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AGM62 Photography Research Project Stage 1 Posts

AGM62 Hawthorn by Bill Vaughn 17 November 2020

While researching the subject of hawthorns, I initially found reference to these trees in books that covered the subject in general. There were brief mentions in a selection of tomes that gave a taste of the back ground of this tree, but they were quite general. I then discovered an enlightening book by Bill Vaughn titled Hawthorn – The Tree That Has Nourished, Healed and Inspired Through The Ages. Published in 2015, it is a combination of political, religious and natural histories and Vaughn’s own relationship with the hawthorn. The author lives on a large plot of land in North America called Dark Acres that is dominated by the tree. Throughout the book, Vaughn intertwines his experiences on this land, his family history and how the tree has impacted humanity. The book is a wealth of inspiration and information and I will studying it in greater detail over the coming months.

The aspect which is most useful is that Vaughn does not just focus on the hawthorn in relation to Great Britain or the United States. The author looks at the influence of the tree on a global basis and how it interconnects places in the world through invisible and visible means.

The book is divided into twelve chapters that cover a particular aspect in each one. My aim is to extrapolate the berries of relevant information in each chapter then utlise these as starting points of further inquiry and photographic exploration.

Chapter 1: The World’s Busiest Treet

Chapter 2: Under the Hawthorn Tree

Chapter 3: The Celtic Forge

Chapter 4: The Hedge Layers

Chapter 5: The American Thorn

Chapter 6: The Return of the Native

Chapter 7: The Tree of Heroes

Chapter 8: The Medicine Tree

Chapter 9: A Tree for All Seasons

Chapter 10: Essence and Spinessence

Chapter 11: The Crown of Thorns

Chapter 12: The Warrior Queen

One of my critical and important observations of this book is that there are no photographs, apart from the cover.

There are a selection of illustrations by the author, two 19th Century engravings, two maps and photograph of an owl. This is not a criticism, but a pertinent observation. It echoes the words of David Campany in his contemplation of the use of images to identify plants and trees.

‘Being a medium of specifics means photography is not well suited to generalities. A photograph can record the uniqueness of an object but it cannot designate the general category to which it might belong. What makes it useful in compiling an inventory makes it quite useless in defining the group.’

(Campany, D. 2020 pp. 116)

Campany continues with his stance in putting forward the example of images found in books to be used for identifying plants. Campany purports that although photography can record a specimen, but not the species, as each individual specimen is a variation of that species. Campany states that botanical identification is better served by drawing than by photography as:

‘The skill of a botanical illustrator is to look at several specimens and then produce an average. The average does not exist in reality but it is useful to have it.’

(Campany, D, 2020 pp. 116)

This is highlighted by Vaughn’s own illustration of a hawthorn branch that covers all the seasonal appearances of blossom, leaves and berries.

How this relates to my current project is that I am recording individual hawthorns to highlight their variations, not providing a generalisation of a species. Each tree will have their particular characteristics recorded to show their differences.

References

Campany, D. (2020). On Photographs. London: Thames & Hudson Ltd.

Thehawthorneffect.com. 2020. Hawthorn | Crataegus | Crataegus Succulenta | Bill Vaughn | Crown Of Thorns | Enclosures | World’s Busiest Tree. [online] Available at: <http://www.thehawthorneffect.com/&gt; [Accessed 17 November 2020].

Vaughn, B. 2015. Hawthorn – The Tree That Has Nourished, Healed, And Inspired Through The Ages. New Haven & London: Yale University Press.

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AGM62 Photography Research Project Stage 1 Posts

AGM62 Myoung Ho Lee 19 October 2020

While reading David Campany’s recently published book, On Photographs, I came across a pertinent section in connection with trees and photography. Using the series entitled ‘Tree’ by the South Korean Photographer Myoung Ho Lee and one of the images as an example, Campany states that the series can be seen as:

‘A meditation upon the artificial terms and conventions by which photographic images can become knowledge.’

(Campany, D. 2020 pp. 116)

Figure 1: Myoung Ho Lee, Tree #3, 2006 – From The Series ‘Tree’, 2006-2012

Myong Ho Lee erected a giant white backdrop which Campany describes as:

‘Turning space into a stage upon which the tree presents itself (or performs itself ) for the camera. The framing is wide, allowing us to see not just the isolated tree but also the whole drama of its isolation.’

(Campany, D. 2020 pp. 116)

I had also seen another of Myoung Ho Lee’s Tree series at the Among The Trees exhibition when I visited back in September 2020.

Figure 1: Myoung Ho Lee, Tree #2, 2012 – From The Series ‘Tree’, 2006-2012

In the exhibition’s accompanying brochure, Myoung Ho Lee asserts:

‘It’s as if the tree unites all: the ground, the sky and man in between. In East Asian philosophy the universe breaks down into three parts: Chun-Ji-In. Chun means the sky, Ji means the ground and In means human. Since a tree connects all three, I feel very much that a tree is like a universe.’

(Myong Ho Lee. 2020 pp. 106)

The brochure also gave a brief background into Myong Ho Lee’s tree photography, which resonated with my own passion for this subject. As mentioned in his Artist Statement, Myoung Ho Lee:

‘Began photographing trees because they are ‘something you see everyday, but we often overlook them; we forget their value and just pass by.’ Since 2004 he has focused attention on individual trees in the landscape by treating them like studio portraits, dissociating them from their immediate context and spotlighting their true shapes and forms.’

(Rugoff, R, 2020. pp 155)

The statement continues to describe Myoung Ho Lee’s practice motivation:

‘Lee selects his subjects for their personalities and patiently observes them through different seasons and at varying times of the day before deciding how to portray them.’

(Rugoff, R, 2020. pp 155

Next, the method:

‘In a complex performance-like process involving heavy machinery and skilled production crews, he isolates a chosen tree from its background by installing an expanse of white canvas behind it. Though evidence of this elaborate mechanical intervention is removed during retouching, the backdrop retains traces of the hoisting operation.’

(Rugoff, R, 2020. pp 155

The method results with the image of the tree being framed ‘naturally’ by the tree’s actual habitat.

What I found interesting is comparing the way in which Campany uses Lee’s images of trees in relation to photography to Lee’s motivations. Lee is portraying trees in particular way (philosophically, sensually and metaphorically), while Campany is taking a more literal approach.

Campany states that:

‘Being a medium of specifics means photography is not well suited to generalities. A photograph can record the uniqueness of an object but it cannot designate the general category to which it might belong. What makes it useful in compiling an inventory makes it quite useless in defining the group.’

(Campany, D. 2020 pp. 116)

Campany continues with his stance in putting forward the example of images found in books to be used for identifying plants. Campany purports that although photography can record a specimen, but not the species, as each individual specimen is a variation of that species. Campany states that botanical identification is better served by drawing than by photography as:

‘The skill of a botanical illustrator is to look at several specimens and then produce an average. The average does not exist in reality but it is useful to have it.’

(Campany, D, 2020 pp. 116)

Campany takes his observations further by stating that:

‘Photographs of specimens are, of course, extremely useful in their own way. They show not the average or the ideal but the actuality. A photograph of a plant might be able to show an instance of mutation by which a deviation is made from the species average. It might be able to show the specific effects of the environment on that particular specimen.’

(Campany, D, 2020 pp. 116)

The most pertinent comment that Campany makes in relation to choosing Lee’s work is:

‘To ease study, a specimen is best isolated from its surroundings.’

(Campany, D, 2020 pp. 116)

But the point of Lee’s work is not to make study of a particular specimen easier through isolation – it is to make an individual tree ‘visible’ through isolation. It also is make the viewer contemplate and mediate on the concept of ‘tree’ as a single entity and not just part of the landscape.

I also questioned my own motivations for this project when comparing these two viewpoints. I realised that am not looking to create ‘literal’ interpretations of particular individual trees within Bushy Park. Although I have spent the past seven years taking photographs of many of the trees within the park, I’m not seeking the perfect ‘tree’ picture. There is more to consider about the ecology of this managed environment and how the trees are part of it. Also, how trees and their ecology are portrayed artistically within photography.

References

Campany, D. (2020). On Photographs. London: Thames & Hudson Ltd.

Rugoff, R., Among The Trees. (2020). London: Hayward Gallery Publishing.

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