The first stage of the photography unit covered the basic operation of Pentax SLR cameras, using a preset exposure level, manual focus control as well as a general introduction to approaching photographing a chosen subject.
I have always had an interest in photography, derived from my interest in cinema and cinematography, and I have enjoyed taking photographs using digital cameras in the past. My experience with traditional SLR cameras up until this point has been limited however so I am very keen to get more experience on their use, and using them to support my work now and in the future. Analogue photography is a more involved physical process, which in itself is fascinating to me, and allows for more 'incidental' effects to be discovered.
During the session today we shared a camera and a roll of 36 shots of black and white film, between groups of two or three. We went out around the college site to photograph anything of interest that came up, and I enjoyed not only taking my own photos, but discussing subjects, framing, light and visual patterns with my fellow students. The only downside that I found was that I could have continued taking a lot more than 12 photos (per person) and I continued to see points of interest beyond my allotted amount. The rolls of film we have been using will be developed between now and the next session a week from now, when we will develop photographs from the negatives using photopaper in the photography studio. I had some experience of this process (as well as developing rolls of film) previously at the college, when I was studying an AVCE Media Studies course in 2001, however my memory of the process is very vague by this point in time and I am eager to re-learn what I previously studied.
In terms of photography that I enjoy, I am always curious about experimental photography techniques, such as using long exposures and unconventional framing of images. I have found recently that using black and white photography (primarily with my own DSLR Sony A390 camera) results in starkly different results to colour photography, and these images contain a lot of 'drama' without a great deal of effort being required. Over the last year since buying this camera I have practised in both colour photography and black and white, and I am now leaning more towards black and white photography almost entirely, however I am wary of shutting off any options. There is a realm of experience in colour imagery that is entirely complex but in different ways, whilst there is a pure simplicity of monochromatic imagery that is both revealing in it's contrast but also distinctly mysterious. This is the power of film noir, of art-house cinema such as Eraserhead or Tetsuo: The Iron Man, films where the expected becomes twisted and distorted, in no short amount because of the removal of colour from the equation. Light and shadow become polarised, directly opposing each other instead of supporting one another, and so the roles that light and shadow play in the visual narrative change and become altogether more significant, whereas tradtionally (at least in contemporary work), colour leads our eyes and minds in many ways all at once. They are not so much different phrases of the same visual language, but almost different languages entirely.