Like Polaroid, a medium fit for simple snapshots.
By RUTH LA FERLA
Justin Giunta thinks of his camera phone as a kind of appendage. “It’s like an extension of my eyelid,” said Mr. Giunta, a jewelry designer. He uses it to discreetly snap classical portraits, which he likes to juxtapose against contemporary advertising images.
Using his device, usually an iPhone, “is a way of walking the viewer through the way I look at the city,” he said. And a way of recording colors, shapes and textures that ultimately filter into his designs.
Two of his portraits, a detail from a Modigliani sphinx, shot at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan; and another, from a billboard, taken at a subway platform, were on view recently at the Stephen Weiss Studio in downtown Manhattan, part of an exhibition conceived to introduce the Casio Exilim Mobile camera phone.
To underscore what the company says are the phone’s advanced capabilities, one was given to each of 14 artists, who were asked to chronicle a week in their lives.
The concept isn’t original: Photographers like Philip-Lorca diCorcia have performed such promotional stunts in the past.
The show’s attraction was that it highlighted the rise of the camera phone as a totem of cool. Matthew Kristall, Danielle Levitt and Ricky Powell are among those who have embraced the palm-size device as a medium for spontaneous, if inadvertently gritty, expression.
The pictures’ imperfections are part of their charm. “They kind of remind you of Polaroids in the way they’re very small and kind of glowing,” said Vince Aletti, a curator of the Richard Avedon show at the International Center of Photography.
James Danziger of the Danziger Project gallery doubts that camera-phone images will ever have merit as art. “Where they are most interesting is in a journalistic situation,” he said.
Cass Bird, whose ethereally lighted portraits were on view at the Weiss studio, said her favorite images “are just intimate moments, that if you had to bust out a conventional camera, you probably would miss.”
For fashion designers the camera phone has a practical draw. Chrissie Miller, a sportswear designer whose portraits of Lindsay Lohan and others were in the show, has jettisoned the conventional mood board in favor of camera-phone images, which she loads on to her computer. When she needs a creative jolt, “I just look at the screen,” she said.
For the exhibition, she acknowledged having paid extra attention to composition and lighting. Just the same, she continues to share the preoccupations of her self-documenting peers in fashion.
“I didn’t want to do anything artsy,” she said. “I just wanted these pictures to be a real snapshot into my life.”
A New York gallery showed phone photos by Chrissie Miller, above, and Matthew Kristall.
댓글 안에 당신의 성숙함도 담아 주세요.
'오늘의 한마디'는 기사에 대하여 자신의 생각을 말하고 남의 생각을 들으며 서로 다양한 의견을 나누는 공간입니다. 그러나 간혹 불건전한 내용을 올리시는 분들이 계셔서 건전한 인터넷문화 정착을 위해 아래와 같은 운영원칙을 적용합니다.
자체 모니터링을 통해 아래에 해당하는 내용이 포함된 댓글이 발견되면 예고없이 삭제 조치를 하겠습니다.
불건전한 댓글을 올리거나, 이름에 비속어 및 상대방의 불쾌감을 주는 단어를 사용, 유명인 또는 특정 일반인을 사칭하는 경우 이용에 대한 차단 제재를 받을 수 있습니다. 차단될 경우, 일주일간 댓글을 달수 없게 됩니다.
명예훼손, 개인정보 유출, 욕설 등 법률에 위반되는 댓글은 관계 법령에 의거 민형사상 처벌을 받을 수 있으니 이용에 주의를 부탁드립니다.
Close
x