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Mouvances & médias

Fish Plants

Eyesores and community

2012-02-03 by GedeonCom Leave a Comment
Stack 2, Burnt Islands
Stack, Burnt Islands NL
Burnt Islands Fish Plant

From a distance, Burnt Islands

A recent report on the local CBC radio morning show is a good illustration of the kind of ideas I want this work to broach. You can have a listen to it here: http://bit.ly/ykRusL. One of my goals with this is to look at how the fish plant fits into the community, physically as well as socially.

As an artist, I have a certain belief that by looking at things in various ways we are able to gain new perspectives into issues and ideas that affect our lives. This can be a direct relationship, as in an illustration or description of an event [Massumi] or it can be more subtle, demanding attention from the viewer and an effort to connect the dots and create relationships between the represented subject matter and the reality around her/him. In this project I created fairly strict parameters influencing my decisions for composition, exposure and printing.

Burnt Islands

Interior of fish plant, Burnt Islands NL

The “New Topographers” was/is a grouping of photographers who believe that a photographer should try to develop strategies that allow for the most objective look at subject matter, exemplary of this group, and most influential in my work, is Lewis Baltz. Though globally there is a belief that photography is objective since it is done by a machine with the human simply pushing down on a button; it is impossible to separate the series of decisions leading to the click from the subjectivity of the photographer in any clear manner. The choice of angle, composition and exposure is part of a personal aesthetic that is formed by experience, not to mention opinion. If I am looking at a devastated landscape and I want to “expose” the power of the scene, I may choose to shoot lower to the ground, making the scene more overwhelming, and play with exposure to make the scene more dramatic, darkening skies and increasing contrast in the subject matter. Though the image is perceived as being machine made and thus objective, this is obviously not the case. A photograph is always more about the photographer than it is about the subject at this level.

Stack, Burnt Islands

Stack, Burnt Islands NL

The New Topographers would attempt to compose and expose in an effort to flatten or suppress their own identity as much as possible. There is a need for a mastery of craft and an ability to take a certain distance from one’s own preconceptions. It is a scientific approach, not quantitative, but qualitative; it is based on observation. It requires that the burden of dramatic effect be placed on the subject not in its representation. It is hard work and in stark contrast to the emotional language used in the CBC report, but as can be seen in the images attached to this post is still able relate the state and impact of these sites that are so important to many communities. Yes, indeed many of these fish plants are being left to disintegrate and become obsolete. But the question remains of trying to think about how this happens. Why are these industrial sites that are so important to communities allowed to be separated from the life of the community? Why aren’t they the source of corporate engagement with community? They are after all where most members of a community spend the most time together, even more time than is spent with family and friends.

Interior, Diamond Cove

Interior, Diamond Cove NL

Parson's Pond

Parson's Pond

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Posted in: Fish Plants Tagged: CURRA, Fish Plants, Media, Photography

The Fish Plant blog, resurrected.

2012-01-30 by GedeonCom Leave a Comment

It has been quite some time.

Too long really, through a mixture of other projects to finish; an exhibition that travelled to Ireland and Tasmania, on-going health issues that have slowed me down considerably, not to mention trying to see where things were going with this work I have been remiss in updating this blog. Plus, I have overhauled my website to consolidate blogs and webpages. You will notice a new look and feel, I hope it is more efficient and somewhat more engaging.

Truck, Woody Point

Truck, Woody Point

I have completed the first edit of the series and am really happy with the work. There is a total of 56 prints and I am thinking about splitting it up into two exhibition packages for travelling to communities, hopefully I could show the whole thing in a larger venue like The Rooms and onwards. Some of these will also be printed very large on vinyl or other “indestructible” surface so they can be shown outdoors at, or near, the fish plants I visited. All 56 images, plus one or two for design purposes should appear in the book, I have yet to start working with an editor but this will most likely be my initial manuscript. I have some interesting sequences and paginations in mind for this.

Trucks parked, Rocky Harbour

Trucks parked, Rocky Harbour

 I will use this blog to talk about the work, tell stories about the process, raise issues about photography and the image’s ability to relate “truth” or objective reality. Though this work is bracketed within a larger project with a social science and science lens, CURRA, I am hoping to bring in the potential role that visual culture can bring to a broad research base. My hope is that these images will engender discussion from a new perspective and engaging community and research in a new way.

I'd Rather Have, Woody Point

I'd Rather Have, Woody Point

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Posted in: Fish Plants Tagged: Architecture, Fish Plants, Labour, Landscape

Isle Aux Morts 03

2009-05-18 by GedeonCom Leave a Comment

What a day! Finished printing last season’s photographs. All in all, there are about 130-140 eight by ten “work prints”. The time spent in the darkroom is a most interesting place to consider when doing work.


A portion of the time/space spent is within a tightly concentrated space, keeping track of seconds, minutes, time in, time out. Something quite interesting about this duration of time is that, while being intently conscious of seconds and minutes the mind looses track of “watch time”. The idea of loosing track of time by being fully immersed in its minutia is something I need to develop further, maybe video or sound (but that is for another blog).

Another part of this time/space, is where attention is a little more diffused, where something seen in a print in one of the baths stirs a thought, recalls another photograph. This is where the editing begins, and it is not always done in a very deliberate manner; it is simply a question of seeing the prints in the red light and submerged in liquid seems to make certain details, textures or compositions enter into a system of meanings that is absent in “perfect lighting”. It is probably a variation of the old design school trick of studying your compositions upside down in order to see if there are any problems.

Then there is the time/space of imagination. Ideas enter into a free association with the print in the tray. For an instant a multitude of cross-referencing images and sounds fill the imagination, it is the moment of possibility as such it is virtual.

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Posted in: Deleuze, Fish Plants Tagged: CURRA, Fish Plants, Gilles Deleuze, Industrial Architecture, Landscape, Photography

Isle Aux Morts 02

2009-05-13 by GedeonCom Leave a Comment

I am presently trying to complete my printing from the 2008 shooting season. This is keeping me quite busy and I am not posting as often as I would like. This post will be mostly images. Writing does not always come easily, at times it is as if I am trying to say everything in one fell swoop; not taking the time to let the narrative unfold, let the idea come through in the words.

As this year’s printing draws to a close, I am starting to think more and more about what the edited suite of photographs will look like. This can serve two purposes; firstly, it encourages me to continue working and plugging away at the subject matter. Secondly, it will make this second season of shooting more efficient as I will hopefully have a quicker sense of what I am looking for as I arrive on a new site.

This second effect can be dangerous. An ever-present risk for an artist is the possibility of getting ahead of an idea. Thinking that one knows what one s looking for can lead to imposing meaning on a subject; effectively taking away the subjects voice in the process. This is something I am constantly struggling with what I am working with a more “documentary” approach.

Contemporary culture’s obsession with “the documentary” is rife with the conflict between “truth” and “opinion”. The concept of objectivity has been central to the discourse of the photographic image since its invention. It has shifted from total objectivity to total subjectivity with very few stops in between. Like in many things, the objective and the subjective are two poles with an infinite number of grey zones in-between. As surfaces they can even overlap as is described in “Mille Plateaux”, Gilles Deleuze’s and Felix Guattari’s landmark exploration of the schizophrenic impulse in contemporary society. But I digress.

The tension between giving voice to the subject and allowing one’s subjectivity to interact with it is often where all the interest lies in a work of art. A truly engaging piece of work will inevitably play the ideas off of each other and invite the viewer to add more levels of interpretation to the mix.

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Posted in: Deleuze, Fish Plants Tagged: CURRA, Fish Plants, Gilles Deleuze, Industrial Architecture, Landscape, Photography
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