Assignments – FotoFika https://rampages.us/fotofika Covid 19 Teaching Resources Fri, 17 Sep 2021 20:53:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Kim Beil – Good Pictures https://rampages.us/fotofika/2021/03/31/kim-beil-good-pictures/ Wed, 31 Mar 2021 13:10:43 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1435 Read More...

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Kim Beil joins FotoFika TODAY. In this talk, Kim Beil introduces her Fotofika assignment, “Good Pictures Break the Rules,” with a visual tour of aesthetic rules that have been overturned in photography since the 20th century. She argues that breaking the rules can be a radical act: a rejection of the stylistic status quo can also suggest new ways of seeing and being seen as photographers.

https://zoom.us/j/93761631388?pwd=eTYxL0NSVkVNWDh4SnVhclFXTEorQT09

Kim Beil teaches art history at Stanford University. Recently she’s written about  photography and climate change for the Atlantic,  the pre-history of  Zoom backgrounds for Aeon/Psyche , and pandemic bread photography for Literary Hub. Her book,  Good Pictures: A History of Popular Photography , was published in June 2020. You can find her ever-expanding collection of how-to books on Instagram. Join Foto Fika Wednesday, March 31 4PM HERE

– John, Betsy, Anne P.S. Please consider donating to our Kickstarter campaign for our 2020 All Star Trading Cards: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/spenational/fotofika-2020-all-stars-trading-card-project

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Links from Annu Palakunnathu Matthew and Max Kandhola’s PDF https://rampages.us/fotofika/2021/02/16/links-from-annu-palakunnathu-matthew-and-max-kandholas-pdf/ Tue, 16 Feb 2021 14:00:30 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1361 Read More...

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We’ve added the links Annu’s shared with us to our databases which you can find here. You’ll find most of them in the database for creating an inclusive classroom.

And for those who weren’t able to attend our Feb 3 session, Max’s PDF can be found here: Max_Kan_Fotofika_2021

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No Studio / Studio Lighting https://rampages.us/fotofika/2021/01/20/no-studio-studio-lighting/ Wed, 20 Jan 2021 15:09:18 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1333 Read More...

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Join us TODAY when Geoff Delanoy, Lindsay Metivier, B. Proud, E. Brady Robinson, and Elena Volkova share their strategies for teaching studio lighting photography in our virtual classrooms. Similar to last week, we’ll use the meeting more as an open forum/workshop. Each of our guests will share their thoughts on teaching studio lighting virtually.

See you Soon: JANUARY 20th, 4pm EST at:

ZOOM ID: https://zoom.us/j/93761631388…

Zoom – PWD – fotofika
https://zoom.us/j/93761631388

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Q&A from the Jan 6 Workshop https://rampages.us/fotofika/2021/01/13/qa-from-the-jan-6-workshop/ Wed, 13 Jan 2021 13:46:23 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1327 Read More...

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FotoFika Awesome people! I’ve consolidated down the Q&A from our workshop. I hope you’ll find it helpful. Thanks to everyone who contributed.

 

 

Q: Fewer assignments and fewer prints does not seem unusual during this time. What strategies might you be employing to still have rigor in your classroom? Or can you? Does less work mean better work for all?

A: To keep some rigor, in-progress critique has become much more important for my classes this year than in the past. More in-progress critiques also helped check student understanding (and misunderstanding), esp. when communication is weird… students coming in and out… some on hybrid plans, etc.

– I usually do 4 projects, this fall I did one semester long project so that everything they did was working towards one thematic direction, there was structure build on technical skills and conceptual readings but gave a lot of flexibility on any potential issues related to covid as well as conceptual flexibility for students to approach the project with their own interpretation

My class size and se-up is similar to Tom’s. I’ve cut assignments in half and requiring both digital file and prints, with an emphasis on the files. Scanning will be covered in the second week and the students learned to convert a color file into black and white in-depth last semester.

– Yes. I agree there is a loss. why do we teach B&W when we can’t be in the darkroom? Most schools already have a separate digital photo class.

– (Re assignment load/change) The project was called “The Poetics of Noticing”. I gave them readings from the White Chapel “The Everyday/ Documents of Contemporary Art” as well as readings from Georges Perec, they also did observational writing exercises they presented along with their work. I had 3 in-progress critiques and they had to meet certain technical benchmarks for each one. The main premise was based on being a slow and intention observer and to question how and what they allow themselves to notice in their day to day lives

 

Q: I’ll be teaching totally on campus with a very small class so there is room to do everything we normally do but I wonder if anyone has ideas about what to do with students who get quarantined for two weeks.

A: I’m wondering if I should give alternative “at-home” assignments or just let them make it up when they come back.

– I am arts dept chair for a boarding high school and we all pre-packed “two-week kits” for kids who have to go home to quarantine. For darkroom kids, they went home with a (full – yum!) Pringles can to convert into a pinhole viewer – no film or paper loaded. Couldn’t really grade that work, just hoping that they could have an art-related experience during a time that would be stressful/difficult for them.

– I had pre written quarantine assignments that allowed for homework to replace an in-person exercises.

– I assigned everyone to do “at-home experiments” and had a long list of possibilities: Lumens that aren’t fixed, pre-coated cyanotypes with ecodye, a camera obscura in your bedroom, etc. Every student had to do one over the course of the semester and if a student had to quarantine for 2 weeks, they made up the in-class work by doing an additional “at-home experiment”. I had great results and pre-planning for students missing days was essential because we were doing things like wet plate collodion in the classroom and I wouldn’t let a student do any of that at home.

 

Q: What are the best apps for being able to control F-stop and Shutter speed with iPhone? Arizona has the highest per capita infection in the world. I think we may need this option for spring semester.

A: There is no app that controls shutter speed on an iPhone bc it does not have a shutter.

– I have found the Lightroom app gives some control

– LE Calculator App may work

 

Q: Does anyone have a good way to replicate a Gum Bichromate print in Photoshop

A: Camera Sim (old version is free) https://camerasim.com/camerasim-free-web-app/

 

Q: What kind of assignments and how are you conducting analog classes?

A: Made head mounted camera obscuras, lumen, cyanotype, anthotypes with turmeric.

– At UArts for Spring Semester, we just added another section (that is now full) of our black and white analog, Intro to Photo course. We are 100% remote and offering 4, at capacity analog/film courses! Our program at UArts is partnering with a local service bureau to process and scan film (that is mailed in and sent back to student as well as scanned film files sent to student via dropbox) and promoting a creation of  black/white analog catalog of negatives that will be used (fingers crossed) for printing in darkroom in Fall 2021.

– Similar to UArts, we’ve been able to include film again, but have the students drop it off for myself and our lab assistant to develop and scan in for them. I definitely don’t get paid enough to babysit the scanner but the students are thankful.

– We’ve been totally remote here at UW since the end of March, and the past two quarters I had students make pinhole cameras for long exposures and most students really enjoyed the assignment and got great results. Some even experimented with shorter exposures and caffenol developer.

– I’m using the app Massive Dev (free). It takes the student through the complete film processing procedure, film type, ASA/ISO, dev. type/dilution, then the complete dev, stop, fix timed process, with timer and sounds for agitation etc.

– For students who cannot come to campus, we do outsource our 4×5 to ACCL in Akron Ohio- they ship us the film and our work studies scan the negatives this semester – it’s going to be quite the challenge
Thanks everyone for the insight + I really appreciate this 🙂

 

Q: Has anyone used any of the cellphone film scanning apps?

A: I have. I find its good for a quick preview of negs but not anything else really. “Filmbox”

– At UArts our students have used Neg Pro software that worked well during fall semester and also FilmBox scanning App (phone)for quick scans for critiques and presentations.

 

Q: Which light meter app do you prefer?

A: LightMeter or myLIghtMeter are both free

– Light Meter (WBPhoto)

– I like Pocket Light Meter.

– Lux (free and paid versions)

 

 

LINKS

https://www.butkus.org/chinon/index.html

https://www.figma.com/

https://www.theverge.com/2021/1/6/22217200/overviewer-app-teachers-overhead-camera-iphone-zoom

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1DoJDqQDDl53LHPIgajQVDoxYfgyM9VGlPhOuwuO5IEY/edit?usp=sharing

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMYTOWED2RUuRD1QWVcbdiw

 

 

 

 

 

 

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FotoFika Workshop January 6 https://rampages.us/fotofika/2020/12/31/fotofika-workshop-january-6/ Thu, 31 Dec 2020 19:32:50 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1323 Read More...

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Reminder– We will be having a FotoFika Workshop on January 6 at 4PM EST to talk about teaching darkroom photography with reduced, distanced or non-existent class darkroom time.

Online, Hybrid and Traditional all have their challenges and advantages and I am hopeful that once Covid no longer dictates our teaching we will emerge with more ways to teach than ever before. And while FotoFika began as a place s is help us develop coping strategies, we are hopeful that it can become a place where we all continue to grow as educators, students and artists.

So all are invited to come and share your experiences from the last year, to talk about different strategies and resources and ways of approaching darkroom in the age of Covid or if you wish just come and listen. We will share resources and assignments, we will build on ideas and talk about ways to approach this coming semester and beyond.

Here is a short list of possible launch points for the 2 hour session.

  • What is essential in a darkroom class?
  • How do you cover what you deem to be essential in a darkroom class?
  • The challenges of teaching darkroom without a common meeting area.
  • Different strategies for remote teaching? For socially distanced teaching? For hybrid?
  • Alt processes? At home processes?
  • Approaches to using PhotoShop for black and white post-production.
  • Specific tools?
  • Discussion about object-ness and engaging physically and over distance.

Any other ideas or strategies are welcome. See you on Wednesday January 6.

 

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FotoFika Dec 15th – Jonathan Molina-Garcia https://rampages.us/fotofika/2020/12/02/jonathan-molina-garcia/ Wed, 02 Dec 2020 21:17:41 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1308 Read More...

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For our final FotoFika of 2020, Assistant Professor, Jonathan Molina-Garcia from VCUarts will join us.  Molina-Garcia was already using hybrid teaching/critique strategies in his classroom even before COVID 19 and has since incorporated innovative remote teaching and student focused engagement at both the grad and undergraduate level.

Jonathan Molina-Garcia is an assistant professor of Photography + Film. He is a Salvadoran-American, photo-based media artist whose projects are committed to experiments in radical sharing, as a practice of both material exchanges and social communing. A citizen of the third world and an American DREAMER, his work examines various zones of conflict at the intersection of national and sexual identity, counterfeiting new criminal identities under the aegis of experimental technology and mechanical media. Heavily grounded in processes of collage, his mediums of interest also include time-based actions: performance art and video; book-making and labor crafts. His exhibitions include a solo presentation of the Bethesda Brotherhood at the Lawndale Art Center in Houston, and “Looms” at Sweet Pass Sculpture Park in Dallas. He is the recipient of the 2018 Nasher Microgrant and has been awarded various other developmental grants from organizations including the artist-run space Art Tooth, the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation and the Dallas Museum of Art. He earned his MFA in photography from the California Institute of the Arts, and graduated with dual bachelor’s degrees in photography and art history from the University of North Texas.

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Ben Gest & Atget….. https://rampages.us/fotofika/2020/11/29/ben-gest-atget/ Sun, 29 Nov 2020 21:02:59 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1300 Read More...

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This Wednesday Ben Gest will be joining us to continue our conversation about critiques, he’ll be introducing us to his critique software – Atget Studio.

Atget Studio provides a simple digital platform that makes a back-and-forth exchange between creator and teacher fast and effective. Ask questions, share your art and receive critical and clear feedback that helps you better communicate your ideas.

Gest is the Associate Chair of Part-Time Programs at the International Center of Photography (ICP), and has taught art at the School of Visual Arts (SVA), Barnard College and the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) in NYC and Princeton University and Rutgers University in NJ and The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Columbia College Chicago. His work is in the permanent collections at The Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; LaSalle Bank, Chicago; Tweed Museum of art, Duluth and The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City. His photographs have been exhibited in solo exhibitions at the Contemporary Museum, Baltimore; the Renaissance Society, Chicago; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Ben Gest is currently based in NYC.

See you Wednesday, DECEMBER 2nd, 4pm EST

at:ZOOM ID:https://zoom.us/j/93761631388?pwd=eTYxL0NSVkVNWDh4SnVhclFXTEorQT09

Zoom – PWD – fotofika
https://zoom.us/j/93761631388

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Terry Barrett! https://rampages.us/fotofika/2020/11/16/terry-barrett/ Mon, 16 Nov 2020 20:03:13 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1272 Read More...

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Please join FotoFika this week as Anne, Betsy and John host Terry Barrett for “Interactive Crits”an informal discussion of rationales and strategies for studio critiques during troubled times.

4pm EST – Wednesday, 11/18/20
Zoom Link: https://zoom.us/j/93761631388

Terry Barrett is the author of books on criticism and aesthetics including Criticizing Photographs and CRITS. A new edition of Criticizing Photographs is being published later this month and is available for pre-order now (Routledge Press). CRITS is a manual written to and for students about studio critiques published (Bloomsbury, 2019).

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Critique https://rampages.us/fotofika/2020/10/28/critique/ Wed, 28 Oct 2020 17:23:51 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1257 Read More...

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My thinking about critique was piqued for three (and then more) reasons this fall. Before the semester started in a meeting with John and Anne, Anne suggested we watch this video, The Room of Silence addressing ways in which some BIPOC students feel in critiques. I began to think a lot about race and critiques. I had always fancied myself a good listener and clung to the words of a non-white student who assured me that I was “warm” when I questioned my own critiquing deficinecies. But learning to question what we think we know, is I think one of the major lessons of 2020 and this semester I’ve been feeling that I need to challenge my assumptions–and be open to others challenging them. Which of course is what we are supposed to be teaching in critiques anyway…

https://vimeo.com/161259012?fbclid=IwAR3tgZ3ykRhKLzT01ICCmYd-OPs_r8YvX-wuVOHJObfC3EeYMuuBUzRyx0k

The second thing was well, the semester itself. Teaching in person small classes spaced out with no darkroom time, no close time and a mid-level asynchronous class with 30 students known by name only– I began to get frustrated by the lack of deep engagement. No one it seemed could say anything even slightly critical or negative about each others work. So when I do its sounds like I’m just out of it or adhering to old ideas.

And then a former student sent me this Tik/Tok by Ghost Honey–which is funny and was funny until I realized that as much as old school art school critiques drove me crazy– the only thing that still happens is that people say “I like the colors”–

https://twitter.com/tylergaca/status/1313308793237721088?lang=en

And then someone posted Terry Barretts tips for running a critique and that launched a discussion on the Photography Professors page that made me realize that I do not use silence well, at all. And I wondered what I could do to get better at this thing I’ve been supposedly good at for the past 20 years. 

And well, I have a lot more to say but its Wednesday and FotoFika day and I am looking forward to hearing what others are thinking as well.

Looking forward to beginning to dig more deeply into this issue later today.

Betsy 

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Nick Shepard Loves “Concept Board” https://rampages.us/fotofika/2020/10/27/nick-shepard-loves-concept-board/ Tue, 27 Oct 2020 14:28:00 +0000 https://fotofika.org/?p=1263 Read More...

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Two weeks ago I was lucky enough to login to Nick Shepard’s presentation at the SPE Online Conference for the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast Chapters.  The amazing Nick Shepard created multi camera studio set up in an AirBnB with borrowed equipment and available lighting, using his laptop, a cell phone and an old 5D Mark II tethered via Capture One.  He also shared his favorite online critique space “Concept Board” which we will demo this week during FotoFika – We plan to have Nick on at another date but for now here is the recording of his fantastic talk.

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