From Wired: http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/12/pl_arts_sugimoto/
Whether making ultralong exposures of movie screens or photographing museum dioramas to look like real scenes, Hiroshi Sugimoto has always used his camera to explore unseen phenomena — artifacts of time, light, the elements, and human perception. But for his latest project, called Lightning Fields, the award-winning photographer traded optics for electricity. He wields a Van de Graaff generator to send up to 400,000 volts through film to a metal table. The resulting fractal branching, subtle feathering, and furry whorls call to mind vascular systems, geologic features, and trees. “I see the spark of life itself, the lightning that struck the primordial ooze,” Sugimoto says. Although some of the effects happen by chance, the artist does try to exercise control. “I have a kitchen’s worth of utensils that produce sparks with different characteristics,” he says. “But there are many variables — weather, humidity, perhaps even what I had for breakfast — I’m never sure what influences the results.”
Japanese Photographer Bends Electricity to His Will
(5 posts) (4 voices)-
Posted 3 years ago #
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This is an old technique called Krlian photography, after Semyon Kirlian who accidental discovered it in 1939.
google it, there are loads of examples.Mac.
Posted 3 years ago # -
I always thought this was more shocking than the darkroom work by May Ray...Intereting, but other than using film, is it a photograph? Certainly makes NAS a non-issue!
Posted 3 years ago # -
Did you mean Man Ray?
Posted 3 years ago # -
oops, of course, Man Ray.
Posted 3 years ago #
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