Pictorialism...
This is the title given to a cosmopolitan style and movement particularly relating to photography throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. There seems to be no official definition of the word Pictorialism, but it tends to demonstrate an image that has been created in a way that depicts something more creative than a basic photograph. Usually the image will be out of focus, have more than one print in colour and black and white, and show evidence of manipulation such as brush stokes or engraving. Types of pictoraliast images tend to be nude, still life and portraiture.
Anne Brigman...
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Self-Portrait - Anne Brigman |
I have chosen to look at an image, a self-portrait, by Anne Brigman of the Pictorialist movement. An American photographer who was a part of the 'Photo-Secession' - a movement in the 20th century that aided fine art and photography exposing Pictorialism. She worked predominantly with female nudes in her images, placing them in moody landscape scenes, particularly where trees were present. Each location carefully chosen. Once the negs were developed she would broadly work on post-manipulation with paints and pencils. She often experimented with self portraiture, and shows an early example of bohemianism and female liberation through her work.
In this image there is evidence of a rural relationship between herself and the land, something that is very common in pictorialism, especially as she is leant on the ground so there is a full connection amid herself and earth. Evidently, she is nude, another key feature in an image that indicates pictorialism. It is a portrait (self), although the more I look at it, the more I see elements of a still life. She is like a statue by the water, so elegantly positioned and leaning forwards. The image is in soft focus - this more than likely was intentional. There appears to be a 'painterley' effect like textured paper, mainly around the top section of the image. I would imagine that she did use paint, pens and scratches to add the texture to the water and the sky area. She possibly used the dodging and burning technique on both sides of the image, and also the darker area of the ground just behind her.