View Full Version : Sally Mann - Deep south
I was poking around Barnes and Noble last night and stumbled on "Deep South". I can't say I'm huge landscape fan, but I was flat out floored by her work. I've seen some of her family work, but hadn't seen these before. I don't know much about her process or equipment but the quality of the images were simply haunting. I was simply transported to her world. Does anybody know about how she gets that look of her prints or what she uses? Here's a PBS link: http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/mann/card1.html
cpborello
05-01-2007, 13:51
She uses a "collodian" process with a lens that has mildew and misaligned elements. See the link below
http://www.tufts.edu/programs/mma/fah189/2002/nmadahar/sallymann.html
Hi Morgan,
i`m a big fan of her work, too.
As far as i know, she works with a 8x10, or bigger, field camera. For Negatives, she uses wet collodium glass plates, i think. Probably homemade. Combined with these old large format lenses used wide open, you get some very interesting results. Of course, this means nothing without a strong photographic vision, which she obviously has.
I`m planning to do a bit of experimenting with glass plates myself, using my old Voigtländer Bergheil 9x12 cm :). Hope to post some results in the future.
(Hello Bartender, what about a Classic Voigtländer LF/MF forum? Maybe no rangefinders, but definitely classics, like the TLRs!)
All the best,
andreas
www.myspace.com/tiredmusik
I found some videos of her on that PBS site actually. She's holding a large camera together with her head!
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/mann/index.html#
Her work is so haunting, so mysterious, it really sticks in you. I've been thinking about it all day. She does have remarkable photographic vision.
She uses a "collodian" process with a lens that has mildew and misaligned elements. See the link below
http://www.tufts.edu/programs/mma/fah189/2002/nmadahar/sallymann.html
Thanks for the link! Very informative.
"I embrace the accidents, the serendipity of the process ...Mistakes are not the end of the world, and perfection is not my goal."
I like that.
sepiareverb
05-01-2007, 14:45
And some of those prints are literally 'huge' like 4x5 feet. Quite powerful in person.
terrafirmanada
05-01-2007, 15:15
Good read. Very interesting technique.
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