Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Art and Photography in London


In the light of an up and coming exhibition at the National Gallery London - "Seduced by Art: Photography Past and Present", I came across this article entitled “The Camera comes of Age” from The Independent by Adrian Hamilton published on Saturday 27 October 2012. Both events mirror what I was lecturing about on 21st October 2012 at the MIPP Convention 2012. This article take us on a virtual tour through a good number of notable exhibitions set in illustrious galleries in London which stress the medium as a fine art and sheds light on various photographers who earned a name in the field.

The Camera comes of Age

Next week the National Gallery mounts its first major photography show. It's a decisive moment that marks the medium's overdue acceptance as fine art

By ADRIAN HAMILTON

Saturday 27 October 2012

Of all the great art galleries in the world, the National Gallery in London has proved one of the last to either embrace photography as a branch of art or as a fit subject for exhibition. Which makes its first proper show of the relationship between photography and the Old Masters, opening next week, something of an occasion. It joins, by coincidence, a veritable host of other photographic exhibitions at the present, Davidson, Eggleston and others from the Sixties and Seventies at the Barbican, William Klein and Daido Moriyama at Tate Modern and Hiroshi Sugimoto at Pace in London, with Henri Cartier-Bresson and Ansel Adams to follow at Somerset House and the Maritime Museum, next month. Rarely can an audience be quite as well provided for as London at the moment.

The National Gallery may be late on the scene but its timing could hardly be bettered. With photography increasingly recognised as an art in its own right, prints from the original negatives by well-known photographers regularly sell for £5,000 or £10,000 each. When limited-number prints from big names such as Richard Avedon are concerned, the sums leap to as much as £500,000 and, in the case of the German photographer Andreas Gursky, between £3m and £4m, as museums compete with modern-art collectors for the privilege of owning iconic images of our time.

Photography has always vied with painting for a position as a fine art in itself. What the National Gallery is now seizing on – quite rightly – is the development in the last decades of an art photography which deliberately looks back to the high art of the past and the Victorian pioneers of photography as its model. Large in scale, often monumental in intent, the works now form a genre all of their own. Placing them side by side with their forebears makes a wonderful exhibition.

Why art photography should have developed in this way is an open question. It has a lot to do with advances in technology which have enabled artist photographers to size up their deep single shots into life-scale and to control the colour and the textures in printing. The best photographers have always taken care of the printing process but we now have a generation that uses technology as painters have traditionally used the brush, to refine, to elaborate and to deepen the effect. It goes deeper than this, however. Over the last 30 years, and even more in the aftermath of 9/11 and the midst of recession, there is a retreat from post-Modernism, with its obsession for irony, jokes and a multi-faceted approach to art, to something much more detached and classical. Just as many artists after the wars of the last century stepped back to a kind of cool abstraction, so many artists today are searching for a kind of melancholic sobriety, a sense of the frozen moment which photography is uniquely able to provide.

Which is where photography entered in the first place. From early on the young discipline saw itself as a form of art and contender with paintings for seriousness. The major figures of the Victorian period – Julia Margaret Cameron, Roger Fenton, Oscar Gustave Rejlander, Gustave Le Gray and the others represented in the National Gallery show alongside their painting models and their modern imitators – quite consciously sought not just the dignity of art but its moral thrust. Cameron, in particular, during the late 1860s and early 1870s walked hand-in-hand with the Pre-Raphaelites and the art of her time in an effort to combine realistic detail with ethereal sentiment. Place her portraits, as the exhibition does, side by side with the paintings of George Frederic Watts and you see precisely the same purpose.

So with the still lives of Roger Fenton and other photographers of the mid-19th century, which aim to replicate both the glowing realism of 17th-century painters but also their indications of decay and the fragility of beauty. Look at the seascapes of Gustav Le Gray from the 1850s and you see an artist reaching out to portray the sublime in the way that Turner was doing.
With nudes, of course, the realism became a problem. While photographers such as Rejlander bathed their photos in the aura of classical statues and the painting of Ingres and Botticelli, the photograph gave the female form a living reality which shocked some and excited others. Art and pornography merged in a way that even the most erotic works of Velazquez and Goya could never have.

And it was the truth of the real which took photography away from art in the last century to pursue its own courses in the photojournalism made possible by the 35mm camera, in the avenues opened up by magnification and skewed viewpoint and in the colour film introduced in the 1930s. For most of the 20th century, photography didn't vie with painting or refer back to it. It felt it was itself the art of modernity with no need for a backward or even a sideways look.
The radical thing about the contemporary photographers assembled by the National Gallery is not just that they look backwards to the traditions of painting and early photography for their models, but they do it by glorying in the realism which makes photography unique. Their works ranges from the masters of the monumental such as the Canadian Jeff Wall and the German Thomas Struth to the more intimate studies of bathers of Rineke Dijkstra from Holland and the exploding still lives of Ori Gersht from Israel.

Wall famously showed his life-sized narrative picture The Destroyed Room, based on Delacroix's The Death of Sardanapalus in the form of a negative, back-lit, in a gallery window in 1978. Struth makes his pictures as large but they are of scenes in which the people are dwarfed by the space so that the viewer both looks on and in. Sarah Jones enlarges her pictures of flowers to three or four times life-size so that every detail is shown and the whole given huge presence. Dijkstra sharpens the detail of her life-size pictures of bathers by using fill-in flash photography. Richard Learoyd employs plain, neutral backgrounds and suffused lighting to give his figures sculptural presences.

Magnification on this scale has the effect of bringing the viewer directly into the picture as much a participant as an observer. It encompasses the viewer as she or he stands before it. The heightened realism only adds to the effect. Where painters had to work up their paintings in layers and in meticulous detail, the photographer has realism at his or her instant disposal. The drawback of having to complete in a single shot rather than being able, like a painter, to keep returning to the canvas, is turned to advantage. The subject is caught in a moment that, properly composed, communicates something beyond the face or the landscape that is presented. They become faces in your face, impossible not to be gripped by.

The National Gallery exhibition is only part of the story, of course. Where the contemporary artists in its survey of "photography past and present" are bent on bettering the photographic process by imitating painting, other artists are bent on bettering the painting process by drawing in photography. The history of contemporary art, indeed, could be written in the way in which painters, following the lead of Gerhard Richter and the example of the Pop Artists, have incorporated photography into their creative process and how photographers, learning from modern painters, have pushed their craft away from realism into the realms of abstraction. Photography and painting, which seemed to go their separate ways through most of the last century, are now, thanks to Richard Hamilton, Gerhard Richter, David Hockney and many others, now merging.

Anyone interested in the uses of digital photography in art and the possibilities opened up by inkjet printing need only slip within the National Gallery to the Sunley Room to see the late Richard Hamilton works, in which the artist both pays homage to the past masters and grapples with the challenge posed by the realism of modern reproductive technology. What fascinated Hamilton, as it has intrigued Hockney, is the extent to which digital enables the painter to compose and sketch graphic work and, in the printing, to achieve hyper-realistic effects of colour.

Go to almost any show of a contemporary artist and what you are likely to see is he or she adopting the technology of photography, and often its language, to express their conceptual art. At Dulwich Art Gallery, the contemporary artist Clive Head has installed across one wall of a room of Nicolas Poussins, a large scale painting of a rail terminus. Part of his From Victoria to Arcadia, it is a painting of the most precise detail but also of unnerving space, a narrative of passengers and anonymity based on photographs of Victoria tube station but composed and painted with a traditional eye.

It has been colour as much as anything that has really brought art and photography together. In the era of black-and-white, the photographer reigned supreme in his own field. Ansel Adams, whose photographs of water and the sea go on display at London's Maritime Museum next month, showed that photography could achieve in detail and in depth the sense of the sublime in nature which painters had so long sought, and in its own way do it better. With faster film and lighter cameras, photography became the means of commenting on the human condition and on events in a way which painting seemed too contrived to compete. The photographers on display at the Barbican's current show of pictures of the 1960s and 1970s barely gave traditional art a passing glance as they sought composition in what Cartier Bresson called the "decisive moment".

As the techniques of exposure and printing improved, so photographers became more "arty" themselves. Just a few hundred yards along Piccadilly from the National Gallery's show you can see the seascapes of Hiroshi Sugimoto – to me the finest art photographer of our day – hung alongside Mark Rothko's late dark abstracts at Pace's new Mayfair Gallery. While at one in horizontal composition, they are quite different in texture. Where Rothko works in paint, building it up layer by layer to achieve his effects, Sugimoto is all about light and exposure. Rothko encloses his pictures firmly within the frame, Sugimoto's studies of the sea's horizon seem to extend way beyond the frame into infinity. Both are alike in their ambition to make their separate forms reach beyond representation into the absolute.

At the opposite end of the spectrum of scale, Daido Moriyama, on show at Tate Modern with William Klein, blows up the close-ups of tights and lips to create works of abstract force but human and erotic resonance. What the painter has to do with imagination, the photographer can do by the magnification of detail. Ansel Adams did it with trees, contemporary photographers do it with the stuff of urban life.

Colour, introduced to film in the Thirties, changed things, as an exhibition due next month at Somerset House hopes to show. For purists such as Cartier Bresson it was a dilution of the realism of black and white photography. But for painters it took photography into the glossy surfaces and hectic pace of the new consumer world. With it, photography joined advertising, colour magazines, flashy billboards and brightly-coloured plastic. It was the world in which the old distinctions between genres had no place. All could be used as one in the portrayal of life.


And yet there remains something distinct about photography, in its realism and in its relationship with the viewer. Go to any exhibition and you will see people, young and old, responding without self-consciousness to the picture before them. There's something about the reality of photographs that needs no explanation. Which is why so many painters are now incorporating it into their works.



Thursday, September 1, 2011

UNEASY RITUALS - Contemporary Tales from Malta by Patrick Sammut

This week, a dear friend of mine and colleague, Patrick Sammut paid a visit at my studio. He came forth with his newly published book entitled ‘Uneasy Rituals – Contemporary Tales from Malta'.


The book comprises a collection of meticulously interpreted contemporary stories, which were later translated to English by Alfred Palma. This publication also includes 16 photographic works by me. This was my very first opportunity to have my photographic works published and exposed in such a powerful manner.

Sammut and I have worked constantly on this project through the very first months of this year.  We have discussed and collaborated on the choice of images which were to be featured. Also, I was in charge of laying out an innovative cover-design complimented by, what I may describe as a, simplistic but effective page setting.  This collaboration resulted to be a fruitful one. I proudly claim my input in this enriching and worth buying book. Thumbs up goes to Patrick Sammut for his excellent creative writing and for allowing me the opportunity to expose my photographic creativity.  I highly recommend this book!

Patrick Sammut was born in Malta in 1968. He studied Maltese and Italian language and literature at the University of Malta, and later obtained a Masters Degree in Contemporary Italian Literature with a thesis on “The Novel of the Resistance Movement”. Between 1994 and 1996 he studied Italian literature and literary criticism at the Università degli Studi of Florence. He teaches Maltese and Italian Language and Literature at De La Salle College since 1992. He is vice-president of the Maltese Poets Association, editor of the poetry magazine VERSI, and coordinator of a literary page of a local and virtual weekly newspaper, Il-Gens illum. He writes poetry in Maltese, English and Italian. He is author of various publications: literary criticism, poetry and short stories for children. His poems were published in both local and foreign journals and magazines. In 2008 he participated in the “Progetto Dante” of Ravenna, together with Maltese poet and translator, Alfred Palma, and won a “Special Mention” in the Nosside international poetry contest. In 2011 he participated in the Gaeta Mediterranean Poetry Festival. He keeps in contact with other poets and writers through e-mail and has a personal blog: www.patrickjsammut.blogspot.com He is married to Rosalie and father of Andrew, Kristina and Matthew.

To buy book Uneasy Rituals


Thursday, August 25, 2011

My Photography Gear 6 - NIKON D7000 | NIKON D3100


During the past ‘My Photography Gear’ series, featured on this blog, I have introduced you to my gear, mainly lenses.  I guess, now it is the time to let you all know which are the machines that I use to match the formerly featured lenses.  

First of all, I am a Nikon shooter.  Personally, I have nothing against other brands.  Some time ago I was simply introduced to the Nikon brand and it was fantastic.  Being a very conservative guy, I tend to stick by what makes me feel comfortable and by what is absolutely practical.  Nikon meets such criteria.

I own two DSLR camera bodies.  In fact my main body is the Nikon D7000 whereas my backup body is the Nikon D3100.  They are both fantastic camera bodies which are up to optimal performance.


Nikon D7000

The Nikon D7000’s feel is awesome.  It is considerably formidable, thanks to a magnesium alloy body shell and slightly thicker rubber coating on the hand grip and rear of the camera. At 16.2Mp the D7000 boasts of the second highest resolution of any Nikon DSLR. All of these pixels are packed onto a newly developed CMOS sensor. As well as extra resolution, the new sensor offers a great variety of ISO, ranging from 100-6400, expandable up to the equivalent of ISO 25,600.

The D7000's AF and metering systems are also new, and feature a significant upgrade to earlier Nikon camera bodies. The new camera boasts a 39-point AF array with 9 cross-type AF points. It also has an upgraded movie specification, up to 'full HD' - 1920x1080 resolution at 24fps. The D7000 can also maintain AF during live view and movie shooting.

Here are some key features:

  • 16.2MP CMOS sensor
  • 1080p HD video recording with mic jack for external microphone
  • ISO 100-6400 (plus H1 and H2 equivalent to ISO 12,800/25,600)
  • 39-point AF system with 3D tracking
  • New 2016 pixel metering sensor
  • Scene Recognition System (see 2016 pixel sensor, above) aids WB/metering + focus accuracy
  • Twin SD card slots
  • 3.0 inch 921k dot LCD screen
  • New Live View/movie shooting switch
  • Full-time AF in Live View/movie modes
  • Up to 6fps continuous shooting
  • Lockable drive mode dial
  • Built-in intervalometer
  • Electronic virtual horizon
  • Shutter tested to 150K actuations



Nikon D3100

My backup and travelling camera body is the Nikon D3100.  It is considered to be Nikon's entry-level model. It is also the first Nikon DSLR to offer 1920x1080 movie recording in its range. 

The Nikon D3100 offers very good image quality together with straightforward handling. Overall, the D3100 is an excellent DSLR.  It has some limitations but one has to keep in mind that this body is aimed to instil the passion of photography and not to amuse the professionals.

Here are some key features:

  • 14.2 megapixel DX-format CMOS sensor
  • 3.0" LCD monitor (230,000 dots)
  • Image sensor cleaning (sensor shake)
  • 11 AF points (with 3D tracking)
  • IS0 100-3200 range (12,800 expanded)
  • HD movies (1080p, 720p or WVGA)


Monday, August 8, 2011

My Photography Gear 5 - Tamrac Expedition 6x

In this week’s blog I am going to feature my Tamrac Expedition 6x backpack.  This is an awful backpack which currently holds all my equipment during photo-shoots and other daily tasks. Originally, I owned a Lowepro 202AW but as time passed by, I kept constantly evolving, equipment wise, that I had to look for an alternative. 

After some time of research I decided to get hold of this Tamrac Expedition 6x backpack.  This bag really suits my needs.  The Tamrac Expedition 6x is a middle-sized backpack, forming part of a range of 6 backpacks, specifically design for photographers and branded by Tamrac as the ‘Expedition’ series.

Here are some technical details:

  • The Expedition 6x is perfect for a wide range of photo equipment. The main compartment is foam padded with foam-padded dividers to protect SLRs with lenses attached, 5-6 extra lenses, and a flash. A foam-padded front pocket holds most 14.1" laptops.
  • Two "wing" accessory pockets with water-resistant zippers organize and provide quick access to important accessories without disturbing the photo gear.
  • A tripod is carried between these pockets with Tamrac's QuickClip tripod attachment system.
  • An SLR with lens attached is held on 2 vertical, foam-padded dividers. A Dual-Hinge Divider System lets a 2nd SLR be carried with a lens attached. Two Windowpane-Mesh pockets organize filters and accessories.
  • The state-of-the-art harness system with Dual-Density Comfort Pads provides maximum carrying comfort while Air Flow Channels help keep you cool and dry during extended use.

I have used this backpack for a couple of months.  Since the first time I have put it on, I find it extremely comfortable and I can fit most of my photographic equipment. The equipment is easily accessible and the weight is nicely distributed for ease of carrying. I highly recommend this backpack!

Friday, July 8, 2011

My Photography Gear 4 - NIKON AF Nikkor 28-80mm G lens

Another tool which I acquired recently, at a relatively very cheap price, is the Nikon 28-80mm G lens.  This lens is not available anymore as it was discontinued in 2006. It was a very popular lens of which Nikon set a large number of copies on the market that nowadays it can be easily acquired either new or second hand at a good price.

It was primarily introduced in 2001 as a kit lens with Nikon's cheapest film cameras.  The Nikkor 28-80mm G is one of Nikon's most popular lenses from Nikon’s vast range of optics. The lens is a plastic zoom with incredibly good performance. It works very well even on higher-end camera bodies such as the Nikon D3s.  It is unbelievable that Nikon at the time produced a very cheap lens with such a stunning performance.

Nikon has made many lenses with similar focal length ranges. The Nikon 28-80mm G singles out as it has an unusual maximum aperture of f/3.3 instead of the more common f/3.5.  This lens is a G lens meaning that it lacks an aperture ring.

The Nikon 28-80mm G works great on just about every AF and digital Nikon camera having a built-in lens motor to drive the AF of the lens.  As a matter of fact, these lenses will not autofocus on Nikon’s beginners’ camera bodies such as the D3000 and D3100. This is an AF screw type of lens.

To conclude, I must admit that this lens is a stunning piece of kit.  It is inexpensive, light weighted and one can easily adapt to its ergonomics.  It can be found either in a silver or black finish.  One has to pay particular attention to the way such lens is handled due to the fact that it is made out of plastic.  On the other hand, this lens stands out to be a winner in every occasion.  I highly recommend this lens!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Senglea Marittima - Re-enactment

1/1600 sec at f / 2.8, ISO 100
200 mm (70.0-200.0 mm f/2.8)
One of the most intriguing characteristics that I am so passionate about in the art of photography, since my early years of artistic training, was always the power of freezing the moment.  Also complimenting this concept is the ability to tell a story through an image. In fact, what I am proposing this week is an image, which I shot a couple of weeks ago during an event entitled Senglea Marittima, which fits the afore hinted genre, being, Environmental Portraiture.

Senglea Marittima 2011, organised by the Isla Local Council, was held at some of Isla’s characteristic locations. Yearly, the council organises the festival to safeguard the town’s socio-historical and cultural heritage while raises awareness of the potential of the locality. Thanks to its fortifications, historic buildings, living history and strong maritime links, there is so much that can be discovered in Senglea.

I was present to shoot several re-enactments which were organised to match the nature of such an event.  A particular image, which I really like, was taken at the end of the session when the re-enactors were about to leave the streets to take shade from the scorching Mediterranean sun.  A female actress, who was wearing a typical 17th century dress, caught my attention when she was rushing up one of Senglea’s characteristical flight of steps. In front of the actress were two other male actors in the vest of 17th century pages.

The black and white rendition suits very much to this image.  Compositionally, the flight of steps divides the image in three sections.  Furthermore, the viewer is directed towards the actress and the pages, the former occupying the bottom tier whereas the latter occupies the upper section, by an iron rail.  The dress of the actress contrasts the neutral surroundings offered by the Maltese streetscape.  The intricate embroidered floral designs set the focal point as the two pages lead outwards.

Monday, June 27, 2011

My Photography Gear 3 - NIKON AF-S Nikkor 35mm F1.8G DX

This week i would like to introduce you to another tool which I really recommend to every Nikon DX user.  This is my AF-S Nikkor 35mm F1.8G DX.  This is a great lens. Its introductory price is quite at reach and thanks to the newly introduced silent wave motor it automatically focuses on Nikon's entry-level D3000 and D3100 bodies. It's also less than half the price of the few other DX format standard primes currently on the market (such as Tokina 35mm F2.8 Macro and Sigma 30mm F1.4 EX DC HSM).  With the production of this lens Nikon has managed to produce the first genuinely inexpensive fast standard prime.

Some specifications one ought to know:

  • 35mm focal length; fast F1.8 maximum aperture
  • Silent Wave Motor allows autofocusing on all Nikon DSLRs
  • Full-time manual focus override
  • For DX format cameras

The lens's performance is impressive. It produces finely detailed images at all apertures, focuses quickly and accurately.  Its dimensions are small and its weight is light. In particular, it's much sharper than typical DX standard zooms such as the Nikon AF-S 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 DX VR or Nikon AF-S 18-200mm F3.5-5.6 DX VR. The fast maximum aperture allows pictures to be taken hand-held in low light levels, while maintaining relatively fast shutter speeds.

Furthermore, I believe that it would be very pretentious to complain about minor flaws in a so inexpensive lens, which gives otherwise such fine results. Nikon did a great deal in addressing the lack of inexpensive fast primes for DX format DSLRs.

As it is, the 35mm F1.8G DX features a great combination of high image quality, large maximum aperture and low price.  This is surely that kind of lens which deserves to be in a Nikon shooter's backpack.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Photographing a Crisis - Lorenzo di Pietro

On Saturday 17th June, the Malta Institute of Professional Photographers (MIPP) commemorated its 15th anniversary by organising a seminar entitled “Photographing a Crisis”.  The guest speaker was Lorenzo di Pietro, a journalist who in 2010 spent almost a month in the African continent where he traced and documented the tragic trafficing of human beings and the crossing of the so called illegal immigrants from Africa towards the European continent.

A brief insight into the activity conducted by Lorenzo Di Pietro:

Lorenzo di Pietro works as a photo and investigative journalist.  He deals with matters concerning politics, immigration and foreign affairs. Di Pietro collaborates with several important Italian agencies such as Rai, Corriere della Sera online, Il Fatto Quotidiano, Il Punto and Terra.

During the seminar di Pietro shared his travel experience and demonstrated a hefty portfolio of pictures and video clips documenting his sojourn in Africa.  The journalist stressed a very important concept that perhaps some photographers who are keen to capture a candid image did not bear that much.  In fact, he made it clear that his images where not to present an aesthetically pleasing experience.  On the other hand he demonstrated that his photographic documentation was to testify his passage in the African continent.  Furthermore, di Pietro clarified that majorly he was using point and shoot cameras which made it possible documenting facts in disguise without ending up being caught by the austere African authorities.

The images presented by di Pietro offered a thorough insight of what is life in Africa and the poor and devastating way people live such as in places like Niamey and Zinder.  The images presented and insight of the domestic life and the intimate domestic environment.  In fact, as he explained, these images were only made possible through the friendship built on trust between the inhabitants and the journalist.   Di Pietro explained that the gaining of trust plays a very important role in African communities.  Trusts rewarded him a free passport to document and illustrate their present state of living.

Lorenzo di Pietro also showed to those present at the seminar a series of striking video clips.  Their content presented the current hard situation in the African continent.  All the video clips were captured either by using a mobile phone or a point and shoot camera.  As stated above, aesthetic quality was not the aim of the reportage.  Contrarily, the video clips brutally demonstrate the way the immigrants are left starving and with no water in the middle of the Sahara desert.  As di Pietro confirmed, these people last till about ten days until they die in the middle of nowhere because of dehydration.   Their corpses are left decomposing or most probably eaten by wild animals.


During the second part of this seminar an interactive forum lead by Sergio Muscat was presented. He was accompanied by Lorenzo di Pietro, Darrin Zammit Lupi (Times of Malta), Andrew Galea Debono (Human rights lawyer) and Maj. Ivan Consiglio (AFM).


On a personal note, I got acquainted with Lorenzo di Pietro the day after during a photo-walk organised by MIPP at Senglea.  I had the occasion to share some time (also humbly offering him a bottle of water) with the journalist, this time not under the African sun but in a much more pleasurable Maltese environment. On a personal note, discussing with Lorenzo, despite of my humble Italian language speaking, was an enriching experience. Di Pietro’s humble and professional character inspires all those who in a way or another encounter him. 

Also, thumbs up go to MIPP for inviting such a talented individual and for this wonderful experience.


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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

My Photography Gear 2 - The Sigma 10-20mm F4-5.6 EX DC HSM

Dear photograhy enthusiasts, today, i would like to introduce you with another useful tool found in my photography backpack.  The Sigma 10-20mm F4-5.6 EX DC HSM is one of my favourite lenses which I recently acquired.  It offers a wide angle range, ideal for landscape and architecture photography.  Wayback, photographers making use of APS-C sensor cameras lacked behind in the wide-angle field.  This lense, when introduced, deflected this barrier and made it possible for a wide range of photography enthusiasts to capture some stunning landscape and architecture shots.

The Sigma 10-20mm F4-5.6 EX DC HSM is a solid, well-built lens with good operational characteristics, which provides some really excellent imaging results. The front element does not extend, which makes it possible to easily attach to it a filter, either directly or through an operator. This is very relevant, as the majority of those looking for such a lens require focal range at scenic and therefore attaching a filter becomes a must.  Optically, this lens is impressive. Chromatic aberration features slightly in this lens but let’s face it, this is a common problem with ultra-wide angle lenses. The images are consistently sharp and crisp.  Infact such quality betrays its focal range and price tag.

Here are some technical data which one ought to know:

·         A DC series lens designed exclusively for use with smaller chip APS-c or 4/3 cameras,
·         HSM (Hyper-Sonic Motor) allows for fast auto focus speeds & quiet shooting and is capable of full-time manual operation,
·         Three aspherical lens elements offer excellent correction for distortion and Three SLD (Special Low Dispersion) glass elements employed for effective compensation of colour aberration,
·         Internal Focusing System allows the convenient use of a polarizing filter for creative effects & improves the optical performance of the lens at various distances,
·         Awarded the TIPA award, best consumer lens in Europe 2006.

This is a decent lens which streches the ability of photography enthusiats to a limit of 10mm wide-angle-view at a decent price. I strongly recommend this lens!

Monday, June 20, 2011

Men at Work - Environmental Portraiture Photography

1/640 sec at f / 5.0. ISO 100
92 mm (70.0 - 200.0 mm f / 2.8)
The photograph that I am proposing today is a stunning shot which I took earlier this month. Despite of being a sunny day, it was quite hazy.  In fact the available natural light conditions offered a very subtle soft light of which I took advantage.

There was no particular setup set prior to this shot.  The people frozen in this image were not posing for the shot.  I was simply stand by round the corner to capture a moment in Malta's rural and conservative countryside.  Unfortunately, such moments reminiscent of Malta's rural past are nowadays becoming extinct.  The image says it all!  Two old men sitting next to an old fuel pump who are accompanied by a mongrel.  Both men bear the signs of the ephemeral passing of time.  Wrinkles feature boldly and the white feathery hair captures the viewers attention.  Both men are sitting tranquilly but the dog is the one which is reacting to its environment.

Compositionally, the work can be divided in two sections, mainly the upper section dominated by an umbrella and local domestic architecture, whereas the lower section is dominated by the afore mentioned individuals. The pump set on the right hand side of the composition deserves a mention.  Being itself a museum piece, one of the very first fuel pumps to feature in modern Malta, still withstanding the natural elements and the passing of time.

This black and white image is bound to remain one of my favorites.  Capturing of such an image immortalized what will in few years time be considered as past.




Monday, May 30, 2011

My Photography Gear 1 - Sigma 70-200mm F2.8 EX DG Macro HSM II

Another section in my blog, that I would like to introduce you to, is the gear that I use to capture my pictures.  I am a serious enthusiast and my gear has some limitations, the major one being budget.  On the other hand, on a very limited budget, one can get hold of superb third party brands equipment which does very good for the price being paid.


Today I would like to share my views on the Sigma 70-200mm F2.8 EX DG Macro HSM II. Here are some technical data which one ought to know:

The Sigma 70-200mm f/2.8 II EX APO Macro HSM telephoto zoom lens has a large maximum aperture of f/2.8 which remains constant throughout the zoom range, an improved optical performance, macro capabilities, and is optimized for digital SLR cameras. It also features super multi-layer coating, which reduces flare and ghosting.

This Macro lens has improved macro capability, with a minimum focusing distance of 39.4" (100 cm) and maximum magnification of 1:3.5. All zooming and focus movement is achieved internally, allowing for a constant length and great resistance to dust and moisture. It comes rendered in a hard coated, baked black EX crinkle finish. 

The Hyper Sonic Motor (HSM) ensures a silent, high-speed AF function as well as full-time manual focusing capability for Sigma, Canon, and Nikon mount lenses.

Apart from all the technical data available in several written reviews posted on the web, I would like to share some pros and cons which I have personally experienced  when using this camera lens.

This lens is a major upgrade from a low budget telephoto zoom lens having as its minimum aperture of f/3.5.  It is a heavier lens, the mechanism is all laid in the interior of the barrel which will avoid infiltration of dust or matter. The tripod ring of the lens has some awesome mechanics which facilitates the handling of the lens and camera body, mostly when shooting sports and making use of a monopod. Being an f/2.8 lens, it focuses very fast and it does it very quietly. The performance of this lens is superb especially for wedding events as the photographer remains unnoticed when focusing and composing his shots. The focusing rings are very subtle and at reach. The rubber material added to the lens barrel does their job very well and they ensure a tight and approachable experience. Despite of its dimensions the lens fits nicely to a wide range of DSLR camera bodies, including beginners camera body types, such as my Nikon D3100 to more advanced camera bodies such as Nikon's D700.

In practise the Sigma 70-200mm F2.8 EX DG Macro HSM II does a very good job.  Considering the limited budget which this lens costs (you can easily get a second-hand version of this lens for 550 Euro) it delivers very well.  Several complaints noted on the web specify that this lens is sweet at 200mm. I strongly agree with statement.  On the other hand, I still believe that Sigma has given the opportunity for beginners and enthusiasts to invest and get hold of a fast and affordable telephoto lens. For those who are not earning their bread out of photography and who simply enjoy the art of capturing a fleeting moment, this is the way to go.  Personally, I avail my self of post processing by adding some sharpening layers to counterbalance the lack of sharpness when focused at 200mm.  Regarding optics and colour rendition, I find this lens to be a decent third party item which honours merit.  When captured at a correct exposure colours kick.  This lens is capable of immortalizing some of the most beautiful chromatic representation which one could imagine to capture.

On a final note, I highly recommend this lens for those out there who are into photography and would like to get a decent, fast and silent telephoto zoom lens.  This is the ideal lens for enthusiasts hitting the streets on a budget, who are not after collecting expensive and phallic equipment, but who are after freezing passionately the fleeting moment.