Chuck Close Daguerreotype Portraits

A good portrait should reveal answers about the person, yet leave enough room for more questions. In some cases, the old ways become exciting methods for producing refreshing images and themes. A good example of this is Chuck Close's daguerreotype portrait of Kara Walker.

Chuck Close is one of the most prominent portrait artists of this generation. He is famed for his extremely large canvas paintings of people's faces, using varying grid and pixel methods to create smaller artworks in the larger portrait. Despite having prospagnosia (face blindness) and having suffered a seizure which left his arms and legs weakened, he continues to produce artworks on the same scale. Over the last decade, he has experimented with different forms of photography, with most of his famous photographs done with the daguerreotype process.

This particular portrait is a collaboration between Close and his artist friend Kara Walker, known for her work dealing with race, sexuality and identity. Walker poses in profile and is captured in silhouette, a more common form of portraiture in the 19th century. Close used daguerreotype photography, of the earliest photographic processes over a century old which involves long preparation, exposure and developing times.

The end result of these artists experimenting with old processes is a beautifully haunting profile portrait in the shadows, the outline of Walker's shoulders and head clearly visible, with the bare minimum amount of light showing enough detail on her face. For this 2007 portrait, Close was awarded the 2nd prize in the Portraits category of the World Press Photo.

For more on Chuck Close, check out this previous entry on him and his not so typical daguerreotypesTime magazine has a good profile on Kara Walker. To find out more about the daguerreotype process, have a look at Louis Daguerre, the father of photography.


return to yourself

'If you feel lost, disappointed, hesitant, or weak, return to yourself, to who you are, here and now. And when you get there, you will discover yourself, like a lotus flower in full bloom, even in a muddy pond, beautiful and strong.'
Masaru Emoto

Visionary Art - Martina Hoffman

Curandera - Martina Hoffman

To create is synonymous to breathing for most artists.If I don't create, I slowly loose my center and energy. Generally speaking it seems less important what kind of a creative process I'm involved in, just as long as I am creating. And what matters to me most here, is how the creative process makes me feel. It fills me with excitement, lets me get in touch with my innermost being and gives me a sense of deep satisfaction and joy. Creating has always been the essential and most important part of my life, and I perceive the creative process as a way of nourishing my soul. Another great perk is the facility of getting in touch with our innermost fears and shadows through our creations. In essence making honest art means facing ourselves at the deepest levels and using this process as a healing tool for deep transformation.

 Martina Hoffman

DNA Spirit

Balance and Swan Sessions

Alan Lee from Merlin Dreams by Peter Dickinson

It seems that we will now be leaving Williamstown in the New Year and so we can offer these last balances for anyone who wishes to see us here in the west before we go. This week we are at the threshold of a doorway into the NEW. This potent portal will open this Wednesday on 12.12.12 and deepen at the Summer Solstice on 21.12.12. Between these energy points we are sharing these last sessions of the year beside the sea.

Last Sessions: 

Thursday and Friday 13th - 14th December Tues - Thurs 18th - 20th December
Evening appointments available Wed & Thurs

Balance Sessions: 1 hour ($100)

The Swan Blessing Past Life Healing Sessions: 1.5 hours ($160) Black Swan Tarot, Astrology and Healing Session: 1.5 hours ($160)

If you are feeling like you need some assistance at this time we urge you to embrace it - the transformative energy available to us now is immense,

Oceans of love for all that is unfolding, Julia & Tony

Fortune by Charles Allen Winter

 

Lover's Eye

Eye Miniatures or Lover's Eye were Georgian portraits of the eye of your beloved so that it could be carried with you. A doorway to your lover's heart that was known so intimately by you but would be hard for anyone else to recognise - a secret link or love-token.  In 1785, the miniatures became well-known through a scandalous affair between the Prince of Wales, later King George IV of England, and a widowed commoner named Maria Fitzherbert. The two wed in secret and commissioned portraits of their as discreet tokens of affection. 
Antique lover's eye jewelry

What Soul is All About

“I’m a victim of my own insides. There was a time when I wanted to know everything. I read a lot. I guess you’d say I was pretty intellectual. It’s odd, I can’t remember when it changed. It used to make me very unhappy, all that feeling. I just didn’t know what to do with it. But now I’ve learned how to make feeling work for me. I’m full of emotion and I want a release, and if you’re on stage and if it’s really working and you’ve got the audience with you, it’s a oneness you feel. I’m into me, plus they’re into me, and everything comes together. You’re full of it. I don’t know, I just want to feel as much as I can, it’s what ‘soul’ is all about.”   Janis Joplin