we do know. Ideas work in both ways whether they are factual, mythical and unverified or whatever.

- Dr MacDonald confirmed an earlier statement that I had read in John Grey just a few days earlier. In - Silence of the Animals: On Progress and Other Myths (2013), regarding 'Myths' - "If there is a gap in knowledge we tend to try and construct something". - As touched on by Gray in examining Cognitive Dissonance, Leon Festinger When Prophesy Fails (1956). (Loc. 769 of 2550) and others.

Another area that could be useful for me to look at, (as suggested by Dr MacDonald), are "Situated Knowledges" by Donna Haraway. Ideas of primate vision, the organic versus the mechanical vision and digital vision that can be theorised through Haraway. She talks of situated knowledges, and this is a rich source of contemplation, which is an essay inside one of the publications. It is available on the Internet, and while very dense in places, (because she is writing in 1991 or sometime then), it is very much of its time. There is a PDF available, and it is worth reading, even though there are references from that era.  A Marxist-feminist standpoint, but also explores the Persistence of Vision, and vision as to what it means, the gaze and how vision is associated with knowledge and scientific practice. It is a polemic way of writing, which is her at her best writing: - "strident" according to Dr MacDonald. From a biologists point of view, this is very useful because it is all about different ways of seeing, and from an animal's point of view, in particular, her dog Cayenne. This sounds like a brilliant source of research material that I need to schedule for a review!

Thinking a little further about the conversation with Dr MacDonald, I recall that we talked briefly about how I had used Adobe Illustrator to vectorise the images. Vector-based image means that I'm able to make the images scalable to almost any size that I wish. The process, in brief, is as follows:
  • The initial image is processed in Adobe photo shop to clarify and reduce the number of colours to say eight. It is exported as a JPEG file which is imported into Adobe Illustrator.
  •  The next part is the process of vectorization. That creates the block lines which surround the detected colour boundaries. This creates pools of different colours with boundaries of solid lines.
  • Once this has been completed, and computational rendering has taken place, I convert the contents of all the block shapes into the transparent fill. This just leaves the outlines as lines on their own.
  • In Adobe Illustrator it is possible to select all of those lines and convert them to a different paintbrush style. The one I have chosen for these drawings is the charcoal paintbrush style.
By removing the colour and converting the outlines to the charcoal style, I'm trying to minimise the articulation of the image. This makes a very scalable image, and the line quality, as already mentioned contains a "lost and found" type of line style.

In keeping the detail of these drawings, it may be possible to create some panorama on a bigger scale as it is vectorised, but it is clear that more sophisticated and highly integrated detail, when expanded to a much larger format, or generally otherwise, requires a great deal of both compute power and computer memory. I'm a little bit doubtful that the technology available to me at the University has sufficient compute power and memory to fully create a three-dimensional, virtual reality style of rendering. However, this is something that I may consider pursuing. My own Windows-based system at home could I suppose be upgraded, although it already has a latest Intel Pentium i7 and 32 GB of RAM, and 16 GB of video RAM. It's quite a beastie!

Perhaps I need to talk with people like Steve Hibbert or Nick Deakin and others to see if it may be possible to either daisy chain some computers if necessary or at least to get a better feel for the likely computing platform that I might need for this kind of work?

I need to explore this further, but the suggestion by Dr MacDonald of making some kind of collage of these images is a very sound one. It is more than likely that this would be the only way for me to render such complex three-dimensional line images using Adobe Illustrator. In my imagination, one continuous single graphical vector file would seem to require a huge amount of memory on the face of it, but now after subsequent reflection and deliberation, because these are vector diagrams, based on algorithms of plotted lines, rather than individual pixel rendered bitmap images (where more detailed resolution simply requires a much greater magnification of memory), such vector plots require far less memory overhead. Indeed if these images are chopped up as frames for collages, then file size is reduced even further.

3-D Virtual reality through digital media production has taken leaps and bounds in technology over the past 10 years or so. Virtual reality glasses such as Oculus Rift and others maybe a route forward. Perhaps my own confidence is lacking somewhat because I believe that such a project is growing beyond my own limits of capability. The fear of this being much bigger and my capability worries me because of time constraints. Nevertheless, there is nothing to stop me considering putting some foundational ideas in place now to pursue at a later date, potentially after my Master's degrees complete. I will be a practising artist after all!

Dr MacDonald reassured me though, that it is within the nature of my project that it is expansive. In trying to visualise the topology of my project, Juliet reaffirmed that there seems to be a significant expansiveness to it. While planning for a PhD for example, this expansive trend should be avoided, however at Masters level, in my own project specifically, this expansive progress is part of my creative works. A lot of my project is about connecting things and so it is inevitable that not only the subject matter but points of interests expand. Those connections must go outwards to some extent and I am reminded here of the idea taken from the book Lines, by Tim Ingold, (2007),  where the author explained that her father was a microbiologist. He often drew representations of fungal mycelium. This idea of expanding fronds of an organism has been articulated before in a previous blog, but again it is reassuring to reflect upon it again here.

I recognise that it is a difficult balance in trying to strip things out to a minimum, such as colour detail and so on, but I know that I'm so inquisitive, curiosity gets the better of me all the time, and my nature seems to be to keep looking for more, and I struggle in holding back. However again, Juliet kindly reassured me by suggesting that this is simply this part of my own process. I should therefore not worry too much, and just accept that it is the nature and part of this project that I continue to connect things and bring in new subjects, research material and nodes of connectivity. Equally, these encourage different modes of thinking through what I'm trying to do too.this is no bad thing.

Subsequently, just thinking about this last paragraph, the idea of knowledge (and Ydrassil, the mythical Tree of Knowledge), when viewed from above, it's zenith, contained in my mind and my visual image of connections and nodes reminds me of networks within the brain, the axions and synapses at a microscopic level re-occur in the image of mycelium.

References:

Haraway, D.S. (1988). Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilage of Partial Perspective. (In Feminist Studies, Vol 14, No. 3. Autumn 1988), pp. 575-599 [Retrieved from www.Jstor.org].
Ingold, T. (2007, 2016 ed). Lines: A brief History, Routledge, London.

Thursday, 25 May 2017

Reflections on last week's 1:1 tutorial with Dr Juliet MacDonald (19th May)

I opened the discussion by explaining that I had experienced some exciting moments during my research which were particularly unusual! In constantly looking for connections (what I believe to be an essential component of making and finding understandings in creative art). My book review of Helen Macdonald (2006) "Falcon" had already given me connections to Huddersfield through a picture of the late Harold Wilson, and a photograph of him holding a dead Peregrine in the early 1970s.

Imagine my complete surprise when continuing reading Macdonald's book, and on the very last page, there seems to be a picture of a commuter walking through a London underpass, in 2005, with some graffiti on the wall to his left on the wall to his left. Now the fact that I was working in London (with Sun Microsystems) in 2005 is a small coincidence, but the underpass in the photograph is at the London Bridge railway station, which was some 150 yards away from my office. On closer scrutiny, the commuter in McDonald's picture is indeed me! I must've used that railway underpass very regularly on my way to the London office, multiple times a day in fact while commuting from the city centre to my customers at Canary Wharf (Barclays Wealth, Barclays Capital, Barclays Retail, HSBC and others). So while the photograph in itself is a more than incredible likeness to me, there is indeed plenty of evidence to suggest that it truly is me.
Photograph of a hooded Gyrfalcon and Me!, 2005 at London Bridge. (MacDonald, H. (2006), p198.)
Photograph by James Macdonald. 


Quite astounding!

Juliet asked me if I could remember the artwork in the underpass, and while it is evident from the photograph. (I recall at the time I was under a lot of pressure with two massive projects, hence my rather downtrodden demeanour, again providing some corroborative evidence). There is only a very vague sense of identification with the scene in my mind now, which when passed every day, might have been taken for granted at the time. Nevertheless, it is highly possible that some kind of subliminal message through the image may have been planted in my mind. Now, some 12 years later, it seems that my quest for falcon's and the Peregrine, in particular, have led me into some temporal twist of fate.

Perhaps if anything, (as Juliet pointed out) there may have been a repressed wish going on in my head at the time to simply fly away from the circumstances that I was in.

I'm a little ambivalent in my thoughts about contacting Dr Helen Macdonald to try and establish irrefutable proof that the commuter in her book is indeed me. There is every likelihood that it is, but equally, there is worry that I have already created possibilities. These possibilities are something that I'm already interested in and reflect the work of photographer Daan Paans and writer Iain Sinclair around the concepts of myths. The myth in itself is incredibly powerful, and sometimes when they exist or emerge, they are best left to develop through their own germination.

Juliet explained to me that she had very kindly bought Helen Macdonald's "H is for Hawk" (2014) and had also placed an order for the book "The Peregrine" by JA Baker (1967). I am delighted that Juliet is clearly engaging with my project far beyond the level that I would expect to have done. I'm already rather humbled and immensely grateful.

I explained to Juliet that Helen Macdonald's "Falcon" was written some eight years earlier than "H is for Hawk" and published in 2006. This first book is much more of a history of the relationships between falcon's and humans, and I was prompted to purchase it on the back of reading Macdonald's more recent Samuel Johnson prize winner.

While the book "Falcon" is clearly a reflection on Helen Macdonald's absolute love of falconry and the birds themselves, I pointed out that my own engagement with the book "the Peregrine" was not because of any pre-habituated obsession with falconry myself. Indeed, before my commencement of my Master's degree I had very little knowledge about the subject except for a modicum of general knowledge. The reason why I chose the literature was more through serendipity while researching the topic of digital media, and coming across the Hertzog's masterclass. This has already been explained in earlier blogs.

Then went on to explain even more serendipitous connections and lucky circumstance, initially triggered by my module tutor Richard Mulhearn. He suggested that I looked at the work of philosopher and writer John Gray. One of Gray's more recent books of the last few years that was recommended to me by Richard was The Silence of Animals: On Progress and Other Myths (2016).

The first few chapters are absorbing reflections on the development of 20th-century culture, especially concerning the progress of "civilisation" over the last few thousand years. With various discourses and enquiries into looking at the world events and the changes in attitude before the First World War, during the interwar period, and post-Second World War. This is an exploration of how myths develop. The idea of how (and this is mentioned in Gray's text), with sufficient persuasion, people can believe that two and two make five. The first two chapters, with an initial discourse on Aristotle and Plato which then leads on to civilisation emerging, and then ideas about politics and idealism, concerning various writers including Walter Benjamin during the interwar period, and various others in that circle. In particular, there is a reference to more obscure philosopher by the name of Fritz Mauthner (1849 to 1923), who it seems was a reference for much of the work by the more great Ludwig Wittgenstein. Indeed, Wittgenstein probably used the thoughts of Fritz Mauthner for much of his own Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.

In Mauthner's analysis of language "Contributions to the Critique of Language" Gray explains the Irish poet Samuel Beckett, having read much of his work, identifies that humans, through language, believe in "facts" that are no more than coincidental reason, becoming truth. In fact according to Gray, "the last sentence of Mauthner's  book reads 'pure critique is but an articulated laughter'". Gray, J. (2014).

But coming back to my conversation with Juliet, the reason for mentioning John Gray's book is because the next section, (chapter 3, Another Sunlight) starts off with a passage from none other than JA Baker's "The Peregrine" (1967). It continues on a discourse about Baker's goal, the illusion of freedom, and the author's deep subconscious desire to escape his own world, and enjoy the freedom of flight et cetera.

I recognise that all of this work through my own research activities continually narrowing down to those peculiar temporal and existential ties that I keep finding are no more than coincidental. Yet there is an underlying feeling of tremendous relief and wonderment that I'm able to make these cohesive links. There is a lovely, almost magical quality in the way that things seem to be coming together. The progress provides me with great motivation to continue.

Having explained my difficulty in attempting to read some of Donna Haraway's "When Species Meet" (2008), it was suggested that rather than try to read this full book, it may be useful to read Haraway's "Companion Species Manifesto". This is a much shorter explanation of Haraway's ideas and co-evolving relationships.

We discussed the ideas that I have around rapport and mutual respect and my notions of stripping away all of the superfluous human attributes, sensations and perceptions that we experience, back to just black-and-white images that are interested in just edges and lines as a kind of halfway, mediated communication with hawks. The ideas of rapport and mutual respect are particularly of interest and importance because this is not about a shared vision, but there may be areas of overlap.

My intended output for this project is to submit my edited research blog, but also to provide a more academic research essay explaining my journey. The critical reflective summary contained in the previous model was a good vehicle for articulating my research and conclusions in a reasonably concise way. I recognise that it's unlikely that the whole project will be entirely resolved by mid-July for the first hand in period.  My feelings at the moment are that my work is likely to be an open-ended discussion and exploration that can lead other people (as well as myself) to form and draw their own conclusions or further motivations. A reflective essay supported by research can be written as a sort of narrative, almost chronological in a way particularly with these curious coincidences that seem to triangulate my thoughts as I'm working forward.

Tuesday, 16 May 2017

Some thoughts on practice / Major project development.

Working through the ideas of stripping out the superfluous detail associated perhaps with human perception and phenomena, the drive towards recreating not just landscape topology, but generally the black-and-white line drawings of what could conceivably be some halfway mediation between human and Peregrine perception. I've been thinking about some of the images that I was able to capture during the Easter holidays at Devil's hole in Jersey, on the more remote North/Northeast coastline. I came across these sheer cliffs almost by accident whilst touring the island with my wife. Imagine my joy when I looked up and saw a pair of peregrines, falcon and tercel, circling above the cliffs. Whilst I was able to take a few photographs using the camera built into my mobile phone, the birds were a little too far away by the time I was able to extract the phone from my pocket. Therefore, I've been left with some nice shots of the coastline and the habitat in which the peregrines live. I later even saw what appeared to be a falcon with Jessies (Falconer's short leather straps), attached to its legs, that appeared to be independent and becoming wild again. At least there was no sign of a falconer and the bird's freedom seemed evident.
 Photograph G.P. Hadfield (Apr 2017), 'The Devil's Hole', Jersey.

After coming home and processing one of the photographs digitally have been playing with the idea of vectorised graphics (through the use of Adobe Illustrator CC), and how I can strip out the superfluous details of colour and yet retain a semblance of edge recognition from the drawings.
Post-production photograph G.P. Hadfield (Apr 2017), 'The Devil's Hole', Jersey.
Digitally rendered with edge line detection. May 2017.
Photograph G.P. Hadfield (Apr 2017), 'The Devil's Hole', Jersey.

Post-production photograph G.P. Hadfield (Apr 2017), 'The Devil's Hole', Jersey.
Digitally rendered with edge line detection and colour removed. May 2017.

At the moment, I still feel that a truly digital shortcut towards recreating the visual images is less likely to work. There is much less sense of expression in the work compared to hand-crafted drawing, even if the drawing is made on a digital tablet. Nevertheless, I need to keep experimenting and reflecting on what seems to be working for me, and that which doesn't and should be abandoned perhaps. I just need to keep going!

Sunday, 14 May 2017

Reflections on a short one-to-one tutorial (12th May)

I spent a little bit of time with my module leader on Friday which was very useful to discuss my ongoing work towards the major project. To articulate my aim and objectives succinctly and clearly, I usually create a single page summary. Clearly, this is a work in progress and forms the backbone of current progress and future objectives.

The current format of my aims and objectives are clear as they have been emerging for some time and are now crystallising into firm goals.
However, my academic argument for my project is still a bit hesitant in its language. My tutor pointed out that the work feels orientated towards an environmental discourse, but I am not sure if that is my sole intent. I need to think a little bit more carefully about how I articulate the argument.

What I found encouraging was the comment that it is useful to include in my thoughts and reflections, and ultimately my final essay my own interpretation and cross-referencing with the work of Donna Haraway and her notion of companion species, through reading and researching the book "when species meet" 2007. An interesting concept is that it could be argued as an act of inaccurate translation?

This fits well with my own thoughts about drawing and in particular the act of drawing. The expression of the theoretical framework.

Therefore the argument is critical. The notion of vantage points needs to be incorporated more fluently in reference to speculative realism.
Ultimately what will help me to not only drive forward my thoughts on interpretation and translation but also my expression of these, is the act of drawing itself. I need to immerse myself in drawing for more than I have been doing, and I recognise I have the opportunity to do so now that the previous terms have been completed, and my focus can be committed to the major project.



Monday, 8 May 2017

Reflections on my end of term presentation to my Course & Module tutors.

Thinking about my end of term module assessment, and the presentation that I gave to my tutors, Rowan & Richard last Friday, I think it went well.  The short feedback provided, although not 'official' (- in the sense that it was informal), was good.  My presentation was 'on-point' and the explanation of my objectives seemed to be sufficiently succinct and well received.

Link to Presentation

The advice was to just keep thinking, reflecting, drawing and more thinking, reflection and drawing, to let things develop naturally.  Excellent advice that I need to turn into artefacts now.


Onwards and upwards...

Friday, 28 April 2017

Some thoughts about perception, and a little sketching in Jersey

I was lucky enough to be able to take my poor long-suffering wife away for a few days to Jersey last week, to celebrate her birthday. While we were there, staring out to sea overlooking St Ouens Bay to the west of the island, I was thinking about not only the mottled reflections of light coming from the sea, all of the reflections from objects in their various forms and wavelengths.

Sketch of St Ouen's Bay, Jersey, (April 2017) Graham Hadfield

I'm not the first by any means, - to say that art is all about light, this has been a common theme for as long as people have been thinking about it since perhaps the renaissance and even before. Perhaps though it is Paul Cézanne, who explored the detail of light more than any other, particularly in his 80 or so renderings of Mont San Victoire, which later influenced the likes of Manet (and the haystacks comes to mind) to make his own recordings and renderings.

Thinking about this, that light reflected from particular pigments, or in nature compound surfaces, is, from my 'O' level physics, merely a reflection of the wavelengths that have not been absorbed by the material onto which sunlight (or white light). It is the subtraction (that is, through the absorption) of all the other spectrum wavelengths, other than the specifically reflected wavelengths, that gives us a perception of colour. This applies to all reflections of electromagnetic wavelengths, from infrared through to ultraviolet and hence all of the colours of the spectrum in between.

In my quest to trying to find common ground, that is a rapport if you like between human perception and the Peregrines' perception, surely I need to strip away everything that is superfluous phenomena. The redundant phenomena that humans may be used to, accustomed to or take simply for granted. So by stripping away all of the colours to leave just two binary states of visibility, that is light or not light (e.g. darkness), in plain language, black-and-white, this alludes to a presence and non-presence.

The idea then that a sketch or drawing rendered in black and white, the black of the ink and the whiteness of paper or the background is surely the minimal phenomena that I can engage with?

This underlines the importance during my next term of continuing to seek chances to develop through continuous drawing and reflection.

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

Practice - Digital Media Processes - A few days devoted to practice!

During the last months and more so, the last few weeks, I have been increasingly conscious that I need to devote a significant amount of time towards my practice so that I can develop a repeatable workflow or method of artistic practice.

For the past couple of days, therefore, I've been working on various sets of photography collections that I have made during the past year, and I have also supplemented this with a full days photography of some of the local topology and landmarks.

This is being done in the context of trying to explore further the ideas of Gestalt, and some excellent suggestions by my tutor Richard Mulhearn to explore proximity and composition, but in the sense of associating it with my theme of the Peregrine (the nonfictional book by JA Baker, 1968). Tying this together with digital media and speculative realism I have started to look at how I can intertwine the concepts of using drawing from those photographs, to convey an alternative point of view. That is the view of the Peregrine Falcon.

Spending a few days away from the academic environment and just only photographing and drawing at the same time has been extremely beneficial for me, both intellectually but also spiritually!

I'm still trying to play with the text of Baker's book, and by reading selected days activities that he recorded, I've been able to recontextualise and therefore reinterpret his writings with what may have been a kind of conscious experience from the Falcon's vantage point. This exercise must continue through the reiteration of these drawings, and comparing it to Baker's original text to find alternative suggestions of the reality that he saw.

Conclusions

I must continue to develop my drawing on the original themes and experiment with photography to try to capture alternative points of view.

The speculative element of the Peregrine's perception might not only manifest itself through drawing, as audio, taste and smell also would play a large part. It is unlikely that touch forms a significant proportion of the Peregrine's perception, as touch receptors on the peregrines body are far more limited in their acuity if compared with say a mammal or primate.

Because of the dependency of all birds and in particular falcons and raptors in their use of sight as their primary sense, I still feel that from a human's point of view, the primacy of drawing provides a sort of halfway method of articulating their perception from their free point of view.

I am avoiding the use of colour simply because our understanding of it could be vastly different from that of a raptor. This has already been proven to a great extent through studies of other animals' visual perceptions of colour ranges, where their sensory abilities to detect variations in the wavelengths of light far exceed our own capabilities.

Sunday, 5 March 2017

Group tutorial with Stella Baraklianou, Friday 3rd March.

In this short group tutorial, we were given the opportunity to discuss our own work individually after a short introduction by Stella. The discussion was opened with the work conducted in the 1950s and 1960s by Norman Parkinson and his concept of the "squeezed in the corner" space.

This work was further supported by work by Joan Jonas entitled "Vertical Roll" and other works entitled "Disturbances."

With regards to my own project, Stella provided some really useful information regarding a book that she read some time ago by the author Helen McDonald, entitled "H is for Hawk".  I've ordered the book!

There was then some discussion on the perception of sight, and interestingly this was broadened to include one of our deaf colleagues and his interpreter's knowledge, about Usher's syndrome. In this condition, the visual acuity field is changed so that it is not possible to provide sign language through visual cues. Therefore the sign language is conducted through touch, that is, hands-on method, of reading gestures.

Conclusions;

  • Another peer of mine provided a fascinating quotation by Slavoj Zizek who states "the function of ideology is not to escape from reality but to offer us the social reality itself as an escape".
  • Further reading of a book entitled "Realism, Materialism and Art" by Suhar Malik and Christopher Cox and Jenny Jaskey is worth reading.
  • Consider also the Google Books by Rodchenko, as further sources of information. 


Monday, 27 February 2017

Reflections on a presentation by Daniel Ainsworth who shared his experiences with the creation of his website "the pupil sphere"

Something that I picked up almost immediately in Daniel's lecture that I thought was particularly poignant was that he said: "it is not really ever been about money". It is evident from this statement alone that it is Daniel's love for photography that has given him success is a good lesson for anybody that passion drives success more than money!

The website is intended for student photos and is a portfolio of their work. In setting the site up, then asked a stock set of questions from each of the image providers and in response, he provides a shop window for them to establish themselves as photographers in their own rights. There is also space so that image providers can place their own web links to the site as well.

A great inspiration for Daniel in this work was a piece written by Harry Rose, founder of "Darwin" magazine. He found this to be an excellent resource. (See http://www.darwin-magazine.com - offline at the moment, being rebuilt!)  or http://darwinmagazine.tumblr.com/

Through the use of the new website that then created, he offered free publication to students and felt that he had found a niche in the market. His pupil sphere site has allowed him to mix with other microcosms of students from other universities all over the UK.

His slides consisted mainly of single lines of text on a white background with simple text font. I found this to be very practical and very elegant way of expressing himself.

Daniel made the recommendation that when choosing a website URL, one should always consider the whole range of social media as this should also link and be the same name as the site. It is vital that it all connects together.

Another excellent resource to look at is ASX, or  AmericansuburbX.com. See http://www.americansuburbx.com/

Dan is clearly very good at network marketing by making contacts at other universities and then getting referrals from users at those locations. Ultimately this is free marketing.

Using a small on-line application called "Hootsuite" allows for scheduled postings in the future, but it comes at a price.  See http://signuptoday.hootsuite.com

Dan admits that he soon ran out of content for his website, so innovatively he started searching for "photographic societies" at other universities. He joined all of them through their Facebook sites and posted a link of advertising to all of them. The result was a tremendous response from all over the UK with a variety of skills coming back and asking to be included on to his site.

Another really useful resource that Dan has used throughout the development of his website originates from the company "Redeye" (). Joe Slack, really helped from that organisation, by providing a really useful critique of Daniel's work through an interview. See https://www.redeye.org.uk/
The Redeye magazine can also help you become "verified" by Twitter, and such references make you a much more credible provider.

On the subject further of social media, Twitter is now becoming seen as a professional platform and is a massive reference for artistic practice according to our tutor Richard M.

With regards to Instagram, there are niche tags that can help you with social media and increase your presence. There is also "Free Range" show which is a postgraduate photographic show. Here there as a huge amount of content which also provides email addresses that can be used in a marketing campaign.

The original website was built on Wix, but then switched from this provider to "square space" quite recently, as they do not have the size limitations

The way that Dan gets new contributors is to visit the universities and making pitches and distributing flyers. Money is earned through these visits. Where possible.

Google AdSense provides an income as does the Amazon Associates affiliate program (which is much easier to establish yourself within than Google). On the Amazon Associates platform, you are able to find niche affiliate's to make your work extend to a further audience.

However avoid advertising on the website as much as possible, because on a clean website they become distractions and take the viewer away from the content of your site.

Google Analytics provides a method to track viewer usage and records each of the mouse clicks that they make. Therefore sidebars are splendid for getting users to make those extra clicks.

Through the proper use of Google analytics and SCO's, it's possible to get very efficient targeting. For example, this can be from specific gender and age demographics. This allows you to make campaigns that are much more productive.

Words are also a key element that you need to understand if your website will be successful.

The importance of "self-promotion". In this regard, Stephen Shaw is a fantastic reference who regularly posts to Instagram. However, good self-promotion means that one should try to use all the digital platforms.

What seems to be key to Daniel's success is that he has separated himself from the product. By doing this, Dan has learned that if his website succeeds or fails he personally should not be affected with regards to reputation.

Part of the Master's study has given Dan space to create his own ideas for the next stage of development. He has learned to recognise his own weaknesses and is able to ask others to support him in these areas. His strings are then able to be focused upon and used to maximum effect. He has just recently got a "plug in" with "village" and also apply to do some curating work and marketing with the website "format".

Conclusions

  • Any good kickstart a campaign for a website should start at least three or four months before a launch. This was one of the main lessons that Daniel learned and regrets not taking time away in the production of the platform before he learnt he launched it.
  • With regards to social media, Dan advised against ever cutting and pasting content. It is not interchangeable, and you should tailor your social media specifically to your message.

Dan also recognises the need to ask customers what they actually want!
In summary,

  • the website production was quite easy!
  • It helps an individual to network with peers.
  • It creates portfolios of other people's work which can be adopted within your own scope.
  • This is a vehicle for duration and productivity.
  • It is an excellent way of self-promotion.


Tuesday, 21 February 2017

Reflections on the photo project workshop with Sebaastian Hankeroot (of the Hague - The Photobook), 20th February 2017.

The purpose of this photography workshop was to help students bring out the 3-dimensionality of photographs, by bringing out light, establishing the correct focus, and removing distractions. By revising the contrast of photographs and combining the activities above, it can create a new expression in the finished works.

It is perfectly acceptable to change an existing "poor" photograph by changing it and refining it. Do not be afraid to do so, simply because you will always have a backup of the original in any event. Creating a sense of three-dimensional's is essential to good photography.

Ask yourself why you originally made the photographic shot? Keep coming back to that question and critically analyse the work that you do.

Before embarking on photographic adjustments it is essential to calibrate the screen on which you are viewing and adjusting the shots. There are a variety of applications on the open market such as "Spider, Colour monkey, or T-one"

It is also important to consider colour spaces that do not exist on the actual screen, but yet we know that the camera can record. CMYK is a very much smaller file size and range of colour space than what the proprietary Adobe RGB pallet is capable of, or is even more, what our own human eye can see.
S-RGB is an even smaller colour space than either CMYK or Adobe RGB; so the lesson learned from this in itself is to simply forget about sRGB as the colour space is so narrow that it is not worth using.

An important tip when calibrating the screens is to use natural light. Do not allow direct sunlight to hit or reflect onto the screen been calibrated. As a rule of thumb, Gamma can be set to 2.2 and White 26.5. By doing this, this, stops extra warm tones appearing on photographs. With regards to colour adjustment within the camera, try a setting of 200 red 150 green, and 100 blue. Within the camera, the output must be consistent!

By adding other colour filters, such as for example in a photo with a strong magenta cast, this can be corrected with a green filter and so on, choosing the complimentary colours of the actual cast.

The story told by your image changes the way that you edit and feel about it. Create enough density in your image before you do anything else.

Like a painter, build up layers of information when composing a photograph in order to to create an illusion. The photograph can then be manipulated by under exposing and then adding exposure (a recent book by Christopher Edwards shows this technique very well). It turns a clearer three-dimensionality to establish curvature and depth. The light within photographs creates atmosphere.

Organise the process and the work! Take these steps seriously so that you are well-positioned for postproduction. For example, the choice of a book cover, its hardness or its softness, its size et cetera; even the smell, makes a massive difference to your output and the finished artefacts.

A practical explanation of Sebaastian's work was then shown;
the first step using Adobe Lightroom, is to create a picture by reducing the exposure of the original image. Generally this should be no more than about 1.25 to 1.3.

Then by using the Lightroom's feature of "tone curve" it's possible to change the shadows in the image, but these should be adjusted gently. It is also possible to change the quarter and half tones as well. It is at this point that it is possible to change contrasts too, and by doing so, the detail of the image can start to be brought forward, and overexposed areas can be subdued.

We then conducted a practical analysis and adjustment of some of our own work.
We started with a piece that Sam had created which was an image of Hull docks, with two people sat on a bench overlooking the run-down docklands. An interesting feature of the image was Sam's capture of a kind of triad which included the union Jack flag on the left-hand side and then the two individuals people. Within the whole frame, the two people looking at the shipyard (which is now redundant), holds some irony in the union Jack flag also being displayed. The inclusion of the two people makes the viewer ask questions. Is it boredom? Probably not, - is it Britishness? Possibly.

Liam observed that there was a lovely low light to the image, and there is a lot going on within it.

  • Do we want to bring attention to the union flag? 
  • There is a misty quality and some "dead space" in the layers of the image, for example the bottom left-hand is a little too dark.
  • By attempting to pitch a triangle, the light on the side of the ship in the centre right of the photograph helps to create the triangle with the people, which is also shown within a portion of focus.
  • There is a tension of banality and unusualness, a little bit like the famous Turner painting of "The Fighting Temeraire".
  • The desire to crop the image is towards the left-hand corner, to place the triangle of the people and ship in a position to retain it.

We then analysed a photo that I had created, perhaps some eight months earlier during the summertime. My intention of this photograph was to create three-dimensional layers by the use of a foreground wall and layers within the landscape and hills beyond. The foxglove provides a link from the foreground wall to the scene and then to the sky. We debated whether this was an important feature of the photo.



Some practical observations of adjustment would be to change the light within the sky area by bringing this forward to emphasise the detail. On the right-hand side of the image, the wall needs to be lightened in order to make a richer engagement.

However the foxglove creates a focus which is a suitable subject. Nevertheless in contrast to the dark area on the right hand side, this dark area becomes a distraction.

The wall itself can add expression to the final print and the fronds of each of the branches on the left-hand side can be brought forward through the appropriate adjustment in exposure and contrast to become more detailed. Before and after effect can be clearly seen.

In the analysis of Tim's work (which was a hot sulphur spring that he photographed somewhere in Italy), there is an interesting juxtaposition of focus which is elusive as to being on the water and the face of the person on the left-hand side. This creates a mystery and it takes a while to figure right what the photograph and image is of. The colours are beautiful and so can be brought out to full effect. There is also a sense of chaos in play; the contrast is interesting too. As Tim said, the smell, that foulness of the sulphur and the misty-ness adds to the theatre. There is a sense of the magical, the person emerging on the right on the left-hand side seems to be coming through the gloom.

There is a good sense of three-dimensional reality in the image. It is balanced, but that may be improved by throwing it off balance? The picture itself is a question. There are no distractions, but it could be enhanced.

In analysing Liams photograph (which is actually an image taken by Natasha), of a person sitting in a pub in Hull; this is very interesting as it is clear from the image, that this is a regular customer who has a particular seat that he always occupies. The subjects gaze is accepting and arguably intimate?
The background is interesting too, for example there is a picture of Linda Lusardi who is appearing in a pantomime poster on the back wall. This helps to place the social context of the photograph and where it is. Perhaps some further detail could help?

Overall the composition is balanced. The viewers eye is drawn to the subject eye in the image through good focus. There is a distraction in the glare on the top right-hand, but overall it is non-judgemental which is a good example of good photography.

Perhaps some visual enhancements can be made through postproduction on the gentleman's coat by under exposing it a little bit further.

When we compared all the photographs we asked ourselves if there were any similarities? It was found that the depth and cropping were necessary on the first two photographs, however on the third and fourth photographs the use of shadows is key to these enhancements here.

If it seems that there are dominant colours of an image, it then becomes a question of density, colour balance and tonality. It is critical to reduce the exposure of an image if useful postproduction is going to be used. The workshop was very useful and seemed to imply that exposure reduction was the most important lesson learned from the activity.

Conclusions


  • Creating a sense of 3D, 3-dimensionality is essential to good photography.
  • S-RGB is a smaller colour space than either CMYK or Adobe RGB; Forget about sRGB as the colour space is so narrow that it is not worth using.
  • By adding colour filters, say, in a photo with a strong magenta cast, correct it with a green filter.  Choose the complimentary colours of the actual cast colour.
  • Narratives of images changes the way you edit and feel about it. Create density in images before any post-production.

Further thoughts;

  • Thinking about layering in my own work, how can I manifest this through the appropriate use of proximity and composition to help form Gesthalt?
  • What are the boundaries of perception an recognition that can be transposed to a Peregrine falcon's sensory experiences?
  • Thinking about the 'deep fovia' found in almost all raptors, how can I apply these thoughts to the drawings I am making?
  • There's much to do, and lots of experiments to take place!

Saturday, 11 February 2017

Some notes on the acuity of eyesight in raptors, and thinking about their perception of images in relation to our own.

In reference to a number of biological papers that I have recently been reading and thinking about, I thought it prudent to make some notes to help me build the all-important, yet elusive point of view of the Peregrine, and here I am talking about that same Peregrine that JA Baker chose to observe for over 10 years, back in the 1950s and 60s.

My source for these notes have come mainly from an American group, "The BioMedia Association" who have placed some valuable material directly online (the details of which can be found in the References section below). This has been supported by work from Vance A.Tucker, who interestingly, being based at Duke University, is located in North Carolina, US: whereas The BioMedia Association is based in South Carolina, US. I wonder if there is a link? Anyway onto my notes…

Raptors or birds of prey, including the eagles, hawks and falcons have up to eight times more clarity of sight than the human eye (with 20+ 20+ vision). A golden eagle, for example, can see a rabbit from a distance of over one mile. The Raptor’s sharp vision is also related to very specific and peculiar feeding and flying patterns. (Biomedia Assoc (2013).

Vision is necessary for flight.  Without vision, birds cannot fly as they are unable to make directional reference sufficiently for both take off and sustained flight. Predatory evolution and feeding habituation, particularly on smaller rodents, vertebrates, invertebrates and aquatic species necessitated a more efficient method of capturing such prey. Favouring high vantage points, flight (initially through gliding) became the norm for these raptors; they also needed abilities to see at close range, and they needed to maintain focus at high speeds when in pursuit. The most successful birds of prey in any population were those with eyes better adapted to these demands. Over thousands of generations, natural selection led to populations of predator birds with greater visual capabilities. Biomedia Assoc (2013), Tucker, V.A. (2000).

According to Tucker, there are two regions of the retina found in raptors, that account for the significant increase in accuracy of vision. These are discussed as the primary fovea, or the shallow fovea, where the receptors of the retina, while pointing forward within the skull, overlap at approximately 15° to the right or left of the head axis. This shallow fovea is not too dissimilar to that found in other animals. Whereas the secondary, or deep fovea, again pointing forward in the skull within the line of sight, also has a range of approximately 45° to the right or left of the head axis. Furthermore, the central beak of the bird, lying symmetrically on either side of the head axis, creates a reference line. (Tucker, V.A.(2000)).

How do predatory birds see more sharply than us?
 All raptors characteristically have large eyes. With a greater opportunity to allow light to enter into the eye chamber (e.g. as a ‘camera’), they also allow for a larger image to be projected through the lens into the rear of the eye chamber. If a retinal image is spread over a greater number of visual cells; it necessarily follows that there will be higher resolution to the detail in the picture.
Bird's eyes are so huge that a significant portion of the skull is devoted to them, allowing only limited room for the brain. Biomedia Assoc (2013).   Nevertheless, memory, recognition and cognition play an important part in the successful functioning of the organism.
A bird in flight, hunting small prey must not only be able to distinguish how far away the prey is but also its size, shape, position, and motion. In response to these challenges, raptorial birds also evolved precise accommodation and binocularity. (2013).

Accommodation
To determine the size and distance of prey, predators rely on memory as well as visual information. Through recognition (memory) it is possible to determine (through recall) how large the prey animal is, and then judge its distance based on the size of the image available on the eye’s retina. A clear image of the prey, no matter what its distance is also critical for the correct cognition of it. (2013).
The eye automatically focuses at a variety of distances using a natural neuromuscular adjustment called accommodation. In this process, microscopic ciliary muscles surrounding the eye alter the curve of the lens within the eye, to allow focus on objects that are far or near. Raptor’s eyes have exceptional capabilities for accommodation. Thus, as a potential prey moves closer or farther from the eagle or hawk, the predator's eyes remain focused by rapidly changing the lens curvature accordingly. (2013)

Binocularity: 
Raptors have front facing eyes. Therefore binocular vision is similar to our own. In binocular vision, the fields of view of the left and right eye overlap. Whereas, creatures with eyes on the sides of their head (especially prey animals) have low binocularity (what each eye sees overlaps very little) but high periscopicity (each eye has a full field of view) to evade predation by early cognition of threat. Biomedia Assoc (2013).

The right-eye and left-eye visual fields of a hawk overlap about 90 degrees, (in human vision, this overlap is about 120 degrees). A further adaptation in raptors - the cornea and lens are angled toward the beak to increase the overlapping region further.
Binocularity allows for stereoscopic vision, which in turn permits the determination of distance. When an organism compares the slightly different images from the right and left eye, the brain is capable of automatically determining the distance to the object. Raptors, with their greater amount of visual field overlap, have the most significant abilities to use binocularity to develop a sharp, three-dimensional image of a large portion of their view. Biomedia Assoc (2013)

The Deep, or 'Second' Fovea:
In birds that need accurate distance vision, (i.e.: birds of prey and some other species), a second fovea evolved in the lateral part of the retina. The fovea is a small region of the retina where the concentration of rods and cones is highest and therefore vision is at its sharpest. Raptors, with their broad binocular field of view, have both a central and lateral fovea. As a result, a substantial proportion of their visual field projects to the most visually sensitive parts of the retina. Tucker, V.A, (2000) & Biomedia Assoc (2013)

Pecten:
Another unique structure found in almost all bird species eyes is the pecten. Pecten is a thin, greatly folded tissue extending from the retina to the lens. Predatory birds such as eagles and hawks have the largest and most elaborate pecten. This unique structure supplies nutrients and oxygen throughout the vitreous humour of the eye, thereby reducing the number of blood vessels in the retina. With fewer blood vessels to scatter light entering the eye, raptor vision has evolved to be the sharpest image known among all organisms. Biomedia Assoc (2013)

Conclusions;

In thinking about my readings, I undertook a few weeks ago (concerning ancient Egyptian mythology). Concerning the god of the sky "Horus", I find it quite surprising that those ancient Egyptian thinkers and particularly the "priests" or shamanic leaders chose the Peregrine Falcon as the symbol of the God of all gods, and great overseer. How did they know, over 5000 years ago, that this simple bird of prey was indeed, not simple at all!

It is fascinating that science only over the past hundred or so years is now able to prove the observations that those ancient Egyptians were able to recognise 5000 years earlier. The myths of Egypt's heritage hold Horus, (usually depicted in human form but with the head of the Peregrine Falcon) as the highest deity, and it is from their original notions that the all seeing eye has been reinterpreted, indeed re-conceived, throughout the ages. The concept extends to almost all the major religions.

My determination to stay with the original project ideas seem to be continually reinforced.

References;

Notes recorded from material provided by
 BioMEDIA ASSOCIATES, LLC (2013), Beaufort, South Carolina, US.
(LIMITED EDUCATIONAL USE MAY BE ALLOWED) https://www.ebiomedia.com/
Tucker, V.A. (2000) “THE DEEP FOVEA, SIDEWAYS VISION AND SPIRAL FLIGHT PATHS IN RAPTORS” Department of Biology, Duke University, Box 90338, Durham, NC,
in The Journal of Experimental Biology 203, The Company of Biologists Limited, Great Britain  (pp 3745 – 3754).