Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Self Portraits for an Emulation of Eugene Von Bruenchien

Eugene's Photographs 


            With this project I emulated Eugene Von Bruechenhein, an outsider photographer. The term “outsider photography” is different than the mainstream photography we see today. These artists like Eugene, use photographs or photographic elements in their creation." This study has broad enough parameters that include photomontage, collage, manipulation, and tableau methodologies. Whether the artist is setting up a fantastic scene, gluing cut-out photos into a work, or painting over the top of a photograph- he/she is employing non-conventional means to express a wildly idiosyncratic and personalized vision”(Turner and Klochko 136-143). Eugene practiced outsider photography with a specific subject. He essentially took hundreds of photographs of his wife, Marie, who he married in 1943. He would stage her in different costumes, most of which resembled the popular pin-up girl. He then created these awkwardly envisioned scenes behind her. “Working in his bathroom-cum-darkroom, he developed his film and experimented with combination printing. He also hand-colored many of his black and white photographs, and also shot in color transparencies.” (Turner and Klochko. 136-143)
            After emulating five of Eugene’s photographs of his wife Marie, I started viewing his ideas differently. While his pictures appeared collaborative, “Marie is, however, rarely completely at ease. There’s an awkwardness, even a subtle deer-in-the-headlights alarm that registers in these images and is perhaps the most direct reflection of Von Bruenchenhein’s personality available to us” (Smith). While researching Eugene I was very interested in his work and his mind set while creating. The pictures of his wife seemed so imaginative, and appeared as if they had been playing dress up together and pulling items out of a dress up box all day long. A quote by Von Bruenchenhein that I became intrigued by reads, “All were made for the love of creation”. It seems so ambiguous but after taking my own self-portraits it made me believe his intention behind a camera was to create his own frame of world. With his camera he could capture his imagination on to different canvas for others to see, exactly how it appeared in his own mind. His idea was expressed through Marie.
After taking my own photos, I started imagining if I was in Marie’s shoes, and Eugene was taking the photographs. Replicating her photos on my own, I essentially was playing Marie. By the end of the process the photos I was capturing became very depicting. Picturing a man capturing these Images of me, while being inserted into a strange and awkward environment that only he understood. I felt as if I was promoting my sexuality, and it became a gruesome and irritating process for me. In the act of my picture taking, there was actually a car of men driving by that could see me from their car windows. As they drove by, they shouted things like “Damn Baby!” and whistled at me like I was a dog. From my experience playing Marie I started emulating my last photos with my smile gone, and decided to create my own reality as Eugene did. It made me realize the fact that many women allow men to dematerialize them by condoning man’s mockery. With the way many beautiful women dress and display their bodies publically, and vise versa with covering too much. Society will not let us win, and it’s creating a barrier between woman and mankind equality. My experience playing Marie and Eugene was an outsider photography moment, and I impulsively decided to create my own message and vision. My photographs are below: 








 Dona Morgan


Monday, March 25, 2013

Infinite Vivacity Series

The ocean is infinite, and 90% of it still remains unexplored. It stands as a symbol of endless possibilities. Vivacity is a term to explain liveness and animation. This series is one I took to explore life and the endless enjoyment one is able to find. Life is beautiful, spontanious and exuberayting! 






Photos By; Dona Morgan