APRESENTAÇÃO DO 1º NÚMERO DA PUBLICAÇÃO SOPHIA PEER REVIEW JOURNAL 

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DO 1º NÚMERO DA PUBLICAÇÃO SOPHIA PEER REVIEW JOURNAL 

18 DE ABRIL DE 2016

Foi lançado no passado dia 18 de Abril o 1º número da revista Sophia Peer Review Journal “Crossing Borders, Shifting Boundaries: the Aura of the Image” na Galeria da Faculdade de Belas Artes da Universidade de Lisboa.

Esta apresentação contou com a presença de Vítor dos Reis, Susana Ventura, Pedro Leão Neto, Nélio Conceição e Joana Cunha Leal.



Sophia Peer Review Journal é uma publicação periódica que tem como chancela a scopio Editions e o grupo de investigação CCRE integrado no CEAU, centro de I&D da FAUP. Sophia é especificamente dirigida para trabalhos de reflexão teórica, e pretende ser o suporte de divulgação para um conjunto de textos críticos e exploratórios sobre Arquitectura, Arte e Imagem em sentido lato, isto é, incluindo os universos do desenho, fotografia, cinema, vídeo, televisão e novos media. 



Neste primeiro número são publicados três ensaios principais que questionam o universo da imagem, trazendo para a discussão diversos conceitos e autores como, por exemplo, Walter Benjamin:



Wandering in a Sea of Ice – Voyage, Narrative and Resonance in the photographs of Nils Strindberg, de Eduardo Brito;



Shedding the veils, making room: on some photographic motives in Walter Benjamin, de Nélio Conceição;



From the ruins of Beirut by the reflexions on some Ray-Bans to the visionary experiences in the stereoscopic photographs by Francisco Afonso Chaves (1857-1926), de Vítor dos Reis.




Este primeiro número foi coordenado por Pedro Leão Neto e teve como Editores Susana Ventura e Edward Dimendberg (editor convidado) 
Coordenação Editorial ( CEAU - FAUP ) 



Mais informação sobre Sophia Peer Review Journal > http://sophiajournal.net/

 

ARCHITECTURE PHOTOGRAPHY: THE COMPLEMENTARY INSIGHTS OF A PHOTOGRAPHER IN DIALOGUE WITH A CURATOR

 
fotografia_4_copy.jpg

ARCHITECTURE PHOTOGRAPHY: THE COMPLEMENTARY INSIGHTS OF A PHOTOGRAPHER IN DIALOGUE WITH A CURATOR

with the Portuguese curator Pedro Gadanho and the Italian photographer Paolo Rosselli

The second session of the conference cicle AAI – Architetcure, Art and Image – at Casa das Artes, in Oporto, occured on the 30th October. This event was organized by the architects Camilo Rebelo and Pedro Leão Neto in collaboration with the Scopio Editions and research group CCRE (FAUP) and with the institutional support of Casa das Artes.

To this second edition were invited the Portuguese curator Pedro Gadanho and the Italian photographer Paolo Rosselli, who developed a conversation about Architecture Photography, focusing on the work of Rosselli.

On one side, we had Pedro Gadanho, an utter connoisseur of the many ins and outs of this universe of Architecture Photography, denoting a very serene and intelligent posture, always making sure the conversation would not cool down or be lead to an uninteresting point, intervening from time to time without ever trying to be the centre of attention. Almost playing the role of the host, Gadanho insisted on standing out his interest on Paolo Rosselli’s work, mostly because it brings a humanized and quotidian side normally not so deeply developed by the traditional approach to Architetcure Photography. 

According to the Portuguese curator, the main stream publications highlight and invest excessively on the aesthetical and constructive matters of Architecture, often creating stereotypical images without the intelligence and sensibility required to comprehend the architectonic space and the site in which it is inserted. On Gadanho’s own words, this recurrent praxis “tends to be exhaustive by portraying a building from every possible angle and trying to give a false objectivity of that building or architecture” by means of “certain tricks that work out oddly, like trying to remove people” and most of all ”trying to obliterate the city from the scope of architetcure” much by influence of “the architect’s desire to aestheticize their own work, making it something abstract, devoid of any quotidian dimension.” Gadanho believes that Rosselli’s photographs are on the antipodes of this more usual and common approach, offering us a richer and more profound understanding of architecture and space, by means of a vantage point and artistic strategy that results in critical images that allow a new perspective on architecture and the city through images whose framework and plasticity capture with sensibility, intelligence and emotion, the life and configuration of Architectural space.

On the other side, Rosselli brought a very clear tone to the conversation, reminding that Architecture Photography is, before anything else, Photography and that its range and possibilities are not restrict, even fitting inside a certain category, among many others, when we talk about Photography. According to the Italian photographer, one should not approach Architecture Photography in a technical way but in a personal one, finding in his personal approach the motivation for his constant search for a new relationship with Architecture through Photography. Curiously, in his case, this new relationship with Architecture is in many cases established by means of a direct inspiration in fictional literature, developing a kind of filter, typical of a novelist or a poet, that allows him to discern in which way and what to capture or not in his photographs – in this matter, he grasps much of the puctum epiphany, bequeathed by Roland Barthes – assuming nonchalantly that for him “the most important is, above all, to read books.”

It is possible that his amusement by this layered fusion between objects and fragments in his photographic work may come from this literary universe, becoming almost a pattern in his work the combination of elements that, beforehand and by a certain inherence, do not go together: “it is my process”, says Rosselli, “I am very tolerant in Photography” – a tolerance that he takes to the point of intervening graphically a posteriori on the captured image putting any purism aside. It is in this limbo, in this undefined exploratory area, that one sees how much Photography is for Rosselli an instrument of discovery, not only of the world of Architecture but also of himself, as he goes along, becoming more and more aware of certain personal and selective paradoxes. This can be seen, for example, with his dislike of cars in real life in confrontation with the fact of using these same cars in his photographic compositions, considering them a valuable addition; or his aversion toward shopping that converts itself into a kind of fascination by photographing shopping places.

In parallel, or maybe in consequence of his personal approach rather than a technical one, Rosselli assumes, even with a certain pleasure, a voyeuristic facet – beyond the inseparable voyeurism of the photographic act. For example, this happens when he suggests to the viewer his constant, however subliminal, presence in his photographs, without letting the camera capture parts of his own physiognomy. Moreover, along his speech there were some indications that this effect, this implicit impression on his work, may be profoundly related to a very peculiar vision of the world, of a very experimented and wise lightness, when he says “I don’t want to be serious; life is serious but I like to be funny.”

Albeit his lightness, Rosselli was neither superficial nor unilateral at any time about his more personal and intimate posture towards Architecture Photography. From the very beginning, Rosselli stressed the umbilical relationship between the photographer and the camera – an old discussion on Art and Technique and becoming more pertinent and actual nowadays – presenting an insight about his long study and questioning relating to that bond between Man and Machine. “Since I started photographing”, says Rosselli, “ I started a competition; who is making photography: the camera or Mr.Rosselli?”. From this restlessness, which at any moment diminishes his legacy as an author, he stands stoically in defence of Technique: “The camera is not a stupid object. The camera sees more than the photographer” even because, he admits, “I have many prejudices but the camera does not[...] the camera is freer than Mr.Rosselli.”

Other essential issues were also discussed, like the process of deconstructing conventions in Architecture Photography, the way in which the space is read, the relationship with the viewer, the interpretation of images or even the implication of two authorships in conflict – the architect’s and the photographer’s – always with an open mind and without prejudice, in a clear search for insights coming from a practical experience and from the reflections that this practice brought about, whether from the photographer’s point of view, whether from the curator’s.

In the final part of the conversation, Gadanho introduced some important ideas related to the logics of representation linked to the universe of Architecture Photography. He enhanced the relevance and interest of having adopted, at a certain point, a perspective and modus of work that tried to be more diversified, going beyond a certain traditional representation of Architeture. He brought back the idea that Architecture is truly a cultural production, making necessary this enriched interpretation from other quadrants, for it contributes to its openness – in the sense of Umberto Eco’s open work by. The praxis and discipline of Photography allow this enrichment of architectural interpretation by making possible the representation of vantage points that may diverge from the ones with which the architects would like to see their work represented. This allows to create in many cases a richer spatial interpretation and representation of the work of Architecture that should not be limited in the self-representation of the architect, assuming itself as a work of interpretation per se.

Much more a duet than a duel, this meeting of a little more than an hour between the Portuguese curator and the Italian photographer, contributed significantly to shed some light over some less obvious particularities in the field of Architecture Photography, never losing the essayistic sense one requires when two individualities meet. Undoubtedly, it was a significant valuable dialogue and text.

 

Author
Mário Carvalho (colaborador da scopio network)  

Editorial review
CCRE/FAUP (Editorial Department, scopio Editions)  

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DO LIVRO BEING & BECOMING

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DO LIVRO BEING & BECOMING

Museu do Douro
Peso da Régua
15 de Março, pelas 21h30


A apresentação da publicação Being and Becoming ficou a cargo do seu editor, Pedro Leão Neto e o painel da mesa redonda que contou com a presença do autor, de Artur Cristovão e Eric Many.

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DE EDUARDO SOUTO DE MOURA

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DE EDUARDO SOUTO DE MOURA

"FOTOGRAFIAS EM OBRAS DE EDUARDO SOUTO DE MOURA" SCOPIO EDITIONS

Excerto da apresentação do livro “Fotografias em obras de Eduardo Souto de Moura” de Luis Ferreira Alves. Discurso de Eduardo Souto de Moura, no passado dia 18 de Junho 2016, na Galeria Rui Alberto, no Porto. A apresentação contou também com a presença do autor e do editor da scopio Editions, Pedro Leão Neto.

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DE PEDRO LEÃO NETO [CONTEXTUALIZAÇÃO]

 

APRESENTAÇÃO DE PEDRO LEÃO NETO [CONTEXTUALIZAÇÃO]

"FOTOGRAFIAS EM OBRAS DE EDUARDO SOUTO DE MOURA" SCOPIO EDITIONS

Excerto da apresentação do livro “Fotografias em obras de Eduardo Souto de Moura” de Luis Ferreira Alves. Discurso de Pedro Leão Neto, no passado dia 18 de Junho 2016, na Galeria Rui Alberto, no Porto. A apresentação contou também com a presença do autor, Luis Ferreira Alves, e do arquitecto, Eduardo Souto de Moura.

 

ARCHITECTURE, CITY AND TERRITORY: NEW APPROACHES FROM CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY 3/3

 

ARCHITECTURE, CITY AND TERRITORY: NEW APPROACHES FROM CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY 3/3

Excerto da apresentação do livro “Fotografias em obras de Eduardo Souto de Moura”. Discurso do editor (sobre o autor), Pedro Leão Neto, no passado dia 18 de Junho de 2016, na Galeria Rui Alberto, no Porto. A apresentação contou também com a presença do autor, Luis Ferreira Alves, e do arquitecto Eduardo Souto de Moura.

 

ARCHITECTURE, CITY AND TERRITORY: NEW APPROACHES FROM CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY 3/3

 

ARCHITECTURE, CITY AND TERRITORY: NEW APPROACHES FROM CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY 3/3

Public presentation followed by open questions from the public concerning the Editorial Project focused on Documentary and Artistic photography related to Architecture, City and TerritoryIt will be seen how this Editorial Project SCOPIO has, on the one hand, supported and spread the various text and image content related to the topics of interest and whose origins emanate from initiatives and projects in which the research group CCRE collaborates, or that is coming from its research line City Spaces and Culture. On the other hand, how it has spread several photography projects and authors who conduct research on photography as an exploratory and innovative tool for thinking critically the themes of Architecture, City and Territory.

The project aims to promote the awareness and reflection upon art and documentary photography in regards to its conception as an instrument to question Architecture, City and Territory universe. This means understanding Architecture as an extended discipline and practice with an interest, on one side, in the real space and its experiences, exploring new spatial forms and architectural codes, and on the other side, in how architecture operates within larger systems: socio-cultural, technical, and historical.

 

ARCHITECTURE, CITY AND TERRITORY: NEW APPROACHES FROM CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY 2/3

 

ARCHITECTURE, CITY AND TERRITORY: NEW APPROACHES FROM CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY 2/3

ROUNDTABLE AT UNIDAD PREDEPARTAMENTAL DE ARQUITECTURA DA UNIVERSIDADE DE ZARAGOZA, 19TH OCTOBER

Public presentation followed by open questions from the public concerning the Editorial Project focused on Documentary and Artistic photography related to Architecture, City and TerritoryIt will be seen how this Editorial Project SCOPIO has, on the one hand, supported and spread the various text and image content related to the topics of interest and whose origins emanate from initiatives and projects in which the research group CCRE collaborates, or that is coming from its research line City Spaces and Culture. On the other hand, how it has spread several photography projects and authors who conduct research on photography as an exploratory and innovative tool for thinking critically the themes of Architecture, City and Territory.

The project aims to promote the awareness and reflection upon art and documentary photography in regards to its conception as an instrument to question Architecture, City and Territory universe. This means understanding Architecture as an extended discipline and practice with an interest, on one side, in the real space and its experiences, exploring new spatial forms and architectural codes, and on the other side, in how architecture operates within larger systems: socio-cultural, technical, and historical.

 

AULA ABERTA NO CI.CLO – PLATAFORMA DE FOTOGRAFIA

 

AULA ABERTA NO CI.CLO – PLATAFORMA DE FOTOGRAFIA

“DIÁLOGOS ENTRE FOTOGRAFIA, ARQUITECTURA, CIDADE E TERRITÓRIO, ENQUADRADO NOS VÁRIOS DOMÍNIOS SÓCIO, POLÍTICO E CULTURAL: SCOPIO EDITIONS”

No passado sábado, dia 21 de Janeiro 2017, Pedro Leão Neto, Editor da scopio Editions e Docente / Investigador na área da Arquitectura e Fotografia (FAUP), apresentou numa sessão aberta da plataforma CI.CLO, “Foto-livros: Narrativas Visuais e Sintaxe”, tendo como base textos de análise crítica de Gerry Badget e David Bate sobre estratégias visuais e lógicas sequenciais passíveis de adoptar na construção de um foto-livro, são comentados diversos exemplos de edição fotográfica e de técnicas de narrativa visual.


A Plataforma CI.CLO é uma estrutura independente de formação pesquisa e criação, na área da fotografia e a sua interação com outras disciplinas artísticas, ambientais e sociais. Oferece um programa regular de formação, debate, residências artísticas, exposição e difusão.

Este programa de formação conta com a colaboração de artistas formadores, curadores e investigadores ligadas à fotografia, mas também de outras disciplinas de Filosofia, Ciências Sociais e Ambientais, que irão orientar debates e oficinas específicas e temáticas, centradas no laboratório de formação, com o objetivo de desencadear processos de pensamento criativos através do intercâmbio multidisciplinar e transversal a diversos conhecimentos e experiências, nomeadamente Virgílio Ferreira (organizador e coordenador do projecto), Maria do Carmo Serén, Olivia da Silva, Paulo Catrica, Rita Castro Neves, João Lima, Susana Lourenço Marques, Pedro Leão Neto, Tiago Porteiro, Manuela Ferreira, Rui Leal, Luís Fernandes, Marco Rocha, Krzysztof Candrowicz, Ricardo Mendes, Álvaro Domingues, Christian Barbe, David Antunes, Jorge Castro Ribeiro, Katja Tschimmel, Pedro Sena Nunes.

 

HUMANITARIAN ARCHITECTURE PRACTICES

 

HUMANITARIAN ARCHITECTURE PRACTICES

In the call for the number 3 of Branca Journal “Humanitarian Architecture practices” it is proposed to promote interdisciplinary research and critical reflections on humanitarian practice, with a special focus on the contributions that the disciplines of architecture and urban planning can make to communities experiencing extreme poverty, forced displacement by natural disasters or conflict, and the increasing impacts of climate change. 

We invite researchers, professionals and students to contribute with papers to the following topics: 

1. Research: call for contributions about the history, processes, opportunities, contexts and impacts of humanitarian practice with special focus on the disciplines of architecture and urban planning; 

2. Professional Practice: call for contributions on reflective practices or/and its critical analysis within the field of humanitarian architecture through design-based projects in the emergency and development fields; 

3. Design Education: call for different strategies in which design education is, or might be, enriched through the integration of humanitarian architecture issues.    

Deadline for submissions: 23rd November 2018.  

For more information http://revistabranca.com

 

1PHOTO(GRAPHER): HÉLÈNE BINET

 

1PHOTO(GRAPHER): HÉLÈNE BINET

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was this photograph taken?

HB: Kolumba Museum – designed by Peter Zumthor – in Cologne, Germany.

HO: When was this photograph taken?

HB: The date could be 2008 or 2006, I forgot. It was just before the opening of the building.

HO: Was this the first time you were in this city and in this space?

HB: I had been there for four or five days. But it was the first time I shot Kolumba. After I did the photographing I came back a year later to do more photos for the museum - as it was finished with the art pieces inside. So I thought it would be interesting to go back to the same room and see if I can play around the subject. As a result I did a few colour photos, but I do think that the first set was the most successful without a doubt.

HO: Are there any technical aspects about this photograph that you would like to mention?

HB: My work is shot on film and I don’t shoot digital. I use a 4x5 camera which is the classical camera that architectural photographers use.

HO: What's the story behind this photograph?

HB: I was shooting, and it was actually the end of the shoot, and there was a lot of construction work going on around – it looks very peaceful but then it was noisy, and there were big machines – and there were two moments that happened. One was that the electricity was cut out. Finally my brain worked better because there was not so much noise but also there was no artificial light, and suddenly, there was this very small effect of the light “touching” the concrete ceiling which made the light coming in through the brick wall much more relevant. So I had to beg the workers not to repair the problem with the power too quickly so I could take this photograph. So, in most shoots I try to plan what I am doing, but this was absolutely not planned, and I was glad it happened because it was a significant moment in capturing that building.

HO: Why did you select this photograph?

HB: For me it embodies a lot of things that are important. That moment of light captures the role of how light creates a “body of life” in the building, and it makes me understand how not only do we need light to see materials and space, but we also need the space to see the light. If we have light without any object or material we would not be able to see the light. This means that the relationship between light and object is incredibly important and somehow poetic. In my photograph you can feel a body of light that is playing around the room. It is created from different openings in the wall, reflecting and refracting into different beams of light.

Hélène Binet is a Swiss-French architectural photographer based in London.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): JOÃO CARMO SIMÕES

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): JOÃO CARMO SIMÕES

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was this photograph taken?

JCS: In a small room in the new National Coach Museum, in Lisbon.

HO: When was it taken?

JCS: In 2013.

HO: What were the conditions there?

JCS: The room was lit only by an overhead sunlight coming through the huge white skylights. The museum had no one there besides me and someone from the security staff who escorted my visit. Silence.

HO: Are there any technical aspects about the shooting that you want to point out?

JCS: I photographed this image using a wide-angle lens camera on a tripod.

HO: How did you get inside the building?

JCS: Through the architect Paulo Mendes da Rocha. It was a planned visit so that I photograph the building.

HO: Had you been there before?

JCS: I had been there at least twice. One while it was being built and another time when it building was finished.

HO: Why did you choose this image? Was there anything you wanted to tell through it?

JCS: I look for images that are not imposed by being spectacular. Rather, I look for images which, through silence, try to speak about the particularity of an architecture. So, I found this image which seemed to be a bit enigmatic and thus questioned the architecture. I try not to demand for abstraction, but the intention of getting closer to architecture and to question it, to make it a bit more intelligible and conscious.

And so, we are in a small room of a large building, focusing on one direction, we see a diagonal wide span, a large diagonal metal element. At first, we could ask ourselves about the existence of these diagonal elements and then we could quickly take formalistic understandings out of these diagonals. However, if we digest some of what we see, having in mind the relations regarding the wholeness of the project, maybe we can be seduced by this architecture, by this building.

The design of the diagonal opening, enlighted on the left side of the image, corresponds to the opening of a gap in a wall that is a huge metal truss. Still on the left, closer, we can see the part of a huge cross which makes the horizontal locking of huge "wall-beams" that suspend the entire building.

So, looking at the architecture with the desire of understanding it, we find out that, even in a small room, in what seem to be small visible details, we can glimpse part of the whole which sets up the project, and that manifests itself. We understand the relationship of the parts with the whole in the understanding of the architecture of the building. Therefore, I am not only looking for a visual, or a theoretical or a formal issue, but a constructive one, and so an architectural one as well.

 

João Carmo Simões is a Portuguese  architecture photographer.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): PEDRO PEGENAUTE

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): PEDRO PEGENAUTE

POR HUGO OLIVEIRA


HO: Onde foi a fotografia tirada?

PP: Em Cornellá (Barcelona, Espanha). O edifício é o novo campo do RCD Español.

HO: Quando foi a fotografia tirada?


PP: Domingo, 2 de Agosto de 2009. Às 20:50h e 32 segundos.

HO: Quais eram as condições do espaço?


PP: A temperatura, como se pode ver pelas roupas das pessoas fotografadas, era quente, ainda que estivesse a anoitecer, estávamos no Verão. A luz é a dos focos que iluminam o terreno de jogo e o som é o de qualquer estádio de futebol, pessoas que naquele momento ainda estavam tranquilas. Nesse dia, estava a fazer fotografias do novo campo de futebol do RCD Español, ao encargo dos arquitectos (Reid FenwickAsociados e Gasulla Arquitectura) e com o motivo da inauguração do espaço. Posteriormente realizei outra sessão com o estádio vazio. A fotografia está tirada desde uma passarela suspensa na cobertura, para a manutenção do edifício e está em cima das bancadas onde se sentam as pessoas. Uma posição privilegiada.

HO: Existem aspectos técnicos acerca da captura desta fotografia que gostaria de apontar?


PP: Poucos aspectos técnicos, na verdade. Câmara na mão, ISO alto mas não muito (800), diafragma 5.6, ao contrário do que deve ser para se conseguir um “grão” fino e uma boa definição, mas do local onde estava a ser tirada a fotografia, não se podia colocar um tripé e interessava-me ter uma velocidade de obturação suficiente para que as pessoas não fossem registadas na imagem em  movimento. Estava obrigado a que assim fosse.

HO: O que acha mais interessante nesta imagem?

PP: Agrada-me a composição, o ponto de vista. Sobretudo o facto de que nesta fotografia as pessoas são as protagonistas, as que dão sentido à arquitectura e à fotografia.

HO: Existe algum acontecimento peculiar acerca da captura desta imagem que queira partilhar?

PP: Curiosamente, durante esse fim-de-semana (na verdade, no dia anterior), conheci a mulher com quem me casei, a mãe do meu filho.

HO: Existe algo que estava a tentar comunicar através desta fotografia?


PP: No geral, espero que quando as pessoas vejam as minhas fotografias, sintam algo, se sintam emocionadas, com sugestões, ou seja, que desfrutem ao apreciá-las.

Pedro Pegenaute é fotógrafo de arquitectura e vive em Espanha.

A imagem e entrevista seleccionadas fazem parte do projecto editorial  “1 Photo(grapher)”.

 

1 PHOTOGRA(PHER): NICK GUTTRIDGE

 

1 PHOTOGRA(PHER): NICK GUTTRIDGE

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was the photograph taken?

NG: At the Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance, in London.

HO: When was it taken?

NG: In January, 2014.

HO: What were the conditions on site?

NG: It was warm. The dancers have to have warm conditions to avoid injury. No smells, but good music. I can't remember what it was exactly.

HO: Are there any technical aspects about the shooting that you want to point out?

NG: This is an example of a constructed architectural shot with a performer. I drew the shot beforehand with the architect, therefore I dreamt it before I took it. Then I positioned tripod (low) and using a view camera with both rise and sideways movements created my composition.

From then on I used approximately four lights, all profoto. Magnum reflector as the key light on a megaboom approximately 30 feet high up. XL umbrella as the fill + several D1 heads with 20mm built in reflectors to catch the ceiling and the background wall. Each light was metered individually beforehand.

HO: How did you get this opportunity?

NG: It was a commission by Allies and Morrison.

HO: Had you been there before this photograph was taken?

NG: Yes. I was half way through when I took this. The commission lasted two weeks.

HO: Why did you select this image and what do you find most interesting about it?

NG: Well, it is so nice to mix my skills as an architectural photographer, with lighting and a performer.

HO:  Is there a particular story about this photograph that you would like to share?

NG: One of the dancers had had a hip replacement, so that was nice to help celebrate her recovery.

HO: Was there anything that you discovered through it?

NG: It was completely set up, the only thing I couldn't predict was the moves the dancer would make and the light outside.

 

Nick Guttridge is a London based photographer working for the arts and architecture community.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): MONTSE ZAMORANO GAÑÁN

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): MONTSE ZAMORANO GAÑÁN

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was the photo taken?

MZG: The photo was taken at the Campus of the University of Alcalá, in Alcalá de Henares, nearby Madrid, in Spain.

HO: When was the photo taken?

MZG: The photo was taken on May 24th 2012, around 21h30… but don’t remember the second!

HO: What were the conditions at the site?

MZG: It was a beautiful spring day, in that moment with a comfortable temperature (around 25º C), soft light, I was in a calm and quiet area, with a smell of fresh green grass and trees of the surrounding vegetation.

HO: Are there any technical aspects about the photograph that you would like to point out?

MZG: I used a wide tilt and shift lenses.

HO: How did you get into the site?

MZG: I got into the site by commission of the architect (Héctor Fernández Elorza).

HO: Had you been on that site before?

MZG: It was my third day at the site. I had been taking pictures, footage and time lapses for a video I did too, so I knew very well the way the light changed the building throughout the day.

HO: Why did you select this image and what do you find most interesting about it?

MZG: I really like the way the idea of the building is expressed and the light in the picture, softening the sharp shape and roughness of the concrete. 

HO: Is there a peculiar event about this photograph that you would like to share?

MZG: I took a similar version in the morning: I liked the framing, but I was not so proud of the light. I realized it had to be shot in the afternoon.

HO: Is there anything that you were trying to communicate through this photograph?

MZG: I was trying to make understandable the structural idea of the building: a cantilevered structure, with a big “brise-soleil” shadowing the main interior space. People scale the shot, and the upper foliage of the trees makes the viewer realize that the building is surrounded by vegetation.

 

Montse Zamorano Gañán is a Spanish photographer based in New York City.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)"

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): JOSEF SCHULZ

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): JOSEF SCHULZ

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was the photograph taken? 

JS: It's an abandoned petrol station in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.

HO: When was the photo taken?

JS: It was taken at the end of April 2011. I don't have an exact time stamp.

HO:  What were the conditions at the site?

JS: It was a sunny day, this station is placed between two regional roads, in the middle of a commercial area, accompanied by sound and smell of heavy trucks.

HO: Are there technical aspects about the photograph that you want to point out?

JS: It was made on a 4x5 negative material.

HO: How did you get into the site.

JS: This was the first photo of my latest series "poststructure", which has the focus on commercial sites in the USA. It's my own artistic project, costs are covered by myself.

HO: Had you been in that site before? 

JS: No, I had not been there before. I made a rough plan, which states and towns I would like to visit, but no site was discovered before. It was somehow a road trip by chance with a conceptual idea behind it.

HO: Why did you select this image and what do you find most interesting about it? 

JS: It was the first image of approximately 500, which I made in the following seven weeks. 

HO: Is there an interesting event about this photograph that you would like to share?

JS: It was an important moment, I did this first image, and I was immediately convinced, that my visual idea would be possible and it gave me a lot of energy to go on with this project.

HO: Is there anything that you were trying to communicate through it?

JS: With the words of Gregor Jansen: "The photographs by Josef Schulz are also influenced by loss and resignation. Here something has failed whose origin remains hidden and whose context the images deliberately omit. America as the“land of unlimited possibilities”is the past, and unlimited impossibilities are now as present as the over-indebtedness of the Americans. Each beginning contains an ending and every failure contains an oddly shaped ruin." is everything said.

 

Josef Schulz  is a Düsseldorf based photographer.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): PAOLO ROSSELLI

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): PAOLO ROSSELLI

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was this photograph shot?

PR: It was shot in the room of the hotel where I was staying in Katowice, in Poland.

HO: When was it shot?

PR: It was shot in January, 2014. It's my most recent work.

HO: What type of atmosphere of Katowice were you trying to reflect through this photograph?

PR: Firstly, I think that there is a confusion between the "inside" and the "outside". Then there is a confusion between two subjects: landscape and camera. And then there is a view in the second camera which is blurred. So I really like to put these things together.

HO: What made you select this photograph?

PR: First I must say that it is not a real collage. In a way, as a photographer I see the world as a collage, it is artificial, it is built. It is sort of “fake” thing. But at the same time very real. This set is not made with Photoshop, it's made by me. I like to put things together that have no relation. Normally you see the landscape as a landscape. My view of the world is already a collage, it's a sort of a “set”. I think about the “set”, I prepare it, and then I go around the city, and I try and propose to see the world in this way.

So, this series – with the camera “inside the picture” - is something that I conceived around one year ago. I started to put the camera as a subject inside the photo that looks at the landscape. So, the world for me is not “reality”, it is a “set”. In my opinion, there is a difference in the perceiving of the world before and after digital photography arrived - let's say, ten years ago. In my view this change came with other changes in the view of the city. The growth of cities “exploded” in the last 30 years. If you go to China you perfectly understand that! It's a chaos. But nevertheless a very interesting chaos. And in my view, all of these changes - urban, technical, etc. - came at the same time. It influenced the perceiving of the world by the photographer. And as a photographer, I react to these changes through my work.

HO: What do you like the most about this photo and is there anything valuable to take out of this experience?

PR: What I like in this picture that I took - or any other that I take inside of a room or of a car - is that I can put together two experiences. The experience of the inside and the experience of the outside. If I was in a helicopter I could only see the experience of the outside through a medium (a drone or a helicopter). This is not interesting for me. I cannot compose the image as I do, through a drone.

HO: What is the importance of storytelling and narrative in your work?

PR: I think that ideas, words, or concepts lead me in taking a particular picture. That is very important in my point of view. Otherwise, I think that, while taking pictures of architecture is a very interesting thing, in the end you need to think about what you are doing as a photographer.

 

Paolo Rosselli is an Italian architecture photographer based in Milan.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): ALASTAIR PHILIP WIPER

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): ALASTAIR PHILIP WIPER

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO:  Where and when did you take this photograph?

APW: This photograph was shot in a storage warehouse a CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, on May 15. 2013, at 10:36.

HO: How was the atmosphere there?

APW: Quiet, a bit dusty, mostly overcast as there was a big warehouse door open to the left of the picture and it was a cloudy, rainy day outside.

HO: Any technical aspects about the shooting that you want to point out?

APW: I used a digital camera and a tripod, with a shutter release cable, and the available light.

HO: How did you get in?

APW: I am doing a long term personal project about the facilities at CERN, so I have some contacts there that get me access.

HO: Had you been there before?

APW: I have been to CERN before, but never in that building.

HO: What do you find most interesting about this image?

APW: The large circular object is a full scale plywood replica of part of the ATLAS Experiment, one of the particle detectors on the Large Hadron Collider, which was built to train the engineers how to install different parts of it. I'm not sure if it has been used since the construction of the detector was completed in 2008, we found it at the back of a storage warehouse. There are a lot of things that work for me in this image: the playfulness and contrast of having something so technically advanced replicated in wood; the representation of something that is the most advanced machine that has ever been built by mankind put at the back of a warehouse and forgotten about; the way the circles are aligned.

 

Alaistair Philip Wiper is an English photographer based in the Copenhagen.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): LEONARDO FINOTTI

 

1 PHOTO(GRAPHER): LEONARDO FINOTTI

BY HUGO OLIVEIRA

 

HO: Where was this photograph shot?

LF: In Icaraí-Grajaú, in the outskirts of the southern area of ão Paulo, in Brazil.

HO: When?

LF: On November 3, 2011, at 10.28am.

HO: Is there any technical aspect of the photograph that you want to mention?

LF: The fact that shooting was done in a helicopter brought some technical issues to light. For example, to avoid a blurred image I had to use a higher speed. The use of till-shift lenses in an helicopter flight is very difficult task to be performed, because these are fully manual lenses that do not allow things like autofocus or the possibility to set the shutter speed. On the other hand, the most important in this picture is the framework. To find an extremely accurate perspective as I do in my nomal work by foot.

HO: How did the opportunity show up?

LF: The work was commissioned by the Municipal Housing Department, which was investing in many sports and leisure facilities on the outskirts of the city of São Paulo.

HO: I had been in that area before?

LF: No, but walked there a few days later.

HO: Why did you choose this image? What's most interesting about it?

LF: The photo is part of an authorial work which I'm developing right now which will be shown at an exhibition in Rio de Janeiro along with a book published in Switzerland. Also, because it has a special meaning in the context of the World Cup (2014 in Brazil).

HO: Was there anything you were trying to communicate through it?

LF: My photography work ends up structuring the reality that I photograph. In a architecture project finding this structure is always easier because it is designed by an architect and has all of those things really well defined, the informal city does not. In this image the football field/slum is "architectuized" by my way of seeing; the structure of the field goes through the slum, but it all happens in the picture, the picture creates a structured reality.

HO: Is there any peculiar story about the photograph that you want to share?

LF: I did a lenticular print this photo as a test, which consists of two overlapping extensions, at the back with paper and at the front with translucent frame, and it created a strange kind of 3D motion, which changes depending on the position of the observer. We put it in the office and everyone hated it. Two days later we had a meeting there with a curator who saw the photo and said, "Don't show this to anyone, we will make an exhibition". That is the exhibition I am working on now. Everybody sees different things in photography!

 

Leonardo Finotti is a Brazilian architectural photographer.

The image and interview selected are part of the editorial project "1 Photo(grapher)".