| "Puisque
tous ces mystères nous dépassent, feignons d'en être les organisateurs"
Jean Cocteau
As all these mysteries are beyond us, we could feign to be the organizers,
wrote Jean Cocteau.
It is a wonderful sentence to describe the mystery of Photography.
If a photograph is initially taken to show or reveal something,
for me it is much more interesting when it suggests something, a
feeling that is difficult to put into words.
Photography is more an art of perception than an art of creation.
How do you show or reveal something that you are touched by through
photography? How do you not only depict the subject, but also the
emotion you feel in the presence of this subject?
When I am moved by a photograph, it is through the feeling, the
emotion of the "author" of this image. If a portrait is
to be a good one, a true portrait, the image must contain the personality
of the model as well as of the photographer.
A great portrait is a meeting between three people: the model, the
photographer and the viewer.
Photography: to write with light. This is obvious...
The light is not only the means to inscribe images on your negative
(or memory card), the light is also YOUR ACCOMPLICE to express your
emotion about the subject you are drawn to, to share with other
people who will be looking at your photographs. The light is your
best friend to render your feelings.
Any source of light has the potential to create "good photography".
The sun or even a simple light bulb hanging from the ceiling could
lend a wonderful light for a portrait, a nude, or anything, really.
Photography is primarily an art of contemplation. We are photographers
because we need to share our emotions.Technique is only secondary,
but it is necessary if we are to express our feelings in the best
way possible.
Many photographers are great photographers, without beeing great
technicians.
They know perfectly the technique they need for their expression.
The technique is the instrument but more important is the music
you are yearning to express.
Letter to the students: Your emotion is more important than the
subject.
At first I have to say that you will find in Tuscany a real
beautiful light and It will be the best place to improve the way
to work essentially with natural light, as much outside than inside
the house.
I will push you to realize that the most beautiful light is not
in professional photography studios, but around you, everywhere.
The way in using light in photography is not "making lighting"
but just looking at the light and thinking about what could result
in your photographs.
I will emphasize during our week together the mystery of photography,
about the paradox of recording reality with the camera, but at the
same time capturing a certain intangible mystery, a suggestion of
something not seen that makes a photograph interesting.
What is a good photograph?
For me , it is something that is lurking, lingering, something that
you can not describe, but something, like a vibration that touches
you.
A good photograph is always a small miracle. We need to learn how
to perfect our technique in order to be able to capture these little
miracles which present themselves to us for the taking.
During this week I would like to leave competition with others and
with yourselves behind. I would like you to just be who you are,
what you feel, what you want to express through photography.
There is no sense in making a "beautiful picture" if
your heart is not in it.
I would like each of you to arrive at the end of the week with ONE
image ( or even better more than one ) that truly demonstrates this
"feeling" for you. An image which says "This is me".
"I am completely in this image"
I would like you to bring, together with your portfolio, two to
three images that you like a lot. (Not your own!) It could be a
famous photograph by a famous photographer or a picture in a magazine
or any anonymous image like an old postcard for example. The idea
is that I will ask you to each to try to explain why you like these
photographs and after that try to explain how the photograph is
made, and how and why the technique used in each image lends to
it a certain emotion. Please choose photographs where the lighting
is especially important.
The essential aim of this workshop is that each of you will come
back with a better awareness of light and all the ways we can use
it to express what we want in a photograph. In addition to the light,
I would like you to become more conscious of the final result that
you are after before setting out to make an image.I do not remember
who said: less is more but for me the best way to express ourselves
with photography is often to show less, to avoid things which have
no importance in an image and which could distract the eye.
We will work with models but It won't be a typical nudes workshop,
I am waiting for more than formal nudes, something more than showing
a beautiful body with beautiful light . I would like you to do also
portraits: Faces are the most mysterious part of a body , but also
you could do just images of atmosphere, with always the aim to express
the emotion you would like to render in the image with the light
. I will ask also to each of you to do a self-portrait to express:
"Me in Tuscany". A way to express your feeling being there
during this week, far or not from your home, far from your usual
life. Doing a self-portrait is a good way to push you to express
yourself sincerely.
- Philippe Pache was born 1961 in Lausanne, Switzerland
- Education 1978-1982 School of Applied Arts of Vevey, Switzerland
- Free-lance photographer since 1982
- Since 1982, many solo and group exhibitions in Institutions
and Museums like Houston Center for Photography, Houston Museum
of Fine Arts, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of photography, Bibliothèque
Nationale of Paris, Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie,
Arles, France, Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Oriental Gallery,
Peking, Cina…
- Many solo exhibitions in galleries like Camera Obscura, Paris,
Galerie Municipale du Chateau d'Eau, Toulouse, France, Galerie
Bodo Niemann, Berlin, Germany, The Photographers' Gallery, London,
FotoGaleria Teatro San Martin, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Photo
Gallery International, Tokyo, Japan, Blue Sky Gallery, Portland
Oregon…
- Works is in many private and public collections like Bibliotèque
Nationale, Paris. Muséè de l'Eliséee, Lausanne.
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tokyo. Museum of Fine
Art, Houston. Museet for Fotokunst, Odense, Denmark. Galerie
Municipale du Chateau d'Eau, Toulouse, France, Museum of Fine
Arts, Buenos Aires.
- Represented by Galerie Camera Obscura, Paris. Photo Gallery
International, Tokyo. Paul Kopeikin Gallery, Los Angeles. The
Photographers' Gallery, London. Galerie Bodo Niemann, Berlin,
Germany. Krisal Galerie, Geneva.
- Professional works also for magazines and advertising and
photographer for the ballet, for Bejart Ballet Lausanne (1992
- 2001) and for the Prix de Lausanne (internationa contest dor
young dancers) as official photographer since 1993.
www.philippepache.com
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