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Tool of the Trade: twin lens reflex camera. |
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E... F... does not bind life around
her with a rope
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The cobblestones in this picture are a clue to its location. Prague, Czechoslovakia, where Eva Fuka lived and worked when she took this picture, is famous for its cobblestoned streets. Fuka waited to snap the photograph until the woman with the baby carriage was in a position to make the most of the deep space in the scene. Click on the deep space diagram bar above to see it. The light that creates all the atmosphere in this picture is a difficult effect to achieve. When a light source like the sun shines directly into the lens of a camera it creates exposure problems for the photographer. If Fuka had set her camera to expose for the amount of light coming from the sky, the buildings in the picture would be too dark and all of their detail would be lost. If Fuka set her camera to expose the buildings details, the beautiful atmospheric effects of the light might be lost. The solution? Position the camera so the light source is hidden behind a tree, reducing the amount of light shining into the camera. Reducing the amount of light allowed Fuka to expose the film at the setting that produced details in the shadowy buildings and plenty of atmosphere. |
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The poetry of every day life and the extraordinariness of the ordinary are illustrated here. | ||||
The edges along each side of this photograph give the impression that the photographer turned a corner and just happened upon this scene. The poetry of every day life and the extraordinariness of the ordinary are illustrated here. Fuka tried to capture these qualities in her photographs as she stamped her individual style onto the larger art movement called Surrealism. It should be understood that the real is a relation like any other, wrote a French promoter of Surrealism. The essence of things is by no means linked to their reality, there are other relations beside reality, which the mind is capable of grasping, and which are also primary like chance, illusion, the fantastic, the dream. These various groups are united and brought into harmony in one single order, surreality . . . (Aragon, Une Vague de Rêves , 1924) Strange and uncertain space was a device used by many Surrealists to represent those other relations beside reality. Look at the looming shadow on the building behind the dancing child. Is it a shadow of the statue in the foreground or something outside of the frame of the picture? The relationship between the shrouded old statue and the lively young girl creates a strange mood. Although they are facing away from each other, they are very much together in the space of the photograph. Does the statue threaten the child or offer some kind of protection? These visual mysteries, presenting themselves in everyday life and turning the ordinary into the extraordinary, were themes that fascinated Eva Fuka. |
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"If you want me to explain the picture, if you put it in reality, then the mystery goes away." | ||||
What is happening in this photograph? Such an air of mystery surrounds these figures that we assume something has just happened, and we have happened upon the aftermath of the odd event. The tree at each vertical edge of the photo lends a feeling of peeking through the trees. We are witnesses to, not participants in the scene. The title only muddies the water - how can the three be alone when they are so together? When questioned about the events in this photo, Eva Fuka protested, If you want me to explain the picture, if you put it in reality, then the mystery goes away. The situation just catches you and you think it is absurd or mysterious and you just take the picture. You dont want to see the bare reality of what happened. I took the picture as the picture, not as the realistic story of what happened. (Interview with Eva Fuka, 1999) |
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Taking a picture of people through a gas lamp wouldnt occur to a lot of photographers, but Fuka saw the lamps potential as a container for the people on the street. It looks like an hourglass, and since the people appear to be waiting for something the two ideas work together. A photograph represents a moment in time, adding yet another layer of meaning. Eva Fuka used darkroom special effects to create this picture. The entire photograph was printed at the correct exposure, then Fuka burned in the area outside of the gas lamp to darken it by adding light to the print in the darkroom. Burning and dodging (holding back light from a print) are techniques many photographers use to give different parts of prints different exposures in the darkroom. Fuka took the technique a step further to create an unnatural scene that comments on time. |
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Titles are important in the Surrealist work of Eva Fuka | ||||
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