From Crystal Meth to Urine: 6 Photographers Doing Creative Things to Their Film
Sarah Schoenfeld exposes her film to crystal meth. Phillip Stearns shocks his film with 15,000 electrical volts. Brigette Bloom uses pee to make film soup. Luce Lebart shows us what happens when mold grows on photographic plates. Throughout the years, we've featured countless artists reinventing the rules of what photography can be. Here are just a few of them. Finding Magic in Old, Forgotten, Mold-Covered Photographic PlatesAs director of the collections of the French Society of Photography, art historian Luce Lebart spends most of her time making sure the objects in her … Bacteria Found in Jacuzzis, Adult Video Stores, and Human Orifices Is Used to Construct Celestial ImagesFor Cosmos, Florida-based photographer Marcus DeSieno collects various strains of bacteria and breeds them on the surface of positive film slides depicting scenes … Heroin, Meth, LSD, Ketamine, Speed and More Captured on FilmWe know what most drugs look like—at least in material form that is. But what does their matter, their breakdown, their essence look like? … Photographer Urinates on Film to Create Surprisingly Beautiful ImagesFor Float On, Hawaii-based photographer Brigette Bloom soaks her film in urine, creating ethereal bubbles over a desert landscape… Photographer Phillip Stearns Shocks Film in ‘High Voltage Image Making’For High Voltage Image Making, Brooklyn-based artist Phillip Stearns fundamentally alters the structure of color film by administering as many as 15,000 electrical volts… For the full newsletter experience (including original articles not found anywhere else, exclusive opportunities + more), consider subscribing below! |
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