Regarding Our Intelligence

Here is a substantial excerpt from Mr. Mayhew’s Honors course “Writing Jazz” blog:

“Intelligence, in any field, is driven by the desire to discover the inner logic of things, how things work from the inside out. Education, even at the highest levels, tends to emphasize the acquisition of knowledge, but erudition is not intelligence.

“If you take an approach to learning that is oriented toward discovering how things work, you will acquire a lot of erudition along the way, but, more importantly, you will develop real intelligence, which I define as the capacity to draw connections within and between complex systems.

“In some sense the knowledge (erudition) is the easy part. For example, if you asked me analyze the rhythmic interactions between Paul Chambers, Philly Joe Jones, and Red Garland in the Miles Davis quintet rhythm section, it would be very difficult. It would require a lot of close listening and analysis… Jazz provides a good opportunity to exercise this kind of intelligence because of its complexity and subtlety. Since jazz is already a complex musical style, and takes place as one part of a complex culture, then interpreting its place within culture involves relating two complex systems to each other.

“Now I think you’ll say that to this you have to be very, very intelligent… I would put it another way: the way to become intelligent is to do things like this. This shouldn’t really be a wholly new approach for you. I think good students figure this out for themselves eventually. Sometimes very intelligent students, however, don’t really get it. They still think of education mostly as acquiring knowledge and doing well in classes rather than trying to figure out the secret logic of things.”

(Who was it who referred to revealing the hidden structure of things? Metzker? Naw. G. Spencer Brown? Nope. It’ll come to me… Anyway, the point is — one of the points is — that we get smarter through the doing. We don’t need to know what or how before we start out on something, but rather at the middle or the end (ideally; no guarantee, of course). Ah, it popped into my head: the hidden structure quote might be from Emmet Gowin, in the video we have and will likely watch in class soon.)

Assessment Criteria for This Semester

(Yes, this chalkboard picture is meant to segue from the above post.)

In an effort to broaden the six-point system for projects last fall, here is a list of criteria that earn 3 points each:

Film & Contact Sheets: making well-exposed and developed negatives; making correct and useful proofs.

Following Directions: using the assigned set of concerns to shoot; observing deadlines.

Interpretation: going beyond the letter of the law, trying stuff to see what can resonate for the viewer.

Printmaking: exercising one’s craft to produce engaging pictures.

Late or incomplete work at a given deadline earns no credit; reassessment may occur, but is not guaranteed.

Macro/Micro

For the Art Department’s annual theme show, the game (in our medium) seems to be all about scale, and relationships. Some of the pictures may create a seemless illusion, but there is something also to the idea of revealing one’s methods and intentions as one goes.

One scenario: blow up 20 or so balloons, and present the record of it all as salmon roe on top of sushi. Sounds lame, I know, but this is not the medium. The first concern is how it looks.

Today’s example was to photograph a toy marble with a canteloupe. They can be shown one in front of the other, overlapping, or side by side. The lens could be at table-top level in order to compare the orbs’ height. The frame might be placed so tightly that the entire melon does not fit into the frame (implying a kind of enormity). Strong sidelight, directed just so, could cast an elongated shadow from the marble. All of these strategies would simply come across as exercises until you push the situation to a new extreme.

Allen Ginsburg was fond of saying “First thought, best thought.” That’s a good intuitive approach for a poet; a version of that applies to our way of getting into a situation, but it’s in the shooting session that ideas evolve rather than executing whatever notes one jotted ahead of time.

Don’t discount the role of titles & captions, either. This is Atget’s “Fete du Trone,” at the Art Institute.

Pinhole Photography

You can make a camera out of a cardboard box easily, in under a half-hour. You’ll need a sturdy box, like a snug-lidded shoebox or an oatmeal box; flat black paint to darken its interior; hmm… maybe I can supply the rest. Watch these:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4pdY82vjss&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeBY18KsaXg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeBY18KsaXg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeBY18KsaXg

Choice Camera Choices for Class

You will prefer a reliable brand of 35mm SLR (single lens reflex) or RF (rangefinder) camera for the course at Barrington Huge School, among which are Canon, Minolta, Nikon, Olympus and Pentax. Only one lens is necessary; a flash attachment is not. Likely hunting grounds these days include Alpine Camera in Des Plaines, craigslist.org, and Cash Converters in Hoffman Estates. Maybe you’ll need new merch from a place such as Batteries Plus; maybe you’ll need a rushed overhaul at a service joint like Digicam in Arlington Heights, or Alpine.

Whatever you do, don’t get this model:

Devoto Holiday Roundup

Happy holidays to all, from hours-old Isaac to SteveandGinger.

Now, to re-capitulate what’s up in class: some of you are shooting sleep-related pictures (see the earlier post “Perchance” to begin brainstorming) or shooting that project again out of dissatisfaction with your negatives; bully, I say. One or two amongst the AP roster are finishing/continuing with “Layers” and the long-term port-buddy project.

‘Twould be prudent to re-consider the content of earlier posts “JingJingJingJingChingChingChingChing,” “Better Negatives Through Chemistry,” “Build-A-Room,” and “Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision,” especially since that show closes on the 10th, and it’s an excellent opportunity to write a review for Bonus Karma.

Carpe the diem, everyone; carpe the diem.

Perchance

Today is for brainstorming… so add your comments over the weekend.

Entre chien et loup

REM

Hypnagogic myoclonus

Recurring dreams

Writing ’em down

Fear of falling, fear of the unknown

The Bogeyman

Phobias

Finishing the last dream of the night

Flying/floating

Oversleeping anxiety (not arriving)

“Dream voice” awakens you

Handouts Preview

What follows is the content of pages distributed by Your Obedient Servant (wait: that was Orson Welles) on the first day of the new academic year.

 

Welcome (and welcome back) to The Wonderful World of Photography.
This is primarily a studio course, a course of picture-making (the shooting is the homework) in which more than half of the days in class are lab time (either film processing or printing). There are also writing assignments, some of which will require a visit to an exhibit. Once every quarter we all take a field trip to a promising location that is not normally practical for you to visit.

You’ll need ready access to a 35mm film camera (or a medium-format roll film camera) every week of the term. Art classes traditionally cover supplies by charging lab fees; currently, $60.00 covers two packages of 25 -sheet packages of paper for printing, chemicals, negative file pages and a minimal amount of mount board. Other expenses include film (typically eight or more rolls, averaging 4.50 each), more paper (15-20.00/pkg.), and more mount board. Advanced students often shop elsewhere for stuff like fiber paper, printing filters and portfolio cases.

Every exercise and project that is on time, and complete with respect to its specific requirements, is awarded a good grade; work of exceptional quality (or that which is done well and early) earns a better grade. Work not turned in by the due date earns no credit.

Typical requirements may include preliminary considerations in writing; contact sheets; number and size of work prints, and of exhibition-quality prints. The making of negatives and proof prints is also important enough to be awarded credit for conscientious work: for each roll’s reasonably accurate exposure, for decent processing, and for a correctly made, useful contact sheet. More film shot earns more credit. In addition to evident effort and nice results, credit is awarded for punctuality, preparedness, start-up stuff (such as folder, camera, film), incentive, occasional collaboration, and, of course, “godliness” (cleanliness). Mounted work, as many as one from each project, is usually required from everyone beyond first semester. Writing projects may take such forms of presentations in class, reviews of selected exhibits, interviews of artists, and responses to essays.

One of the stipulations on the application for pass/fail status allows for reverting to a letter grade if the situation warrants. I’ll probably just record a letter grade at the first or third quarter anyway, since those grades are not kept in the computer, but meant instead to be more of a notice to parents.

I welcome work beyond the problems that have been assigned (each for a specific reason), but extra credit is never in place of assigned projects. Photographers who know what they want to accomplish, or who have unique opportunities, make a proposal in advance rather than sidestep the curriculum. Quite often, those workers are assembling a portfolio or are contributing to some other long-range project.

OK, so here’s what you should do to get started, and when to do it:
1. Complete the quurvey today in class.
2. Get a folder to use just for this course. It needs to have two pockets and a three-ring binder inside. Present your folder to me tomorrow (or sometime later this week) in order to receive credit.
3. Bring to class with you, both Thursday and Friday, a camera you are considering using for the course.
4. Get yourself a roll of Kodak 400TX film by Friday (don’t send Mom!). If you are an advanced shooter and you know you want or need a different emulsion, please tell me about that before you do it.

jdionesotes@barrington220.org
jdionesotes@prodigy.net
https://photodevoto.wordpress.com

 

Fo-Do Fussday Quurvey Votre nom, S.V.P.___________________

1. What is your current e-mail address?

2. Do you know which camera you’ll be using?
If so, what is it?
If not, what leads do you have?
Do you have access to a tripod?
How about a cable release?

3. How much sleep do you know you need in order to function well?
What new (to you) food have you enjoyed in the last year?

4. What music do you enjoy, likely more than most people in the
room? Do you play an instrument; are you one? Do you read?

5. Write much? What do you seek out to read?

6. What other areas of expertise can you claim? Any other expressive outlets? Do you engage in any spiritual activities/disciplines?

7. What do you want to know from me today? (Seriously; ask stuff that will be useful for everyone here to know: about the course, the department, the school; jazz…)

 

 

School is the perfect situation in which to take chances: you won’t go to jail, or to hell, or get beat up for trying and not succeeding. You have people around you who care, who are interested, and are there to help.

Don’t think of this class as one which educates your mind; rather, it will sophisticate you, which is different. Sophistication is knowledge that’s acquired in the course of having a purpose. You know why you want the information at the moment that you put your hand on it. You’re not just storing it up for a rainy day.

Aspects of sophistication: love and style, spirituality and street smarts. Street smarts? Shrewdness and toughness? To protect something soft that is going to be in danger if it’s exposed at the wrong time and place. To protect a soul. You’re learning about the course of art, the course of society, the course of the world, the course of your life.

Set up a personal timetable for the semester and understand it. Break the term into days, weeks, months. You’ll be surprised how little time there is to shoot. Do it at the earliest opportunity you can make for yourself. Don’t put off working on projects that demand a lot of creative thinking until late in the day or night. Attack such problems and creative thinking when you are fresh and rested. At the beginning of each day organize your thoughts; write them down, if that helps.

Always try to understand that you are your own best enemy. Be nice to yourself when you are tackling the unknown. Realize that you are going to fail a lot before you succeed. Allow time for this to happen. Creative work is not mechanical. It deals with your subconscious, your view of yourself and your emotions. If you’re at odds with your friends or family and you are depressed, don’t do creative work. Do mechanical, non-reasoning, unemotional work such as cleaning up or organizing. Don’t try to do more than is possible in the time you have available to you.

Everyone needs to get out more.

Photographs are made in the light.

 Making new negatives releases endorphins.

Where you stand and where you put the edges makes clear your intention; the center takes care of itself.

The earlier in the photographic process you take care of details, the easier everything is.

“If you suffer any sense of confusion in life, the best thing you can do is make little forms.” -Robert Frost
“Be patient; be consistent; be sincere.” –Fred Anderson

Get the Guinness Book of World Records on the telephone. The suspense is killing me.

film

Last year 23 rolls of film were processed in the first three days of school.

(Don’t ask me how I remember this.)

I have a suspicion that AML and OK et alii will surpass this record next week. We’d like to have everything ready for you, so how much will you have when you walk in? Leave a comment here.

Watch this space for updates.