Intro to iPhone Photography Workshop with John Clarke (Date & Details TBD)
Intro to iPhone Photography Workshop with John Clarke (Date & Details TBD)
COURSE DESCRIPTION
The iPhone has the capabilities of producing beautiful, unique, art-quality images. Students will be introduced to some of the creative
possibilities of iPhone photography. Get to know your in-phone camera and camera roll. PicFix and Photo Toaster Apps will also be covered.
Students will be led through a workflow from capturing the highest quality images, manipulating them through various apps, and preparing them for print or presentation. Each app covered presents a range of creative processes and styles. Instructor John Clarke will teach you the apps and strategies he uses to create his iPhone photography.
EQUIPMENT:
All students must have an iPhone 4 or above.
ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR:
John Clarke has lived in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts since 2007. He was born in central Massachusetts around a landscape of mills, rivers, trains and bridges. Clarke received his degree in classical music composition from Bates College in Maine.
Clarke’s fine art work is created using a range of mediums. Oil paints, pastels, and pencil were his main tools for many years. A series of fifteen large pieces were displayed in the Latchis Theatre in Brattleboro, Vermont in 2007, and since then in several other galleries. They were inspired by a neoclassical piece of music called Alina by the Estonian composer Arvo Part. The Alina series exemplifies his style and use of color, line, and shape. In an article in the on-line journal Rural Intelligence, associate editor Nichole Dupont called him a “multimedia abstract master.” Earlier, in 2002, Clarke started scanning pressed flowers through a now-outdated color printer. The results, what he called Flower, Stain, and Fingerprint, were a novel type of botanical illustration, which cannot be recreated, as newer printers do not produce the same effects. Also, around 2002 Clarke stopped riding freight trains and realized he hadn’t documented the incredible journeys and places he had discovered. So he bought a camera and started exploring train yards and bridges to capture some of those memories. At that time Clarke was interested in sharply focused images, describing his desire for sharpness as wanting to feel the rust in his photos. In 2012, his tripod broke. During an autumn hike Clarke headed out without his tripod and produced images with accidental blur. The trails of light and color appealed to the abstract line painter in him and changed the way he thought about photography. The experience established a new course for him as a visual artist. A year later, Clarke discovered the iPhone and has become an accomplished iPhone photographer and teacher, helping his students capture and process images with a unique, painterly feel.
Clarke continues to push the camera to its limits, translating photographic images into other mediums. Painting with light, his work can be mistakenly viewed as pastel or charcoal drawings. Long exposures and gestural movements with the camera blur the distinction between art forms. Some of his newest applications have an alternative process or pinhole camera feeling to them. There is often a tension in his work between what is revealed and what is obscured. This has been with him since the beginning when he started painting and is revisited in alternative ways over and over again. He is driven to create images that are purely personal, diffusing and abstracting the world around him in the hopes that they will spark an unknown journey into aesthetic, emotional and spiritual territories. He calls it “looking through the curtain.” The creation of an image holds the excitement of unlimited potential and feelings he has never felt before.
Hanging one visual language on the balance of another, Clarke’s latest work combines mediums, using the photographic print as a backdrop for an emotional layer of line, color and symbol with pastel, pencil and paint to create one-of-a-kind pieces. He is always pushing the edge of the photographic medium until it is a bridge into other mediums.
Often described as a “renaissance man,” Clarke was front man and a primary songwriter for the band Bell Engine. He also has a solo album, All Beneath Our Train. An avid writer, he has written more than 60 short stories about his years jumping freight trains, and more recently, after the birth of his son Orrin, writes poems for children. Clarke’s work has been shown at the Geoff Young Gallery, Art on Main at Barnbrook, Joyce Goldstein Gallery, Isha Nelson Gallery, Deb Koffman’s Little Gallery, and Sohn Fine Art Gallery, where he is currently represented. Clarke was recently featured in the August 2016 and in the April 2011 issue of The Artful Mind Magazine