More readings on photography

Over the past few months, I've had the opportunity to read the following books on photographers, aesthetics, history and installation. They are all great reads!

The Body in Question/Le Corps en questions(s)

Daido Moriyama

Kamaitachi - Eikoh Hosoe & Tatsumi Hijikata

Manifestations of the Spirit - Minor White

Illuminance - Rinko Kawauchi

Transformational Imagemaking - Robert Hirsch

Small Things in Silence - Yamamoto Masao

Speaking With Hands: Photographs from the Buhl Collection

Stieglitz, Steichen, Strand

On Photography - Susan Sontag

Revelations - Wynn Bullock

Clamshell Box

I recently attended a Clamshell Box workshop facilitated by Suzan Lee. I was able to construct a box that could house booklets, a special book or other precious objects.

As always, Suzan was very well-prepared and the workshop proceeded without a hitch in a great working space at Gilligan Girls in Vancouver.


Here's the box I created, made with a sleek Japanese cover fabric and Italian papers.:




Perhaps one of my future handmade books will be accompanied by a clamshell box.

Clamshell Box

I recently attended a Clamshell Box workshop facilitated by Suzan Lee. I was able to construct a box which could contain booklets, a special book or other objects. As always, Suzan was very well prepared and the workshop proceeded without a hitch in a great work space.


Here's the box I created, made with a sleek Japanese cover fabric and Italian papers.:




Perhaps one of my future handmade books will be accompanied by a clamshell box.

Books on photographers and visual aesthetics

Alfred Stieglitz: A Biography is great read that recounts his life as art photographer, founder of the Photo-Secession movement at the turn of the 20th century, and promoter of the finest art photographers in the pictorial tradition. It also recounts his Camera Works magazine and the art galleries he opened, as well as his marriage to Georgia O'Keefe.


Seaworks 1998-2013 by Paul Kenny is a beautiful book that features his beach-based still life images, all taken camera-less. He collects plants from various beaches, then grows them in glass containers, which he then scans. The resulting images are abstract, surreal. and simply breathtaking




In Looking at Images, Brooks Jensen explores images from a number of artists who have appeared in his LensWork or LensWork Extended publications. Brooks makes enlightening comments about visual aesthetics; these are enhanced with audio clips accessible through Q-codes at the bottom of each page.



Forest Spirits: interview and photos


The Taste and See Shop added 25 new photos to the album: Forest Spirits by Dennis Humphrey.


Hanging the show

May 3: Hanging the Forest Spirits show using wire and wooden clips.

Gold leafing

Did a few tests today, applying adhesive size with a fine brush to small areas on the front of the pigment ink print, let it dry a few minutes, then applied the gold leaf. It worked, but I’m not sure I will cover large areas of the image: the process creates hard edges and my images are mostly soft and out of focus… I’ll play more. Once infused with wax, the metal leaf (imitation gold) should not oxidize.

A few images of the trials…



Top: gold leaf sheen visible in small areas where applied on surface of print
Centre: gold leaf sheen visible in small areas where applied on surface of print
Bottom: gold leaf applied to back of thin washi and infused with wax; no sheen, just a subtle warm toning

Visual haiku triptychs


For my Tokyo show, I am exploring what I call “visual haikus”, a series of triptychs I began a few years ago. I had worked with mixed media encaustics during the 2014 Encaustics workshop with Lean Macdonald in Victoria.
The haiku poetic form consists of 3 lines of 5-7-5 syllables and focuses on details of the here and now, often dealing with nature. I have decided to adapt the format to photographs shown in a 3-panel format replicating a 5-7-5 proportion (11″x17″). At least one of the panels (most likely the widest one, will feature the subject (human or nature). I will keep it open, letting the viewers make up their own interpretation of the haiku sequence or narrative.
I have been moving towards a brown warm-toned monochromatic palette, retaining red for a dash of colour, trying to simplify, reduce. In the images below, I use a red leaf texture layer in Photoshop to blend in with the darker areas of the photos, giving it the organic quality I am looking for. Here is a sample of 2 of the 9 images:


I will try printing the images above on thicker washi paper, applying gold leaf on the surface of some areas of the print, then infusing with it wax. Brown-black-gold-red….
In order to take advantage of the translucency and red pigment already part of the print, I will need to limit my use of mixed media. I may use pencil and black ink, red ink washes, red wax, perhaps embed a real leaf here and there… we’ll see.
I like the idea of the triptychs, yet I also like the single image above, which allows for a fuller view of the subject.

Japanese box making

I attended a Japanese box making workshop a short while ago, offered by Suzan Lee from the local chapter of CBBAG.


Bookmaking, printing and publishing

Over the summer, I had the good fortune of visiting three book arts, bookmaking and book printing/publishing events in Vancouver for the first time.

The first was the CBBAG Lower Mainland's 2015 Book Arts Fair which was held on June 20 at the Main Branch of the Vancouver Public Gallery. Visitors were able to "see, touch and buy  bookbinding, letterpress, altered books, artist’s journal, calligraphy, paper arts and mixed arts ", with up to up to 18 book artists and book arts suppliers will be displaying and their works.

Photo from the website: https://vanbookarts.wordpress.com

On October 17, I attended the Vancouver Art/Book Fair put on by Project Space and held at the Vancouver Art Gallery Annex. Two rooms with close to 70 exhibitors: book artists, book and zine publishers, etc.


Image from the website: http://2015.vancouverartbookfair.com/#program

On October 31, the Alcuin Society held its annual Wayzgoose event with more than 25 exhibitors, including book artists and publishers, wood engravers, paper marblers (traditional and japanese).

Image from the website: http://alcuinsociety.com/the-wayzgoose-is-coming-2/
I came away with an exquisite sheet of hand-marbled paper. I was drawn to its organic, flesh-coloured shapes and the residual fluid flowlines of the second pass.

Detail of a hand-marbled (double-dipped) sheet of paper by Phyllis Greenwood. 

More recommended books

The following are great books I've read or am in the process of reading: