Joni Sternbach



tin type photography by Joni Sterbach

Joni Sternbach’s Surfers series is absolutely mind-blowing, done with wet plate technique. The images in the series are almost timeless, pulled by the current styles of boards, stickers, hair and clothing styles and contrasted by the old-school technique of wet plate collodian process and the dream-like qualities of the landscapes and background.

This from Lens Culture:

My photographs over recent years engage traditions of landscape, seascape, and architecture. Working with a large-format camera and historic process (wet-plate collodian), I have concentrated on locations that are close to or directly on the water. At this juncture between land and sea, I explore subject matter in a constant state of transition.

For the past couple years I have photographed surfers in Montauk and in California. Their activity takes place on the water; the people are persistent elements in a shifting scene. The singular, primitive act of surfing on the water is tempered by the social and negotiated state of human interaction on the shore. The surfers act as a bridge between the sea as an unbridled force of nature and the shoreline, a place governed by social expectations.

My approach is simple: introductions are made, and each person willing to collaborate steps into the water and poses. The sea acts as both a backdrop and a watery stage. As the tide recedes the rocky surface underneath is revealed, looking more like the moon than a beach. Photographing people at surfing locations is a natural extension of my interests, exploring yet another dimension of landscape and its evolving state.

Working with a “wet” instantaneous process that must be prepared and developed on location serves me well. It draws spectators and entices new subjects. Using collodion compels me to compose carefully before sensitizing the plate, yet its very nature is spontaneous and unknowable. The raw quality of the process suits the subject matter, and the distinctive appearance of the finished works echoes nineteenth-century traditions of anthropological photography.

Let the Surfers project be an introduction, for you, to Sterbach’s work, but check out her other projects as well. They’re all really amazing. The first photo in her Sea/Sky series would look lovely, framed up on my wall.

I ran in to Sternbach’s work, while digging through vi.sualize.us (it’s kinda like ffffound, but with better search features)

internal tags: ,

Comments:

Gravatar

Evan said,

June 27, 2008 @ 12:40 pm

Incredible shots!

Cool story you’d be interested in:
http://surftherenow.com/2008/06/27/the-board-seen-around-the-world/

You guys must have scored last week with swell. We got some fun waves up here.

Gravatar

Blue said,

June 28, 2008 @ 12:03 pm

Awesome stuff. SO glad you found this stuff and shared it on here. I love Joni’s work, and I’m making Lens Culture my home page in my browser, knoccking off the Photo Editor’s blog.

Cheers,
Blue

RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI



Trackbacks:

Leave a Comment