Early days for a site dedicated to showcasing my work

First to all of you who drop by, just to say a big thank you for your interest :it means a lot to me.

Blogging is helping me  clarify my thoughts about my own work whilst allowing me to discover other photographers , writers, poets , thinkers, painters, activists and more.

I have started creating a site for showcasing only. The site is in its very early stages as I am getting my head around the pros and cons of the template I’m using. Not much to see yet but it is close enough to the feel I am after: simple, “dépouillié” as we say in French, which I find suits most of my work. Three categories for now . It opens on the Paris slideshow. There’s a permanent link to it underneath the title of this blog site.

Wishing you every success in your endeavours.

Kind Regards

Christophe

        Click on the screen shot or the name to get a preview of chevaugeonphoto.com . 

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Paris s’amuse /Paris has fun. Jardins des Tuileries . Fête Foraine /Funfair

It seems a long time ago since I took these pictures, and it was ! At least one was taken in the mid 1990s and the others in the early 2000s. All were captured on film . I scanned them a few months ago from the original 35 mm negatives .For as long as I remember, every summer this funfair sets up on the edge of the Jardins des Tuileries, across the Rue de Rivoli: I have fond memories of the place and love that time of the year :Paris, in August is particularly quiet and yet fun.

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I’ve been working on a book project to present my favourites personal photographs of Paris:these will definitively be there.

When architectural and street photography meet: Elena and a Passer By. Newcastle-Upon-Tyne September 12 2014

Was out and about in Newcastle today working on fairly standard architectural photography views with heavy and slow kit ( tripod , D800 , 24 mm PC lens). I was setting up a shot ( the wall and the reflection in the building’s window had caught my eye ) when this lovely young lady, Elena, if I caught her name right, offered to go around me and said “I hate it when people pass in front of my shots” to which I replied that I sometimes liked it when people became part of a photograph. We had a lovely brief chat about her own photographic pursuits and she accepted to pose against the wall. I  didn’t have a card (unprofessional I know ) so she wrote my long and complicated name on her hand. I hope she finds this blog and is happy with the photo. And of course I wish her the best for all her projects . The photograph is stitched from two frames . As for the second photograph, also stitched, it was taken by the Library. In  a way, although in colour, both these photos  are akin to  the La Piscine rue David d’Angers and to Près de la Gare du Nord captured on film around twenty years ago in Paris.The resolution of the D800 with that particular lens of two images stitched is an invitation to print these big.

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Elena

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A Passer By

Victor Hugo La Comédie Française Paris

Read les Misérables or Quatre-Vingt-Treize ( Ninety-Three ) :his last novel .

 

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A portrait of J. France 2014

A portrait doesn’t have to be up close and personal to be personal: love you J.

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La Piscine rue David d’Angers et Près de La Gare du Nord : Paris un début de projet de livre/ Paris book project

A few months ago I started an ambitious project to put the photos of Paris that matter to me the most in to book form. I’ve almost finished phase one of the work:selecting and editing the photos, many of which where captured on film.

Phase two, the layout, is seriously underway. My options were either to place the photos in more or less chronological order or to link them somehow: I quickly opted for the link them somehow. Furthermore Bruno Chalifour, photographer and critique prompted me to think in terms of series as opposed to stand alone approach.

It’s been a fascintating journey that has revealed to me how much, and sometimes, how little, I ‘ve changed my approach to organising the elements of a photograph leaving aside all considerations of content, lighting and rendition of the black and white.

“La Piscine rue David d’Anger”s is one of my favourite personal photographs. Everything comes together: subject, key elements, light and tonal range. “Près de la Gare du Nord ” I only edited recently (it’s been sitting in my archives for years). It works for me too. Because my archives are not organised , I don’t have a clear idea of how far apart in time they were taken( I suspect not very far ) but no matter how different they are in terms of content, it struck me that they are linked and  need to be on opposing pages:  of course they share obvious features but most importantly in my view they work in similar ways to create a feeling of space and of time captured.

 

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 Black and white street photography by Christophe Chevaugeon  taken at the Piscine rud David d’Angers in Paris probably around the mid 90s

 

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Black and white street photography by Christophe chevaugeon taken Près de la Gare du Nord in Paris probably around the mid 90s too

A landscape exhibition: A bit romantic ? Pourquoi Pas ?

The Felton 45 Gallery ( Northumberland UK), just across the street from me, invited  local photographers to present some of their work. In the end , I decided on this set of  6 regional landscapes, linked by a  touch of romantcism….

The photographs are printed by me on A3+ Harman Fiber Base Glossy Paper using an epson 3880 with Epson ultrachrom K3 inks: my favourite combination of paper and ink, akin to the feel of the glossy fiber based archival silver halide prints I used to make.Each print is catalogued,numbered and signed. The image size is either 30cm by 30cm or 30 cm by 40 cm. They are temporarily mounted, to make professionaly framing them by the buyer ieasier in the future. As they are, they retail at slightly under a hundred pounds. See my article/post about prints made by me.

Birch trees Kielder Little Hill Trees and Clouds little Pool of Water Moon Over Skye Trees at Dusk Winter Tree and Fence

My prints and me. Mes tirages et moi. Prints you can buy . Tirages que vous pous pouvez acheter.

Screen shots and prints:prints have always been my goal.

I strongly feel that a photograph’s worth is ultimately determined by how it lives -or dies- in print form. I’ll even add ,and this is about as close to dogmatic as I’ll ever get, that for me prints are the best way to experience photographs. No matter what they’re printed on, as long as it is well done, I always “enjoy” a printed version of a photograph more than a screen version.

Although presently I work digitally, I still find, just as I did in my darkroom, that  photographs best  reveal their strengths and weaknesses to me when I print them.  If a photograph looks good on screen but “won’t print”, it’s most often a sure sign that I was kidding myself and that I can bin it without regret.

 

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One  of my favourites, works on screen, in a small way but a print really makes it come to life.

Don’t get me wrong, I don’t have a problem with some photographs having only an” on screen” digital life.  And I enjoy working in a light room rather than a dark one, but still, a screen shot just doesn’t quite cut it for me . Simply put,with a screen shot there is no guarantee that the viewer is seeing what the photographer wants him to see at the size and in the colours she/he decided best works for that particular photograph. ( I know, this is also true  with prints but to a much lesser degree in my view.) That’s why, even if I’m delighted to share my photographs as screen shots, and generally speaking to access the works of others on a screen, the digital revolution hasn’t changed my goal , which is for my photographs to exist as prints .

What the digital revolution has changed is how I go about taking photographs and printing them: I’ve traded in my film cameras, processing tanks and trays, contact printer and enlarger, for digital cameras,a scanner, a computer and an inkjet printer.

Of course, and I’m only talking  black and white photography here, there are differences in the look and feel of film and digital negatives, and also in the look and feel of silver halide and inkjet prints, to name but the two processes that I’ve practised ( and that I mix at times when making inkjet prints from scans of my negatives). Having found both processes to fulfill my expectations with respect to what constitues  effective prints of my photographs, I now exclusively print digitally whilst acknowledging that there are subtle differences between the two.

Inkjet prints are hard work and costly: I make my own.

When I took my first steps in photography, I quickly understood that to have control over the final result, the best route for an amateur was to learn how to process film and how to print, and do it yourself: which I did as the other route,collaboration with high quality labs, was out of the question.

Likewise,when I took my first steps in digital photography, I wanted to control as much as possible the final result and learned how to do it myself.  Contrary to my experience in the darkroom, I  expected that making an effective digital print would be cheap and as easy as hitting a button. How naive ! I quickly discovered that making an effective inkjet print is just as costly in quality materials, and finicky and challenging but infintiely less messy, less manual labour intense and possibly less wasteful and tedious  than making silver halide prints. Once again, they are different creatures. As for that often referred to” exclusive magical experience” of the image progressively emerging on photographic paper in the processing tray, I remember it with a mixture of  fondness, excitement and frustration and must say that I now experience something similar in my light room, when a print progressively emerges from the printer. And I get an extra rush when a print is finally framed.

 

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I still get a sort of buzz as a print emerges from the printer,similar to that of seeing the image build on traditional paper in the processing tray: will the image hold its promises or be a disappointment ? Do I need to tweek the file or the settings to get it just right ?

 

In a nutshell, making inkjet prints  involves a lot of work and skill ,quality tools and materials and costs money even before factoring the added value of the photograph itself !  At present, I print all my  photographs sold through this site myself, with a high end inkjet printer and printing materials. Printing  continues to give me great satisfaction. So if you buy a print of one of my photographs, you can be sure that it was made by me.

(Because I feel some of my photographs need to be bigger than whatI can achieve with my set up , limited to A2 paper, I am looking to collaborate with a lab to make bigger prints. When/if I put those up for sale, I’ll make it clear that I’ve outsourced the print.)

Limited edition prints  ?   Maybe one day.

Collectors and buyers like the idea of limited edition prints.  In photography, where there is no theoritcal limit to the number of precisely identical prints you can make of a photograph, there is no justification for it with respect to guaranteeing a consistent quality of print. On the other hand, limiting the number of prints made, can by reducing the offer, contribute to them commanding  an ever higher price  if they become more and more in demand.

About limited editions and vintage prints, as David Vestal points out in the chapter “Print Esthetics and Beyond” of his book “The Art of Black and White Enlarging”…there is a danger  that the photographer might later on come to a better understanding of an image and be able to make a better print of it but be restricted  because held to a limited edition or to the cult of the vintage print. I couldn’t agree more . I  revisit my photographs before printing them and it does happen that I interpret them differently. Thus I see no point at present in making print runs in limited numbers. I only wish to sell prints that I am happy with at the time I make them.

So for the time being I am content with giving each of my prints a unique catalogue number( that I write on the back) and with keeping a copy of the file that I used to make it and with providing buyers with a certificate of authencticity that includes a list the materials and tools used to make it.

Prints are physical objects  that need to be framed ! ( Or at least kept in a decent presentation box.)

Obvious I know but prints are physical objects: they breathe, have a surface, reflect and absorb  parts of the light that fall on them and can present minor imperfections . When exhibited, they need to be hung to allow for an appropriate viewing distance and framed  to enhance how we experience them and to protect them.

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A print on heavy weight Harman Fiber Based Glossy Paper, printed with Epson Ultrachrome K3 Inks, un mounted in an archival storage and presentention box. Note the framed print above it,:it’s actually one of the rare silver halide prints still in my possession ( most of my “traditional” prints I either gave away or sold ).

 

I am not in the business of framing my work except for my own use or  for exhibits: even then I only mount them temporarily. Framing is a serious craft and rightfully costly when done professionaly. A good print deserves a good frame that will work for it and also protect it. Many photographers sell themselves too cheaply: ironically, the framer ends up making more money than the photographer, creator of an orignal image and possibly, like me, of an orignal high quality print that many clients are less willing to spend money on than the frame they’ll eventually hang it in ! Madness .

 

So if you’re interested in buying an original print made by me of one of my photographs…..

Just get in touch via email at frogfoto.com@googlemail.com  prices from £50( for a print on A4 ) not including handling and shipping

Place de la Nation 7 :Manif Mai 2002 Revisitée / Demonstration May 2002 revisited

See Place de la Nation 1 for explanation and take time to look at all these beautiful faces. Thank you. Merci

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Place de la Nation 6 :Manif Mai 2002 Revisitée / Demonstration May 2002 revisited

See Place de la Nation 1 for explanation and take time to look at all these beautiful faces. Thank you. Merci

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