It was very interesting to listen to Jeff Whetstone talk
about his work. Not being familiar with what he does made me learn a lot more
about him. His work shows his work with zoology, which is a large influence on
his photographs. Whetstone talks about how the landscape is
ecological and how humans are animals. The way he takes his photographs seems
incredibly different than the way others do. While taking landscape
photographs, Whetstone wanted to create a different type of wilderness, one
that involved humans. He also stated that landscapes have character. So when he
was photographing in eastern Kentucky he wanted to show that the geology was
indeed very rich but the people were very poor.
I really
enjoyed Whetstone’s portraits of people in the South. They were in some ways
comical because the lives lived there are so different from the ones in the
city. Camouflage, which was a big trend a few seasons ago, really is a way of
life in the South due to hunting.
These two photographs from the New Wilderness series depict a different way of life. These two photos are kind of eery. Especially the second one when you can barely see the mans face. I find them really captivating because even though they are posed they are not staged. This is something that goes on every day, or at least every day during hunting season. Whetstone stated that he wanted to focus on gender and sexuality. In the South there does seem to be traces of hyper-masculinity. Whetstone also stated that he was around a lot of masculine women growing up. He stated that when taking photographs of these men they knew how they were being depicted so it was an interesting experience.
Whetstone tends to focus a lot on hunting. We were able to see a clip from a movie he had made. It showed hunters making female duck mating calls. There was a humor aspect to it because the mating calls would be translated into what someone may actually be saying to attract someone else. It is funny to see men dressed in full camo whispering things to get ducks attention. I wonder why Whetstone was so interested in duck hunting culture. Is it because of where he is from? Does he have some sort of personal attachment to it?
Whetstone created false horizons for the photographs shown above. He stated that these were contemporary landscapes and played with space and perspective. I remember him saying something about living in a collage in relation to these photographs. I like how Whetstone was able to manipulate reality with creating these photographs. Not only are they visually stunning but you have to look closely to see how Whetstone creates the horizon. It is interesting because the pieces used look like they were already in the picture. For example, the broken wood in the second photograph looks like mountains for a quick second because you realize what the object actually is. The colors used are also important, specifically in the first photograph. The green/blueish metal or paper matches very well with the mountains in the background. It almost blends into the photograph.