Project 3 – Surface and Depth – Research Point

Notes, Part 1, Reflection on assignments, Thoughts & Ideas

Summary:

– This research point was difficult to complete due to intellectual text overpowering Campany’s review of the work.

– Campany helped me understand how Ruff works and the importance of archives but didn’t get a feel for how they viewed the work as a whole.

– Colberg’s review was much easier to process and got straight to the point.

– Explained what they did and didn’t like, without dismissing other’s opinions on how the work was presented.

– I agree with Colberg’s view that an image can be beautiful on its own, without having a complex concept behind it.

Brief:

Read the reviews by Campany and Colberg and, if you haven’t already done so, use them to begin the Research section of your learning log. Try to pick out the key points made by each writer. Write about 300 words.

If you wish, you could add a screengrab of an image from Ruff’s jpeg series, and one or two of your own compressed jpegs (taken on auto mode of course). You can achieve the effect quite easily by re-sizing a photograph to say, 180 x 270 pixels, and saving at ‘zero quality’ compression. If you use Photoshop’s ‘save for web’ you can see the effect immediately without having to save, close and reopen the file.‘ (Bloomfield, 2018)

Review 1 – David Campany – Thomas Ruff: Aesthetic of the Pixel, IANN MAGAZINE NO. 2, 2008

Campany describes Ruff’s work as being ‘cold and dispassionate’, yet surprisingly beautiful at times. They also state that Ruff’s art can ‘solicit individual and global responses’ that cannot be completely agreed upon (Campany, 2008) .

All photographic images come from archives, which has shaped Photography and how it developed over time. Photographic prints, family albums, computerised image files and gallery work are all forms of archives, all unique in their way but still forms of photography.
We cannot tell which archives Ruff’s JPEGs have come from, simply by looking at them. However Ruff does mention that the images come from the internet, as he searched for images, going from link to link and finding imagery through a route (Campany, 2008).

Campany believes that Ruff has made a great impact on introducing the ‘art of the pixel’, into photographic art, allowing us to view the pixel at a base level, both aesthetically and psychologically (Campany, 2008) .

While analogue photography was created using film and the prints being made up of grains, in the modern-day these grains are now replaced by pixels.
They suggest that Ruff’s JPEGs are not organised or planned like pixels which are evidence that our view of the pixel is changing and may not be as regimented as we first thought (Campany, 2008) .

Review 2 – Joerg Colberg – Review: jpegs by Thomas Ruff

Colberg believes that Thomas Ruff may be one of the most ‘creative and inventive photographers of all time’, however, they also acknowledge the fact that many people may debate whether his work can be classed as photography at all (Colberg, 2009). 

Despite how you view the work and what you believe the art form is, Colberg, realises the importance of what the work does, more so than what the work is.
Colberg states that the images work well in book form, in comparison to the large physical prints at the Zwirner gallery, where they felt it was a ‘tad too pretentious’. While they understand the importance of physical interaction from the viewer, in their opinion the detail in the images weren’t large enough to justify the size of the prints in the gallery (Colberg, 2009) .

Despite all of the positive feedback, Colberg feels slightly uneasy about Ruff’s work as the images are great, but they feel as if the concepts rely too much on the techniques involved (Colberg, 2009) . 

References :

Bloomfield, R., 2018. Photography 1: Expressing your Vision. 4th ed. [pdf] Barnsley: OCA, p.33. Available at: https://www.oca-student.com/course/photography-1-expressing-your-vision [Accessed 7 November 2019].

Campany, D. (2008) ‘Thomas Ruff: Aesthetic of the Pixel, IANN MAGAZINE NO. 2, 2008‘. [online] At : https://davidcampany.com/thomas-ruff-the-aesthetics-of-the-pixel/ ( Accessed 7 November 2019).

Colberg, J. (2009) ‘Review: jpegs by Thomas Ruff’. [online] At: http://jmcolberg.com/weblog/2009/04/review_jpegs_by_thomas_ruff/ (Accessed 7 November 2019).

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