4/1/10

ESSAY: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY AND IMAGE-MAKING

Digital Technology and Image-Making:
Looking at Manovich



Image-making and image manipulation through digital technology means has become widely accepted and used for photography and video. In "The Paradoxes of Digital Photography," Lev Manovich discusses whether or not this change has been revolutionary, or instead, filed with numerous paradoxes. The point that I believe to be his strongest relates very well to the process and creation of my projects throughout this course. Moreover, his ideas about photorealism connect very well with the ideas in my final piece, created through digital technology.

Although I have previously delved into digital imaging, this course has allowed me to explore motion and film on a much deeper level. Manovich explains that recently emerged technologies of image-making allow photographs to explore new and still poorly understood functions. Video, and especially stop-motion video have allowed me to look at new ways of image-making. While these are still new to me, digital technology has allowed me to engage with motion images in a very hands-on, accessible way. New technology allows me to "direct" my own video using software packages - a much simpler method than cutting and splicing film strips.

Digital images are not like traditional film-based images. As Manovich explains, they exist as mathematical data comprised of millions of pixels. They contain more information than can be seen with the human eye. With this course, I have explored the image of beauty projected by the media - primarily the fashion magazine. This medium is typically comprised of digital images of women that project a particular ideal. Relating to Manovich, the images, like the ideals, contain more than meets the eye. Through digital imagery, an image of what would otherwise be truthful, honest reality can be easily altered. Manovich observes that traditional film editing and printing techniques are being replaced by digital pores, thereby blurring the lines between production and post-production. The same can be said for photography and print mediums like magazines. There is no definite line between what the original and edited outcomes could have been. As Manovich says, "current technology has already reached the point where a digital image can easily contain much more information than anybody could want." Have we lost a sense of reality in the world of digital? Digital photography can change the essence of what a photograph is. Manovich looks at the inherent mutability of a digital image, which connects very well to the digital altering of images in the world of fashion. Digital technology has allowed information to be changed with the click of a mouse. It is accessible and easy to use, but at the same time, an important question raised is whether or not it becomes too easy. Is it a good thing that the majority of images we see on a daily basis are not accurate reflections of reality? Manovich points out that in the past, photographs were comfortably regarded as absolute truths - reports of reality. Even through the simple means of incorporating stop-motion into my final piece, I am blurring reality. The majority of stop-motion put inanimate objects into motion. I chose to animate the flipping of pages in a magazine. However, a sense of reality is lost because magazines cannot flip on their own.

William Mitchell's "The Reconfigured Eye: The Visual Truth in the Post-photographic era" is often referenced in Manovich's article and makes very interesting points. Manovich critiques his notion of "normal" unmanipulated photography, arguing that digital technology does not alter the principles of photography, but simply adds a new element. Retouched photographs are not completely new. Soviet photography in the Stalinist era published photographs that were very heavily retouched. These images existed at a place between photography and painting. It is possible to also say this about photographic fashion magazine images because of the amount of digital airbrushing and retouching. In both cases, the goal is to project a perfct world ha retains enough of everyday reality to appear truthful. Yet, these new representations of reality show a future that promotes a more attractive society, or a particular approach to beauty. However, as Manovich points out, photography is not meant to point out something specific and concrete, but is simply a visual representation of an idea. There has never been a single way of reading photography - a viewer can see an image as representation or as illustration. Manovich argues ha there is no "normal" photography - realism is not entirely present in photography.

The piece that I have created juxtaposes a stop-motion video of magazine pages flipping with a video of a girl applying makeup. In turn, the viewer can relate these two ideas. Firstly, there is a long process that goes into creating the image in a magazine, and it may not be entirely realistic. Secondly, many women adopt a daily routine that includes applying makeup - a task that may seem strenuous and mundane - but the image that women often try to emulate in a conscious manner or not is that projected by society. Digital technology and my exploration of video and images throughout this course has allowed me to depict and represent ideas in new and different ways. I have not only been able to explore my own use of technology, but I have also looked at how the media has taken these technologies to in turn promote a particular reality - truthful or not.



WORKS CITED
Manovich, Lev. "The Paradoxes of Digital Photography." Photography After Photography (1995).
Lev Manovich. Web. < http://manovich.net/TEXT/digital_photo.html >.

3/24/10

LINK: EATPES





PES Films does really interesting stop-motion animation. Pieces such as "My Pepper Heart" are more simple, but very effective. Others like "Western Spaghetti" is extremely complicated and looks very difficult to create, but is incredibly interesting and compelling

3/8/10

LINK: COCK. BULL. STORY.





Mixed media artist Nikki Farquharson's bookwork entitled "Cock. Bull. Story" demonstrates how meaning can be re-interpreted. This relates to media messages such as those related to fashion because it shows that messages are not necessarily straightforward.

PERFORMANCE PIECE: CONSUMPTION



Consumption from Maegan Fidelino on Vimeo.



Youtube: link

3/7/10

LINK: BRANDED





Alissa Quart's book entitled "Branded: The Buying and Selling of Teenagers" is an expose of the many advertising tactics impacting the consumer culture of teenagers. Currently, Google Books has a section of the first chapter available online. I found it to be a very interesting read, detailing the various ways in which advertisers bombard teenagers with images of branding. It is both amusing and thought-provoking.

2/21/10

LINK: UNATTAINABLE BEAUTY



Newsweek's 'Unattainable Beauty' examines the decades most egregious retouching scandals. It is shocking to see the level of retouching that occurs on images of people who are already attractive or very thin. This relates back to the idea of digital photography lacking truth.

2/19/10

VIDEO PROJECT: THE IMAGE OF FASHION



The Image of Fashion from Maegan Fidelino on Vimeo.


Youtube: link

A stop-motion experiment examining fashion's image as perpetuated through media such as the magazine.

2/16/10

LINK: THE CUT




New York Magazine's "The Cut" section features a variety of articles concerning body image and issues related to body image. This particular article about former model Gemma Ward was particularly interesting to me because she was once one of my favourite models. However, she has recently been receding from the industry simply because her body has matured and she now has more curves since she was just 16 when she did her first Vogue cover. This article really opened my eyes to how the image of the ideal female body is portrayed because really, Gemma at her peak did not exemplify the body of a woman, but rather, that of a beanpole thin adolescent.

2/4/10

FOUND MEDIA: NUBBY TWIGLET ARTICLE



Nubby's article is an interesting examination of marketing and whether or its effect, even on those who are educated and know about the impact of brand identities and advertisements. She asks the question of whether the purchases she makes is defining who she is, or if she is making, conscious, informed decisions to buy particular products for their quality. I personally find this article very relatable as I myself am "a stereotypical 20-something college educated creative female."

2/1/10

LINK: STYLE ROOKIE



Tavi is a 13-year-old fashion icon and Style Rookie is her blog. That statement in itself throws the image of fashion. She is weird, and eclective...but probably would not be seen as glamourous. However, she is smart, and important people in fashion have taken notice of the little fashion blogger's wild style. The Mulleavy sisters, of the high fashion brand Rodarte have collaborated with Tavi and taken her in as a sort of protege and thereby, her eclectic style has become influential in changing the face of fashion.

1/31/10

PHOTO PROJECT: BODY IMAGE





This photo is a critique of the impact which the fashion industry and its images have on women, their self-perceptions, and body image.

PHOTO PROJECT: SPENT



People let fashion consume them, as well as their wallets. Spending can become a large aspect of peoples' lives.

1/30/10

LINK: BODY DRAMA



Body Drama is a book written by the 2004 winner of the Miss America pageant. It is interesting because she kind of turns around the image of beauty, with people typically thinking that a pageant winner cannot be academically motivated. However, she is a graduate from the Women's Studies program at Harvard University and through her book, intelligently discusses womens' body issues.

1/28/10

PHOTO PROJECT: TAKING A STAND



Represented here is a stand against the values and fake imagery and promises of fashion. It is a literal stand against the projected glamour present in the images of fashion.

1/26/10

PHOTO PROJECT: "CLOSET MONSTER"

This image represents the lure of fashion and how people are pulled to consume more and more because of the glamour of pretty fabrics and jewelery.

1/25/10

PHOTO PROJECT: OVERCONSUMPTION

Overconsumption is incredibly prevalent in this society, with people constantly purchasing or holding onto things we don't need. This image speaks to the over-consumption of things that are not necessities as well as the many products women consume in order to alter themselves to fit a certain image of beauty

1/18/10

FOUND MEDIA: TYPOLOGIES OF NOWHERE

Typologies of Nowhere



Susan Dobson's "Retail" exhibit at The Department back in May for Toronto's Contact festival showcased her photos of various big-box stores such as Wal-Mart with empty parking lots. These were then altered by masking the structures in a grey concrete tone thereby drawing the message of these retail landscapes having the ability to be in any suburbia. It is a critique of what consumer culture has become and what people have grown accustomed to - people have seen these retail landscapes at a variety of places across North America. In a way, it also calls to the message of society being consumed by the notion of consumption.


LINK: ELLIOT MAGAZINE

Elliot Magazine



This is just a bit of shameless self-promotion. Over this past summer my friend and I decided to launch a small online magazine with a focus on fashion, art, and culture. It is relevant to consumer culture because it is a magazine with fashion-related content, but also because it is a reaction. As consumers of magazines and print media, my friend and I decided we weren't quite satisfied with what was out there and wanted to make something for ourselves, that we could love.

FOUND MEDIA: MCDONALDS GOES MCFANCY

McDonalds Goes McFancy: Your Favorite Fast Foods Get A High Fashion Makeover!




This article is interesting because it discusses a project by Access Agency (founded by The Cool Hunter, a notorious street style connoisseur) in which the large food chain McDonalds undergoes a "fashion makeover" where they are rebranded via different fashion houses such as Hermes and Burberry. This is not so simple as fun branding, but from a more critical perspective, it points to the importance of "image" and projected perceptions in marketing.

1/17/10

LINK: ADBUSTERS

Adbusters




Adbusters. The epitome of anti-consumerism. And also, the first magazine I fell in love with design-wise...but that's irrelevant.

Adbusters uses "culture jamming" to inform others of how corporations wield power and the way meaning is produced in society. Essentially, they look at and expose the impact and implications of branding. Their "Buy Nothing Day" campaign is an example of this effort, with people coming together to take a stand against consumer culture. Interestingly enough, this usually takes place on the "Black Friday", the day following the American Thanksgiving during which companies hold crazy sales and there is typically a chaotic shopping rush.

LINK: MISS BUGS

Miss Bugs



Although not much information can be found on the website of "Miss Bugs", she seems to be an artist who reclaims images from fashion as well as from popular culture, to make something new out of them. This in turn changes its impact and message.

1/16/10

FOUND MEDIA: KILLING US SOFTLY 3

Killing Us Softly 3: Advertising's Image of Women



Jean Kilbourne is renowned for her work challenging media and spreading media education. In the Killing us Softly series, she criticizes media for it's projection and perception of body image and societal values.



FOUND MEDIA: BARBARA KRUGER

Barbara Kruger



In her work, Barbara Kruger uses her design background as art director for Conde Nast publications to question the messages projected by the media in advertising and in publications. She connects the issue of consumerism with feminism and the media's projected image of women, as well as with classicism and desire using images from the magazines that sell the very ideals that she is disputing.

1/14/10

LINK: DAVID LACHAPELLE

David LaChapelle



LaChapelle's work has a very distinctive, recognizable style and is inspired by everything from art history to street culture, creating both a record and mirror of all facets of popular culture today. His work has transcended the fashion or celebrity magazine context it was made for, and purposefully or not, seems to take a tongue-in-cheek look at media, advertising and consumer culture.

1/11/10

ARTIST STATEMENT

It is said that it is human nature to never be satisfied with what we have, but in society today, this need is being amplified through marketing and branding. My name is Maegan Fidelino, and I am a shopaholic. I will be the first to admit that I have fallen for the myths of branding especially in the realm of fashion - from glamourous images, to colours, and sometimes even the not-so-real promises. But admission is the first step to recovery, right?

Throughout this term and within this blog, I hope to exploe the the theme of fashion, but to also delve a little deeper and investigate fashion as an industry and an image thus taking a more critical look at the ideals of consumer culture and how it impacts society today.
 
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