David Hockney: Photoshop is boring
-
Not Synced(Louisiana channel - David Hocney: Photoshop is boring)
-
Not Synced[David Hockney] The invention of photography
-
Not Syncedwas the invention of chemicals
-
Not Syncedand in a way, chemical photography is now ended.
-
Not SyncedIt lasted - what? - 160 years.
-
Not SyncedNow, nobody thought chemical photography would end.
-
Not SyncedNobody predicts that, do they?
-
Not SyncedIt ended - it certainly has ended now.
-
Not SyncedKodak stopped making fixative about eight years ago, I think.
-
Not SyncedAnd the fixative was the invention.
-
Not SyncedDaguerre did it his way
-
Not Syncedand in England Fox Talbot, who was playing with cameras,
-
Not Syncedand meaning, seeing these images -
-
Not Syncedand remember, they sold them in color: you always see them in color;
-
Not Syncedthey were surprised that the photograph was black and white
-
Not Syncedwhen they first came out -
-
Not Syncedbut, he said to Sir John Herschel:
-
Not Synced"How can I -- how can we fix this image?"
-
Not SyncedThey could get it on paper, using silver
-
Not Syncedbut it didn't last long.
-
Not SyncedAnd in fact, sir John Herschel said:
-
Not Synced"Oh well, if you want to fix it, you need this, this and this"
-
Not Syncedand wrote out the formula for fixative
-
Not Syncedthat was still being manufactured till eight years ago.
-
Not SyncedSo now, we've now moved out of that period.
-
Not SyncedI will point out, I - in 1989, I was invited by Adobe, in Silicon Valley,
-
Not Syncedto the launch of Photoshop.
-
Not SyncedAnd they invited a few people for various reasons.
-
Not SyncedI tink I was invited because they'd seen the photo collage I'd done
-
Not Syncedof - of Pearblossom Highway.
-
Not SyncedAnd so they invited me and I went up with my assistant, Richard.
-
Not SyncedAnd I took my dogs as well.
-
Not SyncedThey said - I saw it -
-
Not Syncedthe two things they don't like in Silicon Valley:
-
Not Syncedsmokers and dogs.
-
Not SyncedI said "Well, you got to lump it,
-
Not SyncedI'm here and you'll have to do it."
-
Not SyncedBut they were showing as well - we tried things [check]
-
Not SyncedAnd when we were driving back to LA, I said
-
Not Synced"Wow, that was all about drawing
-
Not Syncedand it's the end of chemical photography."
-
Not SyncedBecause you can't do this with chemical photography.
-
Not SyncedIt has to be digital for the Photoshop.
-
Not SyncedAnd I was a bit early, but nevertheless,
-
Not SyncedI could see that's what was coming.
-
Not SyncedThe one-hour Photomat place was going to disappear
-
Not Synced- that's what I had been using, things like that.
-
Not SyncedAnd it has implications that I began to see.
-
Not SyncedThey've got bigger,
-
Not Syncedthey're still there now, they're getting bigger.
-
Not SyncedIn a way, I mean to say, useful thing, Photoshop
-
Not Syncedbut I think it has made a lot of magazines look very similar,
-
Not Syncedrather boring.
-
Not SyncedIt polishes photography, they put the highlights in,
-
Not Syncedtake them blemishes away, I mean that sort of thing,
-
Not Syncedlove it in Hollywood,
-
Not Syncedthey all touch up things.
-
Not SyncedBut I mean, it's also causing a kind of stale look
-
Not Synced- to me, anyway, to me.
-
Not SyncedBut that's why, if you need, you know,
-
Not Syncedeven fashion magazines, thirty years ago,
-
Not Syncedwould have quite a lot of drawings in them
-
Not Syncedso you got a different thing as you looked through pages.
-
Not SyncedBut not many people draw now, so it's all photography
-
Not Syncedand I think, getting more and more boring because of it, I think.
-
Not SyncedI mean, I was - we were just in the Picasso show here, you know.
-
Not SyncedI was looking at that owl, that marvelous owl
-
Not Syncedand to Dave, I pointed out,
-
Not Syncedsome people just stuff a real owl and put it in a case.
-
Not SyncedNot that interesting.
-
Not SyncedAnd I was explaining to my young friend
-
Not Syncedwhy Picasso's is so marvelous.
-
Not SyncedIt isn't an owl, it's a human being looking at an owl.
-
Not SyncedIt's an account of a human being looking at an owl.
-
Not SyncedSo that's what thrills us.
-
Not SyncedThere is more owlness there than in the stuffed owl.
-
Not SyncedIf you find a way to solve something -
-
Not SyncedI was talking about the Spring, you know,
-
Not SyncedI'm working on that now in England -
-
Not Syncedand how would you depict the arrival of Spring?
-
Not SyncedThe arrival of Spring is too slow for a movie to catch it.
-
Not SyncedIt moves too - it moves, but it moves too slowly
-
Not Syncedfor the movie camera.
-
Not SyncedAnd it's also not that easy to photograph
-
Not Syncedbecause the very first signs of it is so subtle
-
Not Syncedthe camera doesn't see them that well.
-
Not SyncedBut if the human eye sees it, you can exaggerate a little
-
Not Syncedthe first little green shoots coming up,
-
Not Syncedyou emphasize the green.
-
Not SyncedThe cameras can't - they're not that good on color, really,
-
Not SyncedI mean, they don't see the subtle colors at all, actually.
-
Not SyncedIt's OK, you know, on a beach, color photography
-
Not Syncedbut with greens, it's not that good, really,
-
Not Syncedeven today it's not.
-
Not SyncedEven, I mean, when we use nine cameras,
-
Not Syncedand therefore we could use different exposures on each one,
-
Not Syncedwe didn't get a bigger range of greens.
-
Not SyncedI know that, I mean I know about,
-
Not SyncedI know about technical things, about film and things.
-
Not SyncedBut it's a -
-
Not Syncedpeop-- you know,
-
Not Syncednot much is written often about these technical problems
-
Not Syncedthey're technical problems.
-
Not SyncedYou can overcome them but
-
Not Syncedif you're not taught about them much,
-
Not Syncedsome people forget that there are problems
-
Not Syncedand that they have to be sorted out.
-
Not SyncedI've been dealing with the Winter in East Yorkshire.
-
Not SyncedIt's a climate, just like this really, just over the water.
-
Not SyncedIt's a very similar climate,
-
Not Syncedvery similar horticulture and agriculture
-
Not SyncedI mean, the Spring is just beginning here, isn't it?
-
Not SyncedIt's just beginning there.
-
Not SyncedAnd - but of course, you don't get Spring in Southern California,
-
Not Syncednot big anyway -
-
Not Syncedand I found there was more color in the Winter,
-
Not Syncedthat the road, this little road, is darkest of all
-
Not Syncedat the height of Summer
-
Not Syncedbecause all the leaves of - come over it, it's like a tunnel
-
Not Syncedand it's darker in it.
-
Not SyncedBut I mean, you get in light coming in.
-
Not SyncedBut that's its darkest.
-
Not SyncedIt's at its lightest in the winter if it snows,
-
Not Syncedbecause you get reflection from the ground.
-
Not SyncedAnd we filmed it with nine cameras,
-
Not SyncedI'm drawing it all the time as well.
-
Not SyncedMy local doctor we're friendly with, you know,
-
Not Syncedbecause she is a pai-- an amateur painter,
-
Not Syncedand she comes to the studio
-
Not Syncedand I'm showing her the pictures.
-
Not SyncedAnd then we showed her the films.
-
Not SyncedAnd she said:
-
Not Synced"God, I've never looked at this little street!"
-
Not SyncedAnd she said, next time she came, she said:
-
Not Synced"You inspired us, David.
-
Not SyncedWe drove down and took a long walk,
-
Not Synceda darned long walk [check]
-
Not Syncedafter watching your films and those things."
-
Not SyncedAnd I said:
-
Not Synced"Well, it's a lovely, it's a
-
Not Synced- I'll tell you what's very nice about there:
-
Not Syncedit's a very, rather isolated bit of England.
-
Not SyncedIt's very isolated partly because there's a wide river,
-
Not Syncedthe Humber, to the South
-
Not Syncedand there are not many people there,
-
Not Syncednot many people live there,
-
Not Syncedit's agricultural, great one agricultural land [check]
-
Not Syncedso they don't build on it much.
-
Not SyncedNot many people.
-
Not SyncedAnd we can - we painted in it, filmed in it,
-
Not Syncednobody's - nobody there to stop you.
-
Not SyncedIn L.A.! Oh, if you got out a camera in a car,
-
Not Syncedyou'd have had to get permits,
-
Not Syncedyou'd have to get police riding to protect you,
-
Not Syncedinstall lines [check]
-
Not SyncedHollywood cops and things.
-
Not SyncedBut in East Yorkshire, we come, nobody bothers us,
-
Not SyncedWe're hanging on jeeps, you know.
-
Not SyncedI mean, actually, once JP and I,
-
Not Syncedwe were going out painting with our canvasses
-
Not Syncedand you never see anybody out there,
-
Not Syncedand suddenly, aboard a Toyota truck [check]
-
Not Syncedfour policemen jump out and we got a ticket:
-
Not Syncedwe hadn't put our seat belts on.
-
Not SyncedAnd OK, we were just not going far [check],
-
Not Syncedwe were going to get out our canvas. [check]
-
Not SyncedAnd so we got the tickets.
-
Not SyncedOne of the policemen is looking out of the window to me
-
Not Syncedand saying "You got to have the seatbelt,
-
Not Synceddeath is lurking everywhere."
-
Not SyncedWell, I'm looking out of the window and I mean,
-
Not SyncedI mean at leaves coming on the trees,
-
Not Syncedthe spring is coming out, and I say:
-
Not Synced"Well, you know, life is lurking everywhere as well!" [laughs]
-
Not SyncedAnyway, we got the tickets,
-
Not Syncedwe might put them in the exhibition, actually.
-
Not SyncedBut we were going to paint, you know,
-
Not Syncedset up six canvasses.
-
Not SyncedWell, if they saw us with these cameras,
-
Not Syncedwe'd have been taken out to jail, probably, I mean
-
Not Syncedbecause we were hanging on.
-
Not SyncedBut we're not going very f--
-
Not SyncedI mean, we were going, you know, 10 miles an hour.
-
Not SyncedThey'd leave it alone, probably,
-
Not Syncedbut it was amusing that we got the ticket for the seatbelts.
-
Not SyncedI did tell them that I was not particularly into bondage, me:
-
Not SyncedI'm not, actually.
-
Not SyncedI f-- I don't like the seatbelts. [laughs]
-
Not SyncedA lot of people are into bondage .... [check]
-
Not Syncedand it's OK: good fun, sometimes.
-
Not Synced(Louisiana channel)
-
Not Synced(Supported by Nordea Funden)
-
Not Synced(louisiana.dk/channel)
-
Not Synced(©LOUISIANA)
- Title:
- David Hockney: Photoshop is boring
- Description:
-
In this video David Hockney meditates on the concept of seeing. Of depicting spring, of Picasso's owl that thrills us, of Photoshop and of comparing seat belts and bondage.
David Hockney was invited to the launch of Photoshop in Silicon Valley because of his interest in photography. Photoshop has made a lot of magazines look similar and more and more boring, he says. There is more owlness in Picasso's owl than in a stuffed owl because it is an account of a human being looking on an owl.
Interviewed by Christian Lund, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2011.
Filmed by Martin Kogi
Produced by Martin Kogi and Christian Lund, 2012.
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art.
Meet more artists at www.channel.louisiana.dk
Louisiana Channel is a non-profit video channel for the Internet launched by the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in November 2012. Each week Louisiana Channel will publish videos about and with artists in visual art, literature, architcture, design etc.
Read more:
http://channel.louisiana.dk/aboutSupported by Nordea-fonden.
- Video Language:
- English, British
- Team:
- Louisiana Channel
- Duration:
- 11:20
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for David Hockney: Photoshop is boring | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for David Hockney: Photoshop is boring | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for David Hockney: Photoshop is boring | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for David Hockney: Photoshop is boring | ||
Claude Almansi added a translation |