Tuesday, 29 November 2011

About Pieter Hugo


•       Hugo is primarily a portrait photographer whose work focuses mainly on documentary photography and  art photography with a specific focus on African communities, being of African descent himself.
•       In my eyes, all of his work is documentary with still life's added in which document a happening/ event.
•       In terms of what his work is about, it is very hard to sum his work up. He has work which shows a number of different ideas/ projects with different outcomes but what is apparent from researching his work is that each of his photographs tells more of a story than the first glance. Hugo has the ability to make you really read into the image.

Permanent Error

For the past year Hugo has been photographing the people and landscape of an expansive dump of obsolete technology in Ghana. The area, on the outskirts of a slum known as Agbogbloshie, is referred to by local inhabitants as Sodom and Gomorrah, a vivid acknowledgment of the profound inhumanity of the place. When Hugo asked the inhabitants what they called the pit where the burning takes place, they repeatedly responded: ‘For this place, we have no name’.

Their response is a reminder of the alien circumstances that are imposed on marginal communities of the world by the West’s obsession with consumption and obsolesce. This wasteland, where people and cattle live on mountains of motherboards, monitors and discarded hard drives, is far removed from the benefits accorded by the unrelenting advances of technology.

The UN Environment Program has stated that Western countries produce around 50 million tons of digital waste every year. In Europe, only 25 percent of this type of waste is collected and effectively recycled. Much of the rest is piled in containers and shipped to developing countries, supposedly to reduce the digital divide, to create jobs and help people. In reality, the inhabitants of dumps like Agbogbloshie survive largely by burning the electronic devices to extract copper and other metals out of the plastic used in their manufacture. The electronic waste contaminates rivers and lagoons with consequences that are easily imaginable. In 2008 Green Peace took samples of the burnt soil in Agbogbloshie and found high concentrations of lead, mercury, thallium, hydrogen cyanide and PVC.

Notions of time and progress are collapsed in these photographs. There are elements in the images that fast-forward us to an apocalyptic end of the world as we know it, yet the alchemy on this site and the strolling cows recall a pastoral existence that rewinds our minds to a medieval setting. The cycles of history and the lifespan of our technology are both clearly apparent in this cemetery of artifacts from the industrialised world. We are also reminded of the fragility of the information and stories that were stored in the computers which are now just black smoke and melted plastic.



Below are some of the Permanent Error photographs, I have chosen to only include some of the photographs which are my favourite.






















I really like these images, they all look so 'lucky' but I know that the photographer is very talented. I really respect what the images are trying to document, the struggle for the needy. Although the unwanted technology has been sent there to help the area and it inhabitants, it also brings a very labour intensive way of life which is bad for their health. The smoke and fumes given off while burning the components are ruining the lungs of the people there. 
My favourite image being the one below.




The fear and hardship can be seen through this emotional photograph, it shows that the young man has had a hard life.
 



Others Presentations

The notes below show some of what I was able to pick up on during my piers presentations, it was interesting to listen and learn about each individuals style and techniques.


23/11/11



       Bernd and Hilla Becher

  • ·      Industrial Machines
  • ·      Many books
  • ·      Founders of Dusseldorf school
  • ·      One book for each shoot
  • ·      Very strong images, with history behind them
  • ·      Typography


       Francesca Woodman

  • ·      Many self portraits
  • ·      Show her trying to escape or hide
  • ·      Themes of Identity
  • ·      Very deep images, which need thought
  • ·      Hide and seek seems apparent, she hides in the surroundings
  • ·      Died at the age of 22!


       Keith Arnatt

  • ·      Pictures from a rubbish tip/ dump
  • ·      Previously an artist
  • ·      Walking the dog
  • ·      Interested in how people act when photographed
  • ·      Quite humorous
  • ·      Post it notes ‘Notes from Jo’
  • ·      Note back to Pieter Hugo
  • ·      Similar style to Hugo


 Tom Hunter

  • ·      His local neighborhood
  • ·      Trying to stop the stereotypical images you see of squatters
  • ·      He lived as a squatter
  • ·      Has an article in the BJP! Dig out the copy!
  • ·      Really like his work
  • ·      Teaches at London college of communication


       Richard Billingham

  • ·      Photographs family life
  • ·      Father is an alcoholic’s
  • ·      Low budget processing
  • ·      ‘The black country’
  • ·      Sensations show

Rut Blees Luxemburg

  • ·      Late night photography
  • ·      Landscapes
  • ·      Tutor at royal college of art
  • ·      Large format
  • ·      Long exposures
  •     Fit in with our current ‘City brief’