Photography Asked by mikehasaquestion on December 7, 2020
This image below is called the Funkturm Berlin (Berlin Radio Tower) and is taken by László Moholy-Nagy.
I have done so research but haven’t found much.
I was wanting to know the techniques used in this photo as well as what you guys think about the image.
As other answers have already pointed out, the photograph employs an unusual perspective. This is accentuated by its subject matter: the Funkturm is a particularly slender structure with a relatively narrow base, which contributes to the almost vertigo-inducing perspectival effect. Contributing to this "off" feeling is also the fact that very few if any lines in the subject matter are parallel with the edges of the frame.
The photograph was taken in 1928. As other answers have already pointed out, Moholy-Nagy may have used a camera-on-a-stick approach or simply rotated the print. The former approach would have been greatly facilitated by the use of a small camera, and given that the Leica I had been introduced in 1925, one might assume Moholy-Nagy employed a 35mm camera for this acrobatic task. However, according to MOMA, the camera used was an Ernemann 6x9 (perhaps one of these or these) – so, medium format, and in all likelihood not a wide-angle lens. The film used was, obviously, black and white.
There are various (silver gelatin) prints of this photograph in different museums around the world. Some of the digital reproductions suggest chemical toning such as sepia, but some don't.
To set the photograph in a reasonable context of interpretation, it is useful to consider the following quote, attributed to Moholy-Nagy in the George Eastman House Collection History of Photography (Taschen Bibliotheca Universalis, p. 517):
The reality of our century is technology: the invention, construction, and maintenance of machines. To be a user of machines is to be of the spirit of this century. Machines have replaced the transcendental spiritualism of past eras.
The Funkturm is, in a very real sense, a machine, and a construction which requires maintenance. Moholy-Nagy's quote may then be read as an exhortation to turn away from traditional aesthetics when "reading" the photograph: the aesthetics of past eras are useless, since they are of the wrong spirit. What we have here is a confluence of shapes, and arguably little of the photo makes sense, outside a purely abstract, formal frame of reference, unless one already knows what the Funkturm looks like from more conventional angles. What are the little shapes on the ground? (They turn out to be café tables, chairs and parasols – but they might as well be some unidentifiable radio tower apparatus, or little aeroplanes and petrol tanks, or a million other things, from this perspective.) Why do some of the shadows appear broken, and some appear to appear from nowhere? (Because what on first sight looks like the ground, at the "base" of the tower, is actually the roof of the restaurant at 52 metres – but this is impossible to read from the photo alone.)
Thanks to this perspective play, it is impossible to take the photograph as a literal, realist recording of the architectural structure. Ironically, the chosen high perspective flattens the structure into a mess of shapes, both linear and circular. This invites reading the photograph, as one earlier answer has suggested, the way a Bauhaus painting might be read. But a comparison is also invited with the photogram, a purposely abstract technique Moholy-Nagy also used to great effect.
Correct answer by Kahovius on December 7, 2020
He's used B+W photo obviously, He has a high viewpoint looking down from the tower creating to what I think is a small too big juxtaposition. There is geomtrical element going on with the tower itself and the shadow on the ground give me a sense of how to dominate the tower is.
Sure, the image was shot on black and white film, but where do you think that brownish tone came from? It's not simply printed on black and white fiber. But, I'll leave you to work that one out or ask another question.
Honestly, I'm not seeing a heck of a lot interesting here. Homeboy was shooting with a wide angle lens, which have a good amount of depth of field by default. His aperture selection and focal distance probably made use of the hyperfocal distance to get everything looking sharp from front to back.
The perspective is that where he either had the camera on a pole or was himself hanging out over space to the left of the tower. This is a technique that is actually very commonplace in rock climbing photography: (extreme example) https://petapixel.com/2012/10/11/how-to-use-a-ladder-in-rock-climbing-photography/
The point is to get yourself away from the structure so that you can include more of it in the frame, forcing a perspective that makes you feel like you are very far off the ground.
The time of day for the shadow may have been chosen intentionally to create the triangular shape between it and the tower.
I don't know if there is a specific name for this type of shot, but if you wanted to recreate it:
Answered by OnBreak. on December 7, 2020
Hungarian artist (born László Weisz; July 20, 1895 – November 24, 1946) was a Hungarian painter and photographer as well as a professor in the Bauhaus school (wikipedia).
Also present at this influential German Art School was Wassily Kandinsky and the first thing that struck me about the picture was the way the composition echoed some of Kandinsky's paintings. Kandinsky was an abstract artist and tutor at the Bauhaus throughout the 1920's.
See more at the Tate website where many low res images have Creative Commons licensing.
Both would have been influenced by:
Kazimir Severinovich Malevich (February 23 1879 – May 15, 1935) was a Russian avant-garde artist and art theorist, whose pioneering work and writing had a profound influence on the development of non-objective, or abstract art, in the 20th century.(wikipedia)
From the Tate website:
Suprematism
Name given by the Russian artist Kasimir Malevich to the abstract art he developed from 1913 characterised by basic geometric forms, such as circles, squares, lines and rectangles, painted in a limited range of colours.
Answered by dmkonlinux on December 7, 2020
We could guess how the photographer processed this image. My guess would be sepia toning. It looks like a normal lens was used as there is little distortion and he held the camera out on a stick or as far as he could reach. The shot does not look planned or composed to me. I strongly believe this image is turned 90 degrees to give the illusion of hovering. Turn the image clockwise and you'll have the actual view from the tower.
Answered by Robert Allen Kautz on December 7, 2020
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