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Wet Plate Collodion Photography by Quinn Jacobson

Kristallnacht

My Paris Show Part One: Preparing

Posted on December 8th, 2009 in Art & Theory, Collodion Images, Collodion Workshops, Education, Europe, Kristallnacht, Quinn Jacobson, travel | Leave A Comment

This isn’t the first time you’ve heard me talk about (or read me write about) my show in Paris. And I can assure you, it won’t be the last.

I’m excited beyond words. I’m completely focused on making this the best it possibly can be. So, if I seem aloof, slow to respond or appear to be dropped-out, you know what I’m doing and where my head is!

The Centre-Iris Gallery has started to publicize the events. There will be a few highlights; first, the exhibition (of course!). I will be showing both of my projects; work that I made in the United States and my current European project. I’ll have about 50 images from the project, “Portraits from Madison Avenue“. I will also have several pieces, I’m not exactly sure how many,  of my new project, “Vergangenheitsbewältigung” (loose translation: “struggling to come to terms with the past”). I’m still working on this project, but I hope to have quite a few pieces in this show.

The content and Collodion variant processes will span the gamut. There will be portraits, landscapes, still lifes, etc. There will be Black Glass Ambrotypes, Clear Glass Ambrotypes, Albumen prints, Alumitypes, and Ferrotypes (Tintypes). I’m going to offer sell the work, too. This is a big deal for me and it’s very important that I do this right!

Quinn making Pierre's portraits in Paris - June 2009

Quinn making Pierre's portraits in Paris - June 2009

Secondly, I will be doing a public demonstration the afternoon of the opening (March 9). I’ll also be teaching two workshops during the week. If you’re in, or near Paris, drop Centre-Iris Gallery an email and have them hold a spot for you!

And last, but not least, the gallery has asked me to do a “Portrait Day”. This will be on March 10. People can come by the gallery and I will make a portrait for them (for a fee, of course). It was a hit in Paris last June. I would expect the same here, maybe even more people Oy! We’ll see.

This is a gigantic logistical challenge. I’m going to rent a Mercedes Sprinter Van. Thanks for the tip, Vernon! I need to pack all of my artwork (huge space and very delicate items), Collodion equipment (dark-box, camera, lenses), chemistry and substrate, and luggage. And then we have to fit in it, too! I’m hoping this works! It’s a four and a half hour drive to Paris. Have you ever driven in the city of Paris? Oy!

There will be more to follow… I promise.

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Viernheim Synagogue Memorial & Some Project Thoughts

Posted on March 29th, 2009 in Art & Theory, Kristallnacht | Leave A Comment

I can only imagine what goes through the minds of the people watching as I make photographs in the small towns and villages here.

This morning I went out to re-photograph the Synagogue memorial in the village I live in, Viernheim. They moved the memorial (I call them gravestones - they always seem to be weeping) a couple of months ago. They also included a little sitting area and bench. It’s actually a lot better.

As I setup and made preparations to make a plate, several people walked by and stared - I mean stared! One old German man, maybe 70 years-old, or more, almost tripped, as he was walking by staring. He wasn’t watching where he was going. I said, “Achtung, Baby!” - I wonder if he got the reference to the U2 album, probably not.

I don’t mind people watching. I’m a voyeur by profession and passion. The thing that I don’t is like not knowing if they’re just interested, or if they’re thinking, “I would prefer that this guy go away.” It feels like the latter, but I’m hopeful that it’s the former.

The photograph I made this morning is gone. It made me sick, but I wiped it from the plate. This is the only “evidence” that remains of the Ambrotype. What if I made this whole project like that? What if there were no plates in the entire project, only non-tangible (digital) representations? It would be a lot like the subject matter, no?

A friend/colleague emailed me the other day asked me about my thoughts on impermanence, or ephemeral art. He’s working on his M.F.A. and doing some really interesting things with chalk-screen transfers. His images are only there for a short time on a chalkboard - this theme has been explored by a lot of artists, but it keeps coming back to me, time and time again. It feels like I’m not listening.

Just as the Synagogues and people were “wiped away”, I think that this method may serve the project well. I first thought about breaking the glass, destroying the images, or having Germans do that in a performance. After some thought, I decided no, that’s too much. However, wiping these images  from the plates, and maybe even keeping the Collodion I wipe off as residue may be the answer I’ve been looking for.

You have to remember, these images are extremely beautiful when you’re holding them in your hand. They’re a “precious artifact” in a lot of ways.  They’re also a lot of work to make - a big investment in many ways -  time, money, effort, etc. So destroying them and only keeping (digital) representations creates a sense of loss for me - a lot like how I feel when I see (memorials) representations of these beautiful Synagogues (and people) that were destroyed.

I’m going to seriously explore this some more. Right now, in this moment, I feel very strongly about it.

viernheim-memorial-web 
Destroyed Synagogue Memorial With Apartments and Playground
8×10 Black Glass Ambrotype
29 March 2009 - 0923
Viernheim, Germany
(I flipped this positive so you can read the text)

Notes: The memorials seem to be “weeping” every time I photograph them. The background (apartment buildings, trees, playground, etc.) appear as a painting or drawing, unreal, if you will. The gravestone seems to be emerging from a black earth - terrible and foreboding. 




Shoah

Posted on February 28th, 2009 in Education, Europe, Kristallnacht | Leave A Comment

I’ve watched a lot of films and read a lot of books about the Holocaust, or Shoah, over the years. However, I hadn’t seen, “Shoah” by Claude Lanzmann. I want to travel to some of these places, especially Auschwitz-Birkenau, Chełmno, Sorbibor and Treblinka, and do some work for my project.

If you haven’t seen it, you should - here’s an overview:

Claude Lanzmann directed this 9 1/2 hour documentary of the Holocaust without using a single frame of archive footage. He interviews survivors, witnesses, and ex-Nazis (whom he had to film secretly since though only agreed to be interviewed by audio). His style of interviewing by asking for the most minute details is effective at adding up these details to give a horrifying portrait of the events of Nazi genocide. He also shows, or rather lets some of his subjects themselves show, that the anti-Semitism that caused 6 million Jews to die in the Holocaust is still alive in well in many people that still live in Germany, Poland, and elsewhere.

shoah

WW2-Holocaust-Europe

Click to see this large - it’s a good perspective on the camps, locations and where I live.

 




The Holocaust did not begin in the gas chambers…

Posted on January 26th, 2009 in Dachau, Education, Europe, Kristallnacht, politics | Leave A Comment

Holocaust did not begin in the gas chambers - it began with words

Jan. 26, 2009
IRWIN COTLER , THE JERUSALEM POST
On this United Nations International Holocaust Remembrance Day, words may ease the pain, but
they may also dwarf the tragedy. For the Holocaust is uniquely evil in its genocidal singularity,
where biology was inescapably destiny, a war against the Jews in which, as Nobel Peace Laureate
Elie Wiesel put it, “not all victims were Jews, but all Jews were victims.”

Let there be no mistake about it: indifference in the face of evil is acquiescence with evil itself - it is complicity with evil.

Nazism succeeded, not only because of the “bureaucratization of genocide,” as Robert Lifton put it, but because of the trahison des clercs - the complicity of the elites: physicians, church leaders,
judges, lawyers, engineers, architects, educators and the like. As Elie Wiesel put it: “Cold-blooded murder and culture did not exclude each other. If the Holocaust proved anything, it is that a person can both love poems and kill children.”

Read the entire article here.. thanks Mark

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