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Monday, February 8, 2010

'What You'd Get if You Threw Ansel Adams Out of a Plane'

Posted by on Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 4:13 PM

AGustafson_01.jpg
A Seattle artist named Aaron Gustafson today announces he is "FIRST TO TAKE LARGE-FORMAT PHOTOGRAPHS WHILE IN FREEFALL."

Seattle-based artist Aaron Gustafson recently completed a series of large-format landscape photographs that he shot while freefalling through the skies of New York and Washington State. He became the first person to take large-format photographs while skydiving.

“I wanted to upend the norms by making a [large-format] camera to be used in a wildly different way,” Gustafson said. “This is what you’d get if you threw Ansel Adams out of a plane.”

Gustafson designed a helmet-mounted 4x5-inch film camera, and during the period of several months he made one photograph per jump while skydiving at speeds greater than 130 miles per hour.

“There is a long history between photography and adventure,” artist-photographer Arthur Ou said of the project. “Gustafson's work … continues on this lineage, though not without a sense of wit and sincere irony.”

Artist Miranda Lichtenstein added, “Gustafson contemplates the sublime by jumping into it—literally … Picture [Dutch conceptual artist] Bas Jan Ader working for the [US] Geological Survey.”

Gustafson specially designed the camera that he used for the series. He made a prototype and then worked with a machinist and a plastics specialist to realize the final design. The camera is a cube-shaped acrylic and aluminum box that contains a wide-angle lens and houses a single sheet of 4x5-inch film at a time.

After learning to solo skydive, Gustafson made approximately 25 photo-dedicated jumps in New York and Washington State. The photographs show expansive aerial views of the Shawangunk Ridge in New York, and the Cascade Range and Puget Sound in Washington State. Subtle blur in the images alludes to how they were made.

“Photography is in a strange place now where everyone is taking camera-phone snapshots and posting them online,” Gustafson said. “But photography can still be grand and larger-than-life. This project came out of a desire for that. It’s a hybrid of new and old, calm and chaos.”

In other news, unnamed videographer becomes first videographer to shoot video of photographer taking large-format photographs while in freefall.

 

Comments (14) RSS

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emor 1
gimmick.
Posted by emor on February 8, 2010 at 4:23 PM
2
Lame. I don't care about the gear used. The end result just isn't interesting.
Posted by Chester Copperpot on February 8, 2010 at 4:32 PM
3
Please don't compare this guy to Ansel Adams, who actually took photographs worth looking at. While they weren't jumping out of their respective airplanes, please see Bradford Washburn, Austin Post, and John Scurlock for interesting examples of aerial photography.
Posted by AnselAdams>>>You on February 8, 2010 at 4:53 PM
Dee 4
I am the first person to ever sit in the space I am sitting in right now. Sure, the chair has been sat in before, but the Earth is hurdling though space around the sun, the sun around some other shit, that other shit is expanding... evidently, it's all too complex for me, but it's still true. Every day is a new frontier.
Posted by Dee on February 8, 2010 at 5:29 PM
Free Lunch 5
@1 - Almost all modern art is based on gimmick. All it requires to be taken seriously as an artist is to pick a theme and stick with it, ad nauseum.

How many flags did Jasper Johns paint?
Posted by Free Lunch on February 8, 2010 at 6:05 PM
6
Hey, that's pretty cool! That's a beautiful photo -- sorta like a view from heaven...
Posted by Hobnobwsnobs on February 8, 2010 at 8:20 PM
7
I think the point is not whether it's a gimmick or not – because ultimately that doesn't matter if the work is good – but that there's just too much explanation. (Where are those quotes from?) Explaining why your gear is more grand than a cell phone camera automatically draws comparisons, especially when people are seeing it online, that might not be very flattering. Also, no one should ever say they were the first at anything, ever.

That being said, if they are printed well and huge it seems like they could be great. I think the black and white ones are maybe the most successful because they have the potential to reach into epic (if not Ansel Adams) territory – whereas the color shots actually do remind me of cell phone photos taken out of a plane. The b&w are more abstract and timeless. You can imagine Darius Kinsey in the mountains below, or stay up in the sky.

Yay! art break
Posted by Strath http://pacific-standard.blogspot.com on February 8, 2010 at 8:23 PM
8
Ansel Adams is a twat, so who gives a fuck. Way to destroy the best thing about landscape vistas, which is atmospheric perspective.

I hope that up in heaven, Albert Bierstadt is kicking the shit out of ol' Ansel.
Posted by Oscar on February 8, 2010 at 8:46 PM
9
i guess if you discount the photographs recon planes took during spinouts and nosedives, yes.
Posted by hatty on February 8, 2010 at 10:01 PM
Fnarf 10
I'm not a fan of Ansel Adams, but I will grant that he was highly skilled in the matters of composition and exposure. This guy's featured shot is just a big mass of lens flare. A stunt, not an artwork.

Besides, 4x5 is barely "large format". I call it medium, dammit. You can buy a pocketable folding 4x5 camera. Let's see this guy jump with 8x10, maybe I'll be impressed.
Posted by Fnarf http://www.facebook.com/fnarf on February 8, 2010 at 11:08 PM
11
skydivers, rope jumpers, and BASE jumpers have been doing their thing with helmet-mounted cameras for decades. How is this something new? Oh, right, they're calling it "modern art."

One more for the "lame" category.
Posted by camhead on February 9, 2010 at 7:46 AM
Greg 12
It's great that this guy designed his own camera, but Ansel Adams he ain't. It takes a hell of a lot more than just big film and a gimmick to take a great picture.
Posted by Greg on February 9, 2010 at 8:10 AM
funtown 13
I think some of ya'll are missing the point -- being eye-to-eye with the sky and capturing that moment... when was the last time most of us have done anything that pushes a boundary, let alone capture in a moment of chaos, a slice of tranquility that epic ... man, how about kudos for effort? It seems much easier to be a reviewer than do-er... Armchair quarterbacks. I say props to creating art. art is how we truly live.
Posted by funtown on February 9, 2010 at 10:10 AM
funtown 14
and just a note that the photo stands alone quite well, I think. if i didn't know all of everything else, I'd say it is still a beautiful shot.
Posted by funtown on February 9, 2010 at 10:12 AM

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