




Love Bites III
Happy at last?
Personnage dans un paysage
Model Study 15
Model Study 5

I set the subjects up in their own bedroom. This way you can read from the photograph the level of comfort the person feels at having their personal life invaded. The rest of the components are purposely kept the same from portrait to portrait so that it is easy to compare and contrast from one to the next without distractions. The photographs are purposely set up to resemble passport pictures or other commonplace headshots in order to represent the regularity of the invasion of photography in our lives. The photographs are meant to be invasive portraits of the subject, photographer, and viewer.

Yokomizo sent letters to random people and told them to be standing in front of their window at a certain time. She went to their house at that time and took a picture of them through the window. Although the same approach was used for all of the pictures, the subjects in the photos make them very different. In fact, by using the same approach for all of the subjects, it makes it easier to compare and contrast the differences between the people. What is really interesting about these images is that they were taken at night, which means that the people could not see the photographer, but could only see themselves while they looked through the window, so the viewer sees the subject as they are responding to themselves. I am interested in this set of photos because it is a kind of portraiture where the surroundings and the the emotion are all natural and so we get a real glimpse of who the person is rather than what they want to look like or what the photographer is trying to make them look like.
Hanzlova did a series of portraits where she stopped people in the street and asked to take their pictures. Again, the subjects knew they were being photographed, but in this case they had no time to prepare. We see each individual's reaction to being photographed by the stranger. Since the same treatment is used in all of these photos, the viewer can compare and contrast to learn things about the subjects in the pictures.
Helen Van Meene's portraits are a little different because the setting is completely set up by the photographer. The only thing not premeditated in the photo is the response of the subject. The surroundings elicit a natural reaction from the subject which Van Meene captures. The reaction of the subject is the main focus of the photos. We can read a lot about the person through the emotions they are emitting. Usually Van Meene tries to capture the awkward and/or emotional state of adolescent girls which is usually a natural response to having a picture taken anyways.