It’s been a week since I last wrote anything here and I feel like although this blog has been good to me things are changing and it may be time change tactics.
I’m into Phase two of my MA and I’m planning to focus on making. At the same time I feel that it will be useful to write about making whilst I am making.
Maybe this is a blip in a period of change where I move from one thing to another and i wonder if the commitment to writing daily is too much for me right now. Or maybe I continue to write every evening but this time I reflect on making.
I make everyday so I will write about making everyday. Even if that making is a cup of tea that will be the focus of this blog from this point.
Thank you blog yet again you have gotten me back on track and with that in mind I will tell you about making mouth pictures:
In the wet dark room I began by laying out the trays and mixing the chemicals. I’d not come prepared to be honest. I wanted to have pre-made paper and have a film to develop but that just hadn’t happened. Instead I experimented with the shop bought photographic paper I had brought.
Alone in the dark I folded a sheet of paper, put it in my mouth and gripped it with my teeth. I walked into the back room where there is natural light and twirled around to expose the paper. Keeping it in my mouth until safely back in the dark I then waited for the developer to show me what i had made. A bright white circular shape remained in the pitch black frame. I repeated the action this time pushing the paper further into my mouth and gripping more forcefully with my teeth. Twirling in the natural light again and waiting for the result. I continued to make several of these and then left them to rince for an hour.
Whilst waiting I decided to use the camera I had made to make images of chewing paper. I went to the library and found a quiet space in the corner. Behind me where children’s fairy-tales, The Brothers Grimm and Enid Blighton. I sat on the floor and detached a key from it’s ring to use to wind on the film. In my bag I had a hard copy of my Phase Two handbook issued by the university. I removed the staples and Put the first page in my mouth. I lifted the tape which was covering the pinhole and took a 20 second exposure. I closed the shutter and pushed the paper into my mouth and began to chew. I took another exposure.
Some students wandered around browsing the shelves, unfazed by my activity which I continued until I had masticated the whole of my Phase Two Handbook. I collected up the paper boluses and my other belongings and left for Winton on my bike to have the film processed. It would take an hour so I had some lunch and waited.
The photographs from the morning had finished rinsing so I took a look at them in natural light. They are so dark and so bright. There appearance makes it difficult to know haw they came into existence. The simplicity of it excites me. They are quite beautiful, and I have been thinking how to present them. I showed them to Dave Hazel who is a photography tutor. He says they look like vagina’s with teeth. he says I should watch the film.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0780622/
I remembered that I had the piece that I have temporarily named ‘Don’t turn on the light’ in my bag. I wish this piece was dark like the mouth photo-grams. I decided to develop it again to see if there was any light sensitive chemicals left on it. whilst wet and fragile I attempted to peel it apart to reveal other layers. It worked and I am much happier with it. I will have to wait until tomorrow to find out how everything looks when it is dry.