Showing posts with label double 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label double 8. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 August 2025

Yashica 8T-2

Yashica 8T-2 double-8 camera

Following my experiences with the Bolex B-8VS, I wanted a compact 2x8mm camera to replace it, and for similar reasons–something small enough that could go in my camera bag alongside still film cameras. There are numerous all-mechanical and all-manual 8mm cameras from the same era as the Bolex which have a similar design; slightly earlier 8mm cameras were often less streamlined-looking, such as the Bell & Howell turret cameras, or simply bigger and more boxy, like the early Kodaks with their huge internal sprocket wheel; the design of the compact Bolex 8mm camera must have inspired the first generation of post-war 8mm cameras, as many compact double-turret cameras appeared looking rather similar around the same time.

One camera that came up in my research was the Yashica 8T-2; there were four different initial Yashica 8mm models before the Yashica T3. This features a three-lens turret and makes for a larger camera with a redesigned body. The features of the two-lens turret models are very similar to the Bolex in compact size, shape and layout. I may have been alerted to the Yashica 8T-2 by the video on the Film Photography Project's YouTube channel; similar to the Bolex B8VS, I bought the camer before a trip abroad, to Belgium this time. There are a few evolutionary differences from the earlier Yashica 8mm cameras: the original Yashica 8 from 1957 has a different shutter release and single frame setting (more like the contemporary Bolex) and a different door catch; there then was a single lens Yashica 8S from 1958, and the 8T and 8T-2 from the same year; Yashica triple-lens turret cameras began the following year. There seems to be little difference between the 8T and 8T-2: the cameras have simply "yashica-8" embossed on the door (from reading the Yashica TLR website, the distinction between the two is unclear: the impression I get is that the Yashica 8T was actually the same camera as the 8T-2 but offered with one lens only at the time of purchase).

The first Yashica 8mm model came with Zunow lenses; my camera arrived with a Yashinon f1.4 13mm lens, with the Yashinons featuring an almost identical desgin to the equivalent Zunow lenses from which they must have derived. For the pictures on this post I fitted a Cinetor one-and-a-half inch lens from a different camera, which incidentally has a stuck focus ring–when using the camera I used the 38mm Bolex Kern Paillard lens for a long lens option (which is quite compact compared to the Cinetor, nearly as short as the Yashinon 13mm lens). As the lens mounts on the turret are a standard D-mount, there are many interchangeable lenses that can be fitted to the camera. The Yashinon f1.4 13mm lens does not focus quite as close as the equivalent on the Bolex, but it does focus to 1 foot; focus is manual and not reflected in the viewfinder of course. The 13mm lens stops down to f22, useful for bright subjects when shooting faster contemporary emulsions.

One difference from the Bolex B8 is the mechanism for framing viewfinder to different focal lengths. On the Yashica there is a slider on the side with adjusts the viewfinder from 6.5mm, through 13mm and 25mm to 38mm lenses–unlike the Bolex, the wide angle lens doesn't require an adpator for the wide angle lens. It also has a set of markings with very small numerals inside at the bottom of the scale alongside the word "SCOPE". This was for a set of animorphic lenses, which, when combined with an animorphic adaptor on the viewfinder gave a widescreen projection–various widescreen aspect ratios becoming popular in the cinema, in part as a means to compete with the developing television market. The animorphic 'scope' lenses did require an adaptor which slipped over the front of viewfinder to mask it for the correct aspect ratio; these lenses appear to be very rare now. There was also an early zoom lens produced for the camera which had a mechnical arm which connected the lens barrel to the viewfinder slider, thus providing the correct angle of view when adjusting the focal length.

Loading the Yashica 8T-2 is a little simpler than the Bolex: the camera opens with a latch that lifts up and turns. Inside, the pressure plate does not have to be opened as a separate operation: it is sprung to open automatically when the camera itself is opened: an angled linear spring inside the door pushes the pressure plate into place when the camera is closed again. Unlike the Bolex, the lower spindle inside the camera does have the four teeth at its base to ensure that the 8mm spool is correctly oriented; the original Yashica spool which came with the camera is both numbered for sides 1 and 2 and has a different colour for each side too. The film path is marked with white lines with arrows for the correct threading and loop forming of the film. At the bottom right of the camera interior is a sprung pin which resets the footage counter when released: this is in a small round window on the back of the Yahsica 8T-2 in a very similar position to that of the Bolex B8. There is also a tripod socket on the base, offset presumably to balance the weight and motion of the srping motor; it also doubles as an attachment point for a hand strap, which my camera came with. Timed without film, at 16fps, the camera's motor runs for a full 30 seconds on one complete wind.

Without the Bolex's variable shutter, the controls on the side of the camera feel a little less cluttered. There is the shutter speed dial above the winding key, and the shutter release, changed from earlier iterations of the Yashica 8 appears very much like what one might see on a typical stills camera of the period. It has a recessed port for a cable release; on the front of the camera is a sliding switch with R for run and L for lock; while running, this switch can slide into the lock position to keep the camera running without the need for any pressure on the shutter release. There is also a second cable release port in a very similar position to that of the Bolex, with the same function: this provides the single frame setting for stop motion and animation purposes.

The shutter speed dial has seven marked positions for 8, 12, 16, 24, 36, 48, and 64fps, with 16 picked out in red for normal operation. There is however an eighth position between 12fps and 16fps. This has a definite click-stop on the dial as is common with all of the speed settings. Online, and on the Yashica TLR website–from which much of the historical information fof which this post is derived–there are models where this is marked TV: this appears to be a setting for filming from a television screen and evidently a shutter speed designed to be compatible with the scanning of the cathode ray television screen, a function useful decades before the home video recorder. As to why the marking was removed but setting kept on the Yashica 8T-2–or at least my model, as it appears that some 8T-2 cameras were produced with the setting marked–can only be speculated on.

After my experiences with the Bolex B-8VS–although the Yashica 8T-2 doesn't have a variable shutter which caused the problems with that camera–I did a test of a short length of very old Fortepan film in the camera before using it for anything important. The test looked fine; to date, I've only shot one full roll of Orwo UN54 with the Yashica 8T-2 around Belgium a couple of years ago. I had wanted to make something in Bruges in response to some ideas around the book Bruges-la-Morte by Georges Rodenbach; Bruges la Morte, famously the first novel to be illustrated by photographs, inspired the crime fiction D'entre les morts by Boileau-Narcejac on which Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo was based. The unhealthy Symbolist atmosphere of Bruges in the novel was very difficult to square with the reality of Bruges thronged with tourists on a hot early summer's day. I shot some film of the canals mostly, thinking that it could be put together some how, but as a work, I still haven't resolved it; one short shot of swan down floating on black water gives some sense of what I wanted to achieve, although the resolution isn't quite up to it perhaps.

I subsequently discovered an issue with my camera which I hadn't anticipated: dutifully locking the shutter release when putting the camera away in my bag, I discovered on taking it out again that the motor had run down and it appeared–and was obvious when I got the film developed–that the motor had been running inside the bag. On examination, with the run switch in the lock position there is a bit of resistance when the shutter release is depressed, but if one pushes hard enough the shutter release depresses fully, but–as the switch is in the lock position–the motor then runs continuously. I reasoned that had I not locked the shutter, I may possibly have wasted less film with the release springing back instead of running until the motor stopped. I also botched flipping the film to shoot side 2, as I thought I was sufficiently confident to do this in a dark bag, with the intention of getting as much usable film as possible from not exposing the end of the film to light when turning it over. I didn't load it correctly however, and I thought I was shooting a lot of footage on the second side of the reel around Antwerp before I realised the film itself wasn't going through the gate and onto the take up reel; like the Bolex, the footage counter on the Yashica 8T-2 measures the turning of the take-up reel rather than the amount of film on it, as is the case with some cameras, so this counter can be going up even if the film itself is not actually moving through the camera. The short loop below represents almost everything I actually shot in Antwerp.

Overall, the Yashica 8T-2 gives the impression of a well-designed and constructed 8mm camera, comparable to the Bolex B8, but perhaps a little more elegant, a little more curved than the solid B8, with the Yashica's design details adding to its aesthertics, such as the vertical ribs on the sides of the body, the diagonal slash of the exposure table, and its muted metallic grey, offest by the dark grey accents around the viewfinder, motor wind and exposure table–this coming from a time when cameras all suddenly began to become grey as deviation from the standard black. It also belongs to the period in the 1950s before plastic started to be comonly used in camera construction and as such–issues with the lock lever on my camera notwithstanding (I have thought it should be possible to fashion a small guard or sleeve to fit around the shutter release when not in use instead of relying on the lock switch)–it gives a confidence in the hand, and in use, at nearly seventy years old the Yashica 8T-2 is one of the better compact, all-manual 8mm cameras around.

Sources/references
The Yashica 8 ciné cameras on Yashica TLR
Yashica 8T2 manual
Yashica 8T2 on Anna & Terry Vacani Binocular and Cine Collection
Yashica 8T2 Overview on Film Photography Project 

Thursday, 17 July 2025

The Paillard-Bolex B-8VS

Bolex B-8VS
The Canon Cine-Zoom 512 which I wrote about a number of years ago has all the features that one might want in a 2x8mm film camera except compactness. Considering the desire for a compact 8mm camera for travelling, but one quite fully-featured, led me to consider the series of Bolex cameras which began with the Bolex L8 in the early 1940s, through various models and iterations for the next two decades. I wanted a 2x8mm camera, ideally with as many manual features as possible, in particular variable frame rates, and small enough to fit in a camera bag alongside a 35mm folding camera, a medium format folding camera, numerous rolls of film and accessories. The model that I bought to fulfil as many of these stipulations as possible was a Bolex B-8VS. I wanted it for a trip to the Netherlands made just before the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic; I had the intention of making some work there on 8mm film and I wrote about this under 'Cameras Obscura' and 'A View of Delft'; I also used the Bolex for the first version of 'Workers Not Leaving The Factory'. I had intentions of writing a post about the camera itself around the time, in 2020, but for one main reason–which I will come back to–I didn't; looking through a number of draft posts, having neglected this blog recently, I thought it worth finishing my write up.
 
The Bolex L, B, C and D series cameras are all built around the same body casting and spring wound motor; the distinguishing feature of the B8 cameras, which followed the L8, was the presence of the dual lens turret. In the years before zoom lenses became common, beyond the more basic, lower-end cameras with fixed lenses, for the convenience of changing focal lengths without having to physically unscrew one lens and replace with another, turrets proliferated. Through the 1950s, dual turret cameras were superseded by triple-lens turrets (which would hold a wide, standard and long at once) until zoom lenses made these obsolete. However, both triple turrets and zoom lenses (which also necessitated reflex viewing) increased the bulk of cameras, which was why the B-8 series appealed; being familiar with fully manual still cameras also drove me to seek out manual cinĂ© cameras. Without lenses the Bolex B body is 128mm high, 54mm wide and 88mm deep, compact but heavy. (The letter suffixes for Bolex cameras–after the single-lens L–run B: twin lens turret; C: single lens; D: triple lens; there was also the model P, still built around the same basic body but with a zoom lens; there was also the H8 camera, based around the 16mm Bolex, and as a result a much larger camera–for most of the information about dates and specifications, this post has relied heavily on the excellent Bolex Collector website).
 
 
The Bolex B-8 was introduced in 1953, and its various iterations were produced for the next decade; the B-8VS (variable shutter) model dates from 1957, with the serial number on mine dating it to the following year (serial numbers are engraved on the tripod mount on the bottom of the camera–on the B-8VS this sits a little proud meaning that the camera does not entirely sit happily on a flat surface); following the B-8VS there was a B-8L model with built-in light meter, a single speed B-8SL and the last model, the B-8LA, an improved B-8L. All feature the same rotating turret which allows for two standard D mount lenses; my camera came with a 13mm f1.9 Yvar lens, a 'standard' focal length for the 8mm format; I already had a 36mm f2.8 Yvar lens from another camera, a long lens to complement the standard. As the lenses are the common screw-in D-mount, it means that there are numerous interchangeable lenses available in a variety of focal lengths and apertures that can be used on the Bolex B-8. 
 
Bolex B-8VS with lower lens removed

The lens in the uppermost position on rotating turret is in taking position; the turret rotates clockwise, with a handy arrow to direct the user, with a sprung detent in the centre which clicks the lenses' positions satisfyingly in place. The lenses' screw thread is designed such that the focus and aperture settings are aligned with the indicating line on the lens body when looking down from the top of the camera (the built-in lightmeter on later models necessitated this positioning being changed so that the lens' settings on those cameras is seen from the side). The standard length Kern-Paillard lens which my camera came with is capable of focusing to 3/4 of a foot, or 23cm–a very close focus which of course produces parallax problems, but these are not insurmountable (the post 'Cameras Obscura' describes my attempts to film a close-up of a camera obscura screen roughly 8cm square). The Kern-Paillard lenses have a clever depth of field indicator built in, named by the manufacturers 'Visifocus': turning the aperture ring displays or hides a set of bright orange dots which can be read off against the distances on the lens. Focus and aperture settings are manual and the separate viewfinder is non-reflex.

Lens detail showing the Visifocus depth of field system
All B-8 cameras take 7.5m/25ft rolls of 2x8mm film, run twice through the camera to shoot each side of the film in succession, developed and spliced together for a 50ft length of film for projection. Loading the B-8 camera, although not as simple as inserting a Super-8 cartridge, is fairly straightforward. After opening the camera, turning the catch on the door from F to O, the film gate's pressure plate is released using a pivoting lever. The fresh roll of film is placed on the upper spindle in the film chamber, threaded through the gate while the pressure plate is open, and wound onto the take up spool on the lower spindle. The camera door cannot be closed and the catch turned to F while the pressure plate is disengaged. 

Bolex B-8VS opened for loading
One interesting feature to note is the fact that the two spindles inside the camera are undifferentiated in terms of which side of the spool they will accept: 2x8mm spools are designed with three tabs on one side and four on the other so as to make it impossible to insert them into a camera the wrong way around: some cameras have corresponding teeth at the bottom of each spindle, some only on the take up spindle; the Bolex B-8 has a sprung section on the take up spindle only which holds the take up spool by friction. The footage counter on the rear of the camera is reset on opening the camera; unlike some cameras which use a lever arm on the supply side spool to determine how much footage has been shot, the Bolex B-8's counter must simply be registering the rotations of the take up spool. The camera does require some winding of the motor to load; the winding key ratchets, meaning that the motor can be quickly wound by rocking the key backwards and forwards rather than making complete turns.

Bolex B-8VS with pressure plate opened for threading

Away from the lens, all the other user controls are on the right hand side of camera body. The shutter speed dial has seven speeds from 8 frames per second, through 12, 16 (picked out in red as the standard fps setting), 24, 32, 48, 64; the latter four generally used as slow-motion speeds, with 8 and 12fps intended more for use in low light with the availability of emulsions at the time rather than speeding up motion. The top dial is used to adjust the viewfinder's angle of view, with settings for 12,5mm, 25mm and 36m: for wide angle lenses there was an adapter which slipped over the front of the viewfinder. The shutter release is a lever that wraps around the corner of the body with a serrated grip; below this is a dial to lock the shutter, which will lock in both closed or open positions; above this is a cable release socket with a sliding cover: the first open position is for normal running of the shutter; the top position indicated by a second notch is for single-frame operation. The B-8VS also has a dial to set the variable shutter. This has three semi-circle icons at the front of the dial: one filled in silver, one half-filled, and one black, followed by an arrow and a letter S. On the other side of the dial, there are settings of 35 and 70 which align with the full silver dial and half-filled respectively: these refer to effective shutter speeds, the full open shutter (the silver semi-circle) giving an effective speed of 1/35th of a second, the half-filled circle a 70th. Possibly the 'S' stands for 'shut' with the shutter fully closed. 

User controls on the side of the Bolex B-8VS
When I bought the camera, the possibility of adjusting the shutter angle seemed to be a useful additional control, useful for creating in camera fades to black, or for using a wider aperture in brighter light for example, or a faster film in brighter conditions. However, I found the variable shutter dial on my camera very stiff to turn, and would not turn to the fully-open setting at all; turning it to the half open setting would somehow jam the shutter and the film would not run through the camera. As a result I shot the film with the dial half-way between this setting and the closed symbol, not really understanding at the time what these icons meant and what the numerals referred to. As a result, I found my films shot on the trip to the Netherlands around three stops underexposed; I developed one roll first to find it underexposed, then did numerous tests before getting an acceptable if high contrast image by greatly extending the development time on the second roll of Kodak Double-X that I had shot; with a roll of very old Orwo UP21 film from the early 1980s, I extended the development time, flashed the whole roll to pre-expose it in an attempt to raise shadow detail and then toned it with selenium toner as an exercise in intensifying the negative. This was only partially successful, as can be seen in the post 'A View of Delft' and in the short clip below. 
 
 
Once I had realised that this was a problem, I could adjust the camera when shooting to take into account the partially-closed shutter: the easiest way to do so would be open the aperture by three stops, or simply downrating the film when metering. This was the approach I made for 'Workers Not Leaving The Factory', although that had its own problems thanks to using unperforated film in the camera. I had previously used single-perforated 16mm Double-X film in the Bolex when testing exposure and development times: the Bolex B8 only engages the perforations on one side of the film, but having shot a short length of single perforation film, I thought I might as well try to flip the film and pass it through the camera a second time, and the pull-down claw obviously had enough friction to advance the film. The left hand side of the print below from the film shows fairly regularly spaced marks on the left, unperforated side of the film; the perforated side has the frames bunched up and overlapping.
 
Print from single-perforated 16mm Double-X film, shot with the Bolex B-8VS
I used the fact that I could put unperforated film through the camera when making 'Workers Not Leaving The Factory', using lengths of medium format Ilford FP4 Plus cut to 16mm wide in order to shoot the site of the Ilford factory in Ilford on Ilford film, which was partially successful. Shortly after shooting this film, the camera's spring-wound motor stopped working properly. Using it prior to this, when the motor was fully wound, part-way through its run, there would be an audible 'clunk' (which could also be felt); I suspect that there was a kink in the spring, possibly due to it being stored for years, maybe even decades, with the spring motor partially wound. It feels as though the spring no longer winds past this kink, with the result it only runs for eight or nine seconds–and the speed as it runs sounds irregular as well. Perhaps using unperforated film had some effect, although one feels that this shouldn't really affect the motor. As a result, the camera has stayed on a shelf (or indeed, inside a drawer) since. It may well be worth disassembling to investigate–for which I may have held off from writing this post that the time–but this hasn't been something I've been keen to do so far, having acquired other 8mm cameras since to take the place of the Bolex B-8VS.

Sources/References
Bolex B-8VS on Bolex Collector 
Bolex B-8VS in the Science Museum 
Bolex B-8 on Vintage Cameras (French) 
Bolex B-8VS with triple turret coversion on Deutsches Kamera Museum (German)

Tuesday, 13 October 2020

A View of Delft

“For it is not a question of presenting works in correlation with their time, but rather, in the time in which they are born, of presenting the time that knows them.”
Walter Benjamin (italics mine)

When Vermeer was ‘rediscovered’ in the nineteenth century, his oeuvre scattered and attributed to others, there was no unified idea of what a Vermeer painting was, and therefore what could be looked at and considered a Vermeer. Now, Vermeer is generally thought of as a painter of quiet interiors, usually with a solitary figure, usually female, with just a few odd paintings lying outside these descriptors. However, in this period of rediscovery, many other artists’ works were attributed to Vermeer, driven by ThĂ©ophile ThorĂ©’s conception of what Vermeer’s oeuvre should look like. Thorè, writing under the pseudonym Willem BĂ¼rger, in his article ‘The Sphinx of Delft’ in the Gazette de Beaux Arts (1866), included twenty-two landscapes and street scenes, around a third of the paintings that he listed as being by Vermeer, seeing the artist as a painter of views (these paintings are now attributed to Vermeer’s contemporaries Jacob Vrel, his near-namesake Dirk Jan van der Meer, and the much later amateur painter Jan van der Laan). That Thorè-BĂ¼rger saw Vermeer as a painter of views was no doubt influenced by the impact of his encountering the View of Delft and the Little Street:

"In the museum at the Hague, a superb and most unusual landscape captures the attention of every visitor and powerfully impresses artists and connoisseurs. It is the view of a town, with a quay, old gatehouse, buildings in a great variety of styles of architecture, garden walls, trees and, in the foreground, a canal and a strip of land with several figures. The silver-gray sky and the tone of the water somewhat recalls Philip Koninck. The brilliance of the light, the intensity of the color, the solidity of the paint in certain parts, the effect that is both very real and nevertheless original, also have something of Rembrandt.

When I visited the Dutch museums for the first time, around 1842, this strange painting surprised me as much as The anatomy lesson and the other remarkable Rembrandts in the Hague museum. Not knowing to whom to attribute it, I consulted the catalogue: View of the Town of Delft, beside a canal, by Jan van der Meer of Delft. Amazing! Here is someone of whom we know nothing in France, and who deserves to be known!"

[…]

"Later, even before 1848, having returned to Holland several times, I also had the opportunity of visiting the principal private galleries, and in that of M. Six van Hillegom—the happy owner of the celebrated portrait of his ancestor, Burgomaster Jan Six, by Rembrandt—there I found two more extraordinary paintings: a Servant pouring milk and the Façade of a Dutch house,—by Jan van der Meer of Delft! The astounding painter! But, after Rembrandt and Frans Hals, is this van der Meer, then, one of the foremost masters of the entire Dutch School? How was it that one knew nothing of an artist who equals, if he does not surpass, Pieter de Hooch and Metsu?"

In my previous post, Cameras Obscura, I wrote about my own encounters with the work of Vermeer, and of seeing the Little Street while studying A-level art, and of Arthur J. Wheelock Jr.’s monograph on the artist; a section of this book details Delft’s brief artistic flourishing in the mid-seventeenth century - as well as containing photographs of the (then) contemporary Delft (the book was first published in 1981). As a result I had my own imaginary conception of the city long before I travelled there, and one built in a formative stage in my own life. Arriving in Delft by train, after dark, at the very end of last year, walking from the station to the apartment where we stayed, I suddenly found myself in the market square, confronted by the Nieuwe Kerk, familiar from Fabritius’s View, as well as its tower appearing in Vermeer’s View of Delft. Like finding Alice’s grandmother’s house from the film Alice in the Cities in Gelsenkirchen four years ago, written about on my other blog, this confirmation - in a physical reality - of a world as experienced through images, and, as such, this was an imaginative world, an idea, a conception of place invested with something equivalent to a mythical existence, accessed through its representations, although one much more particular than those larger, more widely-held mythologies of Paris or New York for example. My interest in Wim Wenders’ films of the 1970s was based, in part, through my prior experience of reading about the films as a student, without, at the time, being able to see them; reading about, and seeing Vermeer’s (and Fabritius’) paintings as a teenager, and, perhaps, with an intervening period of my life, many years in fact, in which I did not think about them very much, little did I suspect, then, that one day I would find myself in Delft, and, indeed, staying on Nieuwe Langendijk, a street which continues on from Oude Langendijk, which itself runs alongside the Nieuwe Kerk, and is the corner location of Fabritius’ A View of Delft; Vermeer himself was documented as living on on Oude Langendijk in 1660. 

Delft central station, Kodak Retina IIa with Agfapan APX100

Much is made of the contemporary experience of the ‘non-place’, and the new railway station in Delft, the first impression of the city when arriving by train, conforms in some respects to this idea of the non-place, but then, moments later, standing in the market square, there was a feeling, a feeling of being definitely placed, by the Dutch vernacular architecture of course, and by the memory of those second-hand impressions of the city through the work of Fabritius, Vermeer, and de Hooch, and the material commentary of prints, drawings, and maps which often contextualises these artists and others. In writing about Alice’s Grandmother’s House I quoted, then, at length, a passage from Georges Perec’s 'Species of Spaces': “To cover the world, to cross it in every direction, will only ever be to know a few square metres of it, a few acres, tiny incursions into disembodied vestiges, small, incidental excitements, improbable quests congealed in a mawkish haze a few details of which will remain in our memory…” which summed up the particularity of how it felt to be there, then, at that moment; in the same passage, the phrase “out beyond the panoramas too long anticipated and discovered too late” could stand in for the title of this post.

Nieuwe Kerk, Delft, Kodak Retina IIa with Ilford HP5 Plus

A day earlier, I had been in the Rijksmuseum. As well as the Maidservant Pouring Milk, I had seen again the Little Street, this time paired with Velazquez’s similar-sized landscape of the gardens of the Villa Medici as part of the temporary exhibition ‘Rembrandt-VelĂ¡zquez: Dutch & Spanish Masters’. There’s something about these two small paintings by two artists not known for making views which makes them remarkable; one wonders exactly how they conceptualised what they were doing when they made these works. Of course, there are many paintings like Vermeer’s Little Street, alike enough that they were at one time attributed to him, and yet unalike, now, that they have become stripped from his oeuvre, given to Vrel and van der Laan, with something about these other paintings, suggesting a fidgety, sentimental or anecdotal quality (apparent, too, or too often, with Pieter de Hooch); however these are all part of a general trend in Dutch art of the seventeenth century that fundamentally re-thought what it was to make pictures, but in the particularity of Vermeer’s Little Street, and in the View of Delft, there is something more, a foreshadowing of a tendency which would begin to make itself known over a century later in artists’ sketches from nature. Peter Galassi, in Before photography: painting and the invention of photography traces the “ultimate origins of photography” to the invention of perspective, an ordered way of seeing the world with everything in its proper place and relation to the viewer; establishing this, Galassi elaborates that it is not the development of perspective construction itself (though necessary) which leads on to the invention of photography, but how, in the hands of artists, it is used:
“The Renaissance system of perspective harnessed vision as a rational basis of picture-making. Initially, however, perspective was conceived only as a tool for the construction of three dimensions out of two. Not until much later was this conception replaced—as the common, intuitive standard—by its opposite: the derivation of a frankly flat picture from a given three-dimensional world. Photography, which is capable of serving only the latter artistic sense, was born of this fundamental transformation in pictorial strategy.”
As an example of this, Galassi contrasts a Renaissance painting known as the Urbino Ideal Townscape or Ideal City (c. 1470), in which the space depicted is placed before the viewer; with Emanuel de Witte’s Protestant Gothic Church (1669), the viewer is placed in the space. Galassi describes the two different approaches as depending of two different mentalities: the former, using perspective, in constructing a world; the latter, again using perspective, but taking from the world as an already existing arena of potential paintings. (Galassi also describes a new particularity of time in de Witte’s painting: the Ideal City is suffused with an even light which gives equal clarity to the architecture; de Witte’s painting in contrast shows sunlight breaking up this clarity for a specific time of day - and something analogous is happening with Vermeer’s View of Delft). Galassi states that, for the historian of perspective, its development and uses do not follow a smooth progression, but, instead, this history is
“…denser in the fifteenth, seventeenth, and nineteenth centuries, when innovative conceptions of perspective were richer than during the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. And its emphasis is not guided by absolute value, for Saenredam will claim attention equal to Vermeer, and the young Corot more than David. Similarly, for a given period, it will favor some branches of art over others. The problem of vision was often most directly posed, for example, in the painting of landscapes and views. This tradition thus receives disproportionate attention; around 1800 it is the entire domain of the most radical experiments in the role of vision in art.”
This “problem of vision” explored in Vermeer’s work may explain his relative obscurity in the century following his death - and his ‘rediscovery’ in the age of the invention of photography. Like Saenredam’s radical compositions (“Not until the late nineteenth century was such a willfully fragmentary and internally discontinuous view the common option of every painter.”), Vermeer’s views are also, in their own way, anachronistic in conception, rare “forward glances” in Galassi’s phrase, the logic of which would have to wait for the invention of photography to be properly understood: “perhaps one of the ironies of art history that with a Kodak any child might now produce by accident a composition that a great artist like Vermeer had to use all his ingenuity […] to achieve.” (R. H. Wilenski, An Introduction to Dutch Art, 1928 quoted in Chrales Seymour Jr., ‘Dark Chamber and Light-Filled Room: Vermeer and the Camera Obscura.’)

View across the Kolk, Delft, Zodel Baldalux with Ilford FP4

Vermeer’s View of Delft was painted from a viewpoint looking roughly north, across a harbour called the Kolk, outside the city’s walls, towards the prominent Schiedam and Rotterdam Gates, with the tower of the Nieuwe Kerk prominently lit, and the Oude Kerk tower largely obscured. After visiting the Vermeercentrum and the Nieuwe Kerk earlier in the day, finding the location from which Vermeer painted the View of Delft was straightforward: although almost all the buildings depicted by Vermeer have gone, the general topography is the same: the Kolk, the canals branching off into the city from behind where the city gates were, the general street plan, and the Nieuwe Kerk tower of course (visually, the twin spires of the 19th-century Maria van Jessekerk echo the absent spires of the Rotterdam Gate on the skyline to the right of the Nieuwe Kerk). Wanting to make something about the experience of being in this place, but not knowing how to react, I filmed the reflections of the skyline in the water - the reflections being one of the most remarkable aspects to the painting - with the outline of the Nieuwe Kerk tower clearly seen against the late afternoon sky, its silhouette dominating, in a manner essentially absent in the painting (as it is brightly lit, with the sky behind it, the reflections below only pick up the dark masses of the tree or trees and the Rotterdam Gate in shadow either side of the more distant tower). Perhaps this was appropriate - filming a reflection of the tower which is impossible to discern in the painting - as the current tower of the Nieuwe Kerk is not the same as that depicted in the View of Delft. The Nieuwe Kerk was struck by lightning in 1872 (having been struck and partially destroyed before in 1536; the rebuilt tower that appears in Vermeer’s painting survived the ‘Delt thunderclap’ of 1654) and the tower rebuilt a second time as a result; the rebuilding of the upper stage of the tower used Bentheim sandstone, blackened through a reaction to atmospheric pollution, in contrast to the colour of the stage below, which gives the erroneous impression of having been scarred by fire. As well as not being the same tower reflected in the film, it is of course not the same water making its reflection.

Bolex B8, Retina IIa with Adox Scala 160

Although I didn't know it at the time, the Double-X film I shot here with the Bolex B8 wasn’t exposed properly due, as I later surmised, to the variable shutter being stuck in a near-closed position: I didn’t see the results until developing this roll of film some time later; however, as this footage was on the first roll of 8mm film from the trip that I developed, it did mean that I (rather belatedly) made a number of tests before developing the other two rolls of film shot in Delft, which, particularly in the case of the 'Pouring Milk' film, meant I was able to adjust the developing times sufficiently to get as good a result as was possible from the latent images. I have excerpted a short sequence as an animated GIF below; the thinness of the negative shows any dust incredibly well, a result of a lack of cleaning before scanning and ad hoc processing conditions - essentially attempting to improvise a means of drying 25ft of 2x8mm film in a hurry.


One reason for shooting film, rather than digital, were the sense of having a physical artefact, an indexical link to the contingencies of the location itself, ideas which probably do not hold too much weight in the digital present, especially with the results digitised and disseminated through a digital medium; regardless, what is recorded onto the physical medium is something other than a provisional interpolation of data (and, if ever exhibited, a positive could be printed from the negative and projected). In Ways of Hearing, Damon Krukowski attempts to encapsulate how it felt as a musician to be recording to tape in the 1980s, not an entirely unsympathetic analogy:

“In that analog studio, there was a feeling when the tape started rolling that this was the moment we would capture-a feeling of time moving both more slowly, and more quickly than usual. Like when you’re in an accident. Each split second is suddenly so palpable, as if you’re living in slow motion. Yet what do we say when it’s over? It all happened in an instant.

Analog recording is like an accident in other ways. On tape, there was no “undo”. You could try again, if you had the time and money. But you couldn’t move backwards. What’s done is done, for better and worse.”

Two days after visiting its location, we took the tram from Delft to the Hague to visit the Mauritshuis and see Vermeer’s View of Delft. Any attempt to describe the experience of finally seeing a painting familiar from reproductions for many years would be entirely inadequate. In real life, the View of Delft is both familiar and surprising (or at least to me, in some aspects, especially the thickness of the paint in some areas, notably in the near foreground) and one can appreciate the impression it made on Thorè-BĂ¼rger around the time photography was being invented. As a result, while still in Delft, I decided to revisit the viewpoint again. Having initially been to the spot with a camera but no clear idea, I needed to give myself a logical structure this time; in the interim, I had shot Pouring Milk and had used a duration for that film from a measure of how long visitors in an art gallery look at a work of art: while trying to find a definitive average, a different answer which I had also turned up was 17 seconds. Determining that, if I used a whole side of my last roll of 2x8mm film that I’d taken with me to Delft, shooting at 12 frames per second rather than 16fps, its duration should be long enough to contain 17 separate shots of 17 seconds each. Any response to Vermeer’s painting would only ever be inadequate; any attempt to communicate the personal experience of how it felt to be standing there, in that same location, looking over Delft from that same viewpoint, with the painting fresh in my memory, would also be inadequate. Acknowledging the futility of trying to engage meaningfully with such a canonical work of art, my approach was to not film the view itself: the film is built up from details around the viewpoint as it currently exists in the historical moment that I was there, then.

Thomas Elshuis, Panorama, Zodel Baldalux with Ilford FP4 

Facing the view, a raised platform above the quayside of the Kolk provides an approximate elevation to the correct viewpoint: Vermeer may have used the second floor of an inn which stood on that spot in the seventeenth century to make his painting. This platform is made from brick and paved, but when I was there some work to it was in progress or had just been finished: there were pallets of building materials collected there, paving bricks and kerbstones just at the right point of the platform overlooking the view. Behind the platform there was a patch of muddy, sandy ground which had evidently been re-landscaped recently, with a circular area of cobbles having been removed. In the middle of winter this was bare of grass, imprinted with footprints and tyre-tracks. Curving around the back of the raised platform, a steel structure supports a set of printed, translucent panels. This is a work of art called Panorama by Thomas Elshuis (although in the Dutch text, it seems to be called Gezicht op Delft - View of Delft), which brings together Newton’s discovery of the refraction of white light into the visible spectrum of colours with van Leeuwenhoek’s microscope, represented by drops of water, magnifying the sand from the bed of the Schie, the canalised river which meets the Kolk from Rotterdam and Delfshaven, and, perhaps, is also a reference to the sand incorporated into the paint in some passages of Vermeer’s painting. Photographs of this ‘folly’ (as Elshuis calls it) on the art in Delft website show sunlight streaming through it, highlighting the stained glass-like qualities of the translucent panels, making sense of the references to Newton and van Leeuweenhoek, an effect quite absent on a grey January morning. After I shot the film, behind the raised platform, partially covered with dirt, I discovered the two metal plaques set in the ground behind the structure which detail this piece of site specific artwork in Dutch and English. 

Metal plaques, Kodak Retina IIa with Agfapan APX100

Having shot the two rolls of (new) Double-X I’d taken with me, I had one roll of 2x8mm film left. This was Orwo UP21 with a process before date of November 1982. I had bought two rolls of this online with the same date, in the same lot, and had previously tested a short length cut from the other roll before travelling, and found the best exposure index for the film stock was around 12; I was also developing this as a negative: although nominally a reversal or transparency film, unlike some black and white reversal cinĂ© film I’ve used, the Orwo film does not have a colloidal silver anti-halation layer, which means it can be developed as either a negative or a positive.

2x8mm Orwo UP21 film

I shot at 12fps for the increased duration this would provide, and this would incidentally mean a slower shutter speed, but the grey overcast morning light when I returned to the site was so low, I felt as though I needed an extra stop in filming, and rated the film at 24 rather than 12 (the light levels also meant that most shots were taken with the lens wide open, or close to wide open, and the accuracy of focus has suffered as a result). At the time I thought I might be able to extend the developing time a small amount to compensate. There was a general logic to the sequence of shots, although essentially improvised, moving from the very small, close-framed shots of the platform facing the view, to the final shots which show the artwork by Elshuis, but in fragmentary details. The editing of the film was done in camera, and the length of the film is shown in its entirety, with both leader and trailer. I loaded the film and unloaded to turn it over in a changing bag, meaning that the film wasn’t exposed to light in either operation, in order to use the whole length of the film. When developed, it was clear that the film had been exposed while wound on its spool, but I kept this bleached-out section, containing the identification code, the circular holes punched through the film at the start: light through these holes has imprinted itself through a couple of layers of the film; a wavy line, the shadow of the rubber band securing the roll can also be seen to the right hand side of the image.

When I came to develop the first roll of 2x8mm Double-X shot on this trip, as soon as I took the film out of the tank, I realised that something was wrong: it looked underdeveloped, or so I thought. I subsequently shot a number of short tests of both film stocks I had used in Delft, Double-X (and in doing so, discovered that single-perforated 16mm - having used all my 2x8mm perforated Double-X - would run through the Bolex B8, at least well enough to test the exposure), and the Orwo UP21 from the part-used roll I’d already tested in a still camera and not taken to Delft. I shot three test lengths of the UP21, decreasing the developer dilution and increasing development time as I went, in my attempts to get a usable result. Making these tests I realised - only gradually - that the camera was underexposing by around three stops, and my only explanation for this was that the variable shutter was stuck near closed, so in the shooting of this film, I had effectively exposed it around four stops faster than the exposure index I had tested for. As well as increasing time and decreasing the developer dilution, I also took two rather more extreme technical approaches: first, I flashed the entire roll of film in an attempt to raise the shadow values (as I would be pushing the film, the contrast would be increased, and I was expecting no or little shadow detail at this stage, although I had been filming in very flat, diffused light). To do this, I ran the whole roll of film through the Bolex again, double-exposing it by filming a featureless white wall - with the lens out of focus - and three stops below a meter reading taken from that wall. As before, I loaded, unloaded to flip the film spools, and finally unloaded the film using a changing bag after exposing both sides. I developed the film with Ilfotec LC29, diluted 1+9, for 20 minutes at 20ºC. The second approach was to tone the whole film with selenium toner after development, with the idea that this would act as an intensifier on the negative, providing a little more density. The end results are still far from what I had hoped. It’s possible that the toner may have simply increased the overall graininess of the negative, the fog of age; incidentally, the edge markings on the film look considerably blown out from the push processing. Due to the poor light levels, camera faults, and processing issues, the resulting images on the film are underexposed, hard to read, obscure. Titling it 'A View of Delft' is an assertion of what it shows, factually accurate, despite there being little of the location that is clearly recognisable in the film (although possibly I should call it 'Seventeen Views of Delft'). I have recently become interested in how the title of an artwork functions, how the title, as extrinsic content, is both integral to an artwork yet stands apart, separate from the object itself, a content which brings the viewer into a unique relationship to the art object, a relationship which, in some senses, ‘creates’ the artwork. In an essay called 'Entitling', John Fisher asserts that:
“Titles are names which have a sense; they call for responses. They determine, to a degree to which significant attention has never been given, interpretations and other acts.

[…]

Not all artworks are titled. Not all artworks need to be titled. But when an artwork is titled, for better or for worse, a process of interpretation has inexorably begun.”

Vermeer’s painting, the View of Delft has a declarative title which aids little in the process of interpretation, its need is small, especially if one is familiar with the city it represents; indeed, as with the title of Maidservant Pouring Milk, now more commonly known as the Milkmaid, as described in the previous post, the painting hasn’t always been simply the View of Delft: Thorè-BĂ¼rger knew it as View of the Town of Delft, which seems unnecessarily wordy, but a descriptive title suffices nonetheless. The changing function of works of art, through changing conditions of production and consumption, demand that, in many cases, the title has more work to do than might previously have been the case. As a title, A View of Delft alerts the viewer to the gaps in what it represents, perhaps appropriate to the contingent nature of working with a physical medium, film, the conditions of its making, and its unmet ambition in an attempt to meaningfully encounter Vermeer’s View of Delft.

Bibliography
Walter Benjamin, ‘The History of Literature and the Science of Literature’ from Poesie et revolution, Paris 1971, p14, quoted in Hubert Damisch, The Origin of Perspective, translated by John Goodman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1994; originally published as L’Origine de la perspective, Flammarion, Paris 1987
Daniel A. Fink, ‘Vermeer’s Use of the Camera Obscura - A Comparative Study’, The Art Bulletin, Vol. 53, No. 4 (Dec., 1971) pp. 493-505
John Fisher, ‘Entitling’, Critical Inquiry, Vol. 11, No. 2 (Dec., 1984), pp. 286-298
Peter Galassi, Before Photography: painting and the invention of photography, Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1981 www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/2267
Jonathon Janson, 'Essential Vermeer' website: http://www.essentialvermeer.com/
Damon Krukowski, Ways of Hearing, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2019
Georges Perec, ‘Species of Spaces’ in Species of Spaces and Other Pieces, translated by John Sturrock, Penguin 2008
Charles Seymour, Jr., 'Dark Chamber and Light-Filled Room: Vermeer and the Camera Obscura', The Art Bulletin, Vol. 46, No. 3 (September 1964), pp.323-331
Sandra Spijkerman, ‘Kunst in de Openbare Ruimte/Gezicht op Delft’, https://delft.kunstwacht.nl/kunstwerken/bekijk/330-gezicht-op-delft See also https://thomaselshuis.nl/
Arthur K. Wheelock Jr, Vermeer, Thames and Hudson, London 1988
Arthur K. Wheelock Jr., C. J. Kaldenbach, Vermeer’s View of Delft and his Vision of Reality, Artibus et Historiae, Vol. 3, No. 6 (1982), pp. 9-35

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

Cameras Obscura

“It is not possible to describe for you the beauty of it in words: all painting is dead in comparison, for here is life itself, or something more noble, if only it did not lack words. Figure, contour, and movement come together naturally therein, in a way that is altogether pleasing.”
Constantijn Huygens, in a letter to his parents, 13th April 1622, quoted in Wolfgang Lefèvre ‘The Optical Camera Obscura: A Short Exposition’
Travelling to Delft at the turn of the year, many months now from the time of writing, I took the components to construct a camera obscura while staying in the city. The camera obscura was of simple construction, made from greyboard and black mountcard, using a plastic magnifying glass as a lens, and, for the viewing screen, a square of glass I’d ground myself, cut from an old photographic plate the night before leaving London to take an early train to Amsterdam. To focus the lens, the camera was made as a box inside a box, the internal one sliding in and out to change the distance between lens and screen. As it was made from cardboard, I was not convinced how well this would travel once constructed, with the necessity of carrying it in a rucksack, and so I found myself putting together the camera obscura in Delft from its constitutive parts. Although this was done for entirely pragmatic reasons, I decided to film this activity on 8mm, compressed into a sequence of short successive shots, edited ‘in camera’.
Had I designed this camera obscura from scratch, the size and shape would have been a little different. The size of the ground glass screen would have taken into account the lens’ coverage, and the depth of the camera would have been sufficient that, when collapsed, the lens would be focussed at infinity. However, this camera obscura was a recreation of one I’d made as a teenager. That camera obscura came out of my interest in optical phenomena then, although no doubt not so clearly expressed, and the use of the device by artists before the invention of a fixable, chemical photography.


I had made this first camera obscura with only a rudimentary understanding of what I was doing—I made no attempt, other than a crude approximation, to work out the focal length or the image circle that the magnifying glass projected, which would have provided the box with logical dimensions: I constructed a cube, with another cube nested inside, which could be withdrawn to focus the lens. As made, the camera collapses a little smaller than the infinity focus of the lens: no doubt, it should have collapsed either smaller still for convenience and portability (though this camera obscura is by no means large, being around 12cm square), or, when pushed together, the lens should be focused at infinity for a different kind of convenience. It was made from cardboard, joined with gumstrip, painted black inside to cut down on internal reflections (the reconstruction used black mountcard for its internal section). I used tracing paper for the original camera obscura’s screen, and ‘oiled’ it (using Windsor & Newton Liquin rather than actual oil) to improve its translucency; in the new camera obscura, I decided to use ground glass instead, hoping to get a better image, but I didn’t want to ‘improve’ the design in any significant way.


The lens was a magnifying glass from WHSmith, and I used this for the new camera obscura, above. The choice of this magnifying glass was determined by pure contingency: my father had exactly the same one, largely for examining prints (although he used an engineer’s loupe for any critical work); as children I and my brothers frequently borrowed this magnifying glass, and used it chiefly, in my memory at least, to burn holes in newspapers on sunny days. The paper would only burn where there was ink; at the time, I’m not sure whether I observed the images of clouds passing through the sky, projected onto the paper, nor if I really understood that the focussed point of light smouldering through text and half-tone photos was an image of the sun.


Compiling images for this post, I recently found a drawing I’d made from this camera obscura. Pasted into a sketchbook, the drawing’s position in it dates from 1990: without the evidence of the location of the page, or the juvenile handwriting under the drawing, in my memory, my attempts to use this camera obscura to draw from was somewhat later–not many more years, but I’d located, or, perhaps more accurately, relocated it to around the time I would have been studying for my A-levels two or three years later. [Edit 10/04/23: Re-reading old diaries, I found that the original cardboard camera obscura I had made in September 1993, just after my A-levels: I think the drawing above, in a sketchbook from 1990, was made using a set-up with a magnifying glass lens from my father, which he may have set up as a camera obscura.] Then I'd been looking at Vermeer as part of the ‘personal study’ component of my Art & Design A-level: this began with Caravaggio and the Caravaggisti, and the Dutch Tenebrists, as representing a certain idea of a realism in painting that appealed to me then. Vermeer’s earliest dated paintings featured as the end of a stylistic line through Carel Fabritius as a pupil of Rembrandt: Rembrandt was aware of Caravaggio’s work, although most likely only through prints. I made a copy of Vermeer’s Christ in the House of Martha and Mary at the time, using the reproduction from Arthur K. Wheelock Jr’s monograph on Vermeer, which catalogued all the paintings then accepted as genuine, and also includes a discussion on the possible use of optics by artists in the seventeenth century, with Vermeer’s links to figures such as Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. Coincidentally, during my A-levels the National Gallery in London put Vermeer’s Little Street on display against Pieter de Hoogh’s 1658 The Courtyard of a House in Delft in its ‘Brief Encounters’ series of small exhibitions. This also included Fabritius’ A View of Delft (sometimes titled A View in Delft), which is mentioned in Wheelock’s book in relation to optics, Wheelock stating that it suggests the artist experimented with wide angle lenses: this can be readily appreciated when confronted by the scene itself in Delft–standing on the corner between the street and canal where this viewpoint is located, the Nieuwe Kerk appears much, much closer, and dominates to such an extent that I found it impossible to compose a photograph that replicates Fabritius’ painting with a 50mm lens, considered a ‘normal’ angle on a 35mm frame–as in the photograph below. At the time of my A-levels, I was grasping for a 'realism' which retrospectively perhaps contained something ‘optical’ in all these very different painters. As it was, I didn’t use my camera obscura then to turn its projected images into a painting like those by Vermeer, or Fabritius’ view: it had little practical use, other than a very general ‘proof of concept’.


After my A-levels, at college and with access to a darkroom, I made a new back for the camera obscura into which I could slip a small piece of photographic paper in an attempt to fix the image seen on the tracing paper. Although I had been using the darkroom to develop my own film and printing negatives, I was working from a position of ignorance and assumptions, and my first attempts came out completely black, clearly as a result of overexposure. I had no real grasp of the interaction of the aperture of the lens, the intensity of light, and the sensitivity of photographic paper–all things one could readily look up online now, but such knowledge rather less easy to access then–and instead of trying shorter exposure times (nor constructing any form of aperture control), I thought the attempt a failure, when this was really a failure in not thinking through the implications of my first attempts and making some change in method.


A second attempt, around a year later while studying on my degree, worked rather better given the circumstances: I set the camera on a floor in a dark corridor, just outside the darkroom, the exposure times were longer as a result, and I used a thin piece of zinc that could be slipped behind the lens as a shutter. I then printed the paper negatives by contact onto another sheet of photographic paper in the darkroom as above. There was a lot of guesswork in these photographs as I had to focus the camera, measure or mark the distance that the back with the tracing paper was extended, then take the camera obscura into the darkroom, replace the back with the one loaded with photographic paper, place the camera back to where I had focused it, and extend the back with the photographic paper to the same distance, and then remove and replace the zinc shutter. I tried taking a couple of other photographs in the studios themselves, below, but being lit rather more brightly, these were overexposed (in remaking the camera obscura, I measured the focal length at infinity, which is around 13.5cm; with an aperture of 3.3cm, the resulting f-stop is very approximately f4, relatively fast even with photographic paper when the shutter is a piece of zinc to be raised and lowered behind the lens).


After these few photographs, I didn’t use the camera obscura again to make images, but it moved house with me several times through my student years and after, although the back for exposing photographic paper was damaged and discarded. I continued to be interested in the prehistory of photography however, and this vague interest in artists’ uses of the camera obscura was sharpened by the appearance in 2001 by David Hockney’s book Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters, and the accompanying BBC film, in which he uses a projection inside a room-sized camera obscura to recreate (in drawing) the composition of Caravaggio’s The Cardsharps. Also featured in the programme was a contribution from Philip Steadman, whose book Vermeer’s Camera appeared the same year, the culmination of years of research, and this research had also been the subject of a television programme over ten years earlier.

Hockney and Steadman both demonstrated the practicalities of using a camera obscura to work from, a world away from my cardboard box and magnifying glass. The use of larger lenses with longer focal lengths allow the artist to be inside the camera itself, with paper or canvas in place of the ground glass screen (one of the revelations of Hockney’s book and programme was the (re)discovery of the mirror lens, used to explain how artists could have used projected images prior to the development of sufficiently sophisticated glass lenses in the latter sixteenth century to allow for the room-sized camera obscura); spurred on by these books, I had many conversations with a friend who was studying photography at the time, and we tentatively drew up an outline of a research project, going so far as to meet Philip Steadman at UCL, but our lives pulled in different directions, and the project fizzled out.


I did however use a camera obscura to make a single painting around 2002: this was achieved with a large magnifying glass placed on a stand and painted directly onto canvas from the projected image. This method wasn’t something I pursued any further, but it demonstrated the possibility of using a camera obscura as an aid to artists: this was painted rather quickly in one sitting (I spent more time making the stand for the magnifying glass), essentially establishing the composition, blocking in the tonal masses; it would be easy then to add detail and refine the painting, with further recourse to the projection of the camera obscura, or direct from the motif itself. It was clear to me that with practice and application one could learn to paint using even the simplest camera obscura set up. Despite my interest, and these tentative experiments, it was many years before I experienced a room-sized camera obscura, visiting Bristol around ten years ago, and going to the camera obscura in the Bristol Observatory on the Downs overlooking the suspension bridge. The construction of this camera obscura–with a rotating turret containing both lens and mirror to project the world outside correctly orientated onto a horizontal concave screen–was immediately redolent of the scene in Powell and Pressburger’s A Matter of Life and Death, where June visits Dr Reeves in his camera obscura. Here, it seems to stand as an analogy for cinema itself: secluded in the dark, inside the camera obscura, Dr Reeves watches the inhabitants of the village at a distance, unobserved. Perhaps this scene, where Dr Reeves first appears, is also intended as a subtle allusion to the idea that the power of doctors over matters of life and death is ‘god-like’, further reinforced by Reeves’ fate later in the film.


Returning to the Bristol Observatory last year, I was able to making a tracing of a small detail from the projection of the camera obscura in a notebook there, although also noting that the camera obscura’s angle of view seems to have changed from its historical horizon-following circuit, seen in the reproductions of nineteenth century prints, to now pointing below the horizon, no doubt in order to contain the suspension bridge fully in view, the chief landmark closest to this viewpoint on the downs. Of course, one does not need such an elaborate construction to experience the camera obscura effect: in the early weeks of lockdown in the spring there was something of a craze of creating camera obscuras in domestic spaces, with or without lenses, appropriate to the restrictions of the time, but also, in the UK at least, helped by the bright sunny weather. It’s something I’d done in a hotel room in Granada, Spain many years ago: the room had both curtains and blinds which could be co-ordinated together to make a suitably small aperture, while the bright morning light on the cathedral over the roof tops across the town square made the perfect subject, rotated 180º in the image below (I think I may have seen Abelardo Morrell’s series of hotel room camera obscuras not too long before).


In Amsterdam, prior to travelling to Delft, I had seen Vermeer’s painting A Maidservant Pouring Milk, these days more commonly known as The Milkmaid in the Rijksmuseum (the figure is clearly a domestic servant, not a milkmaid, but the latter title has stuck in recent years, very much in the way that the Girl with a Pearl Earring is now the title for Vermeer’s painting: when highlights of the Maurithuis collection toured in the early 1980s, the catalogue titles this iconic painting as simply Head of a Girl, elsewhere described as Head of a Young Girl; it’s hard to imagine this painting reverting to these titles now). Seeing A Maidservant Pouring Milk in the Rijksmuseum, I felt as though it had the opposite effect often experienced with reproductions of ‘realistic’ paintings: it looked more ‘photographic’ in real life, inverting the homogenising effect of reproduction, which removes the materiality of paint and flattening this to pure image. The effect seemed greater at a little distance, glanced across the room in company with the paintings surrounding it, even against the other two Vermeer paintings accompanying A Maidservant Pouring Milk.


A few days later, in Delft, I made another tracing from a camera obscura, this time in the Vermeercentrum. Despite having no paintings by the artist, the Vermeercentrum does provide a good introduction into Delft’s artistic milieu, and contains a display of high-quality reproductions of all the generally accepted Vermeer paintings at actual size, together. There is also a display on techniques and materials, and a camera obscura. This looks out through the wall of the building into the street, towards the market square and the statue of Grotius–and, on the right, towards the site of Mechelen, the inn that Vermeer’s father owned and where Vermeer grew up. The Vermeercentrum itself is housed in a recreation of the Guild of St Luke, of which Vermeer was elected head in 1662; the original building was demolished in 1879, replaced by a school. This camera obscura tracing, below, was a very quick sketch, and by necessity tracing through the page of the notebook, laid on the ground glass of the camera obscura. The paper was rather too thick to give anything other than the broad masses of light and dark, unlike the tracing from the Bristol camera obscura, where the image was projected onto the paper.


A Maidservant Pouring Milk is one of the paintings frequently cited as evidence of Vermeer’s use of the camera obscura, generally in relation to the rendering of the prominent still-life element in the foreground (“More ink has flowed to describe the poetic and optical qualities of this still life than perhaps for any other detail in Vermeer's oeuvre. The bread, basket, pitcher and bowl display such vibrancy and tactility that they effectively vie with the woman as the focus of the painting." Jonathan Janson, 'Essential Vermeer'). This is generally interpreted as displaying an imitation in paint of the circles of confusion seen in a camera obscura from point sources of light away from the plane of focus. Charles Seymour Jr. in ‘Dark Chamber and Light Filled Room: Vermeer and the Camera Obscura’ explicitly states that: “In order to paint this optical phenomenon Vermeer must have seen it, and it must be assumed that he could not have seen it with direct vision, for this is a phenomenon of refracted light.” To expand on Seymour’s statement, Daniel A. Fink, in discussing the fact that of “most” of Vermeer’s paintings demonstrate a principal plane of focus and that objects either side of this plane exhibit circles of confusion which “respect” that plane, that this is difficult to apprehend with the human eye, and impossible to ‘use’ creatively: “…one might be able to notice circles of confusion forming on the retina, but experimentation shows that the out-of-focus image formed on the retina is useless for picture-making purposes even if one is aware of its existence.”

Although much of the commentary on A Maidservant Pouring Milk does concentrate on the still-life element, with its pontillist rendering, it is the milk in Vermeer’s painting which strikes me as being quietly remarkable - in the same manner that the spinning wheel in Velazquez’s Las Hilanderas is: the paintings are almost exactly contemporary and both demonstrate a pre-photographic feat of observation, Velazquez’s painting of a spinning wheel blurred by motion more obviously so than the thin stream of milk in Vermeer’s picture. Other paintings of the seventeenth century show moving liquids in more generalised, approximate depictions (Ruisdael’s waterfalls come to mind here). Vermeer could have observed the stream of milk in a camera obscura, and, pouring slowly and steadily enough, this movement can approach the phenomenon of laminar flow, where it almost looks as though the milk isn't moving, as if it's a still image: it would be technically possible to trace this image rather than simply observing it (the latter of course being more likely), looking like a solid, non-moving pictorial element, its opacity as if of pure light. In the Rijksmuseum, the caption to the painting (in English) states that “except for the stream of milk, everything else is still”; of course, this is a painting, so all is ‘still’, yet, as an observed scene, the stream of milk could appear nearly as still. Indeed, as an action, in the pouring of milk, what moves more than the milk itself, is the angle of the vessel as its contents empty. Perhaps observing the near-stillness of a stream of pouring milk was the inciting incident in the creation of this painting.

These thoughts around Vermeer’s A Maidservant Pouring Milk led me to the filming of a performative gesture, a film of milk from a contemporary Dutch carton being poured into a blue-glazed ceramic bowl, with some bread from a Dutch supermarket to one side, an action enacted in the city of Delft–and then filmed (again) as a projection on the ground glass of the camera obscura I’d taken from London to Delft via Amsterdam in pieces and then built there. The duration of the film was determined by one measure of how long the average picture is looked at in an art gallery: 37 seconds (although different methods of designating that ‘looking’ generate different times in other studies); this necessitated a slow and steady pour, and, in doing so, this gave the stream of milk a more fixed aspect. The ground glass image was kept upside down, an abstracting effect useful for a disinterested observation, breaking the recognisable image down into patches of colour and tone.
I shot the film on Eastman Double-X black and white negative film. With an ISO of 250 in daylight, it’s a fast film for 8mm: historically, at the times these cameras were in common use, in the 1950s and 60s, less sensitive, finer-grained emulsions used for cine film would have been more typical. However, this granularity was in some senses appropriate to the subject through a series of visual analogies. I felt there was a visual equivalence between the grain of the ground glass (being home-made, this is not especially fine) and the grain of the 8mm film, thanks to the small frame size, (as well as having been pushed it three stops in the processing); materially, there is also the ground pigment in Vermeer's painting which makes up the image, and the still-life section of A Maidservant Pouring Milk famously has the specular highlights which suggested the use of the camera obscura; and in my own initial encounters with Vermeer’s work, through reproduction and the granular qualities of half-tone printing.

Filming the image on the ground glass screen was difficult due to the Bolex B8 having a non-reflex viewfinder: this caused two problems which required educated guesswork, the first being parallax–as the viewfinder is offset from the taking lens, the angle of view is different, and parallax error increases the nearer to the subject that the camera is placed. I simply lined up the lens to the centre of the ground glass screen as best I could, ignoring the viewfinder for this shot. The second problem was focus: in order to film the frame with the ground glass screen, I needed to focus closer than the minimum distance that the Bolex’s 13mm lens would allow, which is three-quarters of a foot or 9 inches, very close, but not close enough. For this I used a Proxar close-up filter; as I couldn’t see through the lens to check the focus, I had to estimate the difference of using this close-up from the power of the Proxar lens, which, with a power of 2, halves the focal distance, and I measured for this. The dimness of the ground glass screen meant that I needed to shoot with the lens wide open, thus not being able to stop down the aperture to gain a greater depth of field–which at such close focus was negligible–and also use a slower frame rate to achieve a slower shutter speed, shooting at just 8fps here. I actually shot this sequence twice: the first was not close enough; the second was, but is partly obscured by a developing error where the film on the spiral reel of the development tank came into contact with itself, thus preventing the developer acting on the surface for a few frames. This also shows the out-of-focus reflection on the ground glass of the camera itself filming–which I was unable to see due to the parallax issues already mentioned–perhaps it could be said that this reflection therefore divulges the means of its own making (as an insurance, I did also shoot the camera obscura image with an iPhone, but this was less satisfying: the digital compression of the close tones of the camera obscura image was somehow less satisfying than the grainy obscurity of the film image).

Returning from the Netherlands, I developed a different roll of Double-X shot with the same camera first. I’d bought some D96 developer in liquid form, a developer I’d not used before and these first results looked very underdeveloped, although, after testing some 16mm Double-X in the camera, I realised that this was actually underexposed. I made several tests with the same camera and 16mm Double-X before forming the hypothesis that the problem arose with the Bolex’s variable shutter. The lever to change the settings was stuck on the camera when I bought it, and, I had assumed, stuck in the open setting; after puzzling over a number of tests, I concluded that this was stuck near to being closed, and was underexposing the film by the equivalent of three stops. The roll of film containing the pouring milk sequences was developed with this in mind, with the result that the negatives were much higher in contrast than I would have liked, and this contrast emphasises the grain.


I made some prints in the darkroom from the negative, to check whether I’d successfully recovered the latent images on the film before sending the roll to be scanned professionally; when printing in the darkroom using Ilford Multigrade paper, with the lowest contrast filter I could achieve something like the tonal rendition I would have wanted for the film. The results from scanning were higher in contrast than the darkroom prints but acceptable (the film of constructing the camera obscura at the top of this post was shot on the same roll, but lit by a south-facing windows, while the pouring milk was filmed with a north-lit window, the less diffused south light here blocks up the highlights more, with little shadow detail in these sequences).


Returning from Delft, I made a new back for the reconstructed camera obscura to take some photographs with it on photographic paper, this time building in a darkslide to cover the sheet of paper for loading and unloading the camera. Attempting to make images of moderately close subjects, the definition from the lens was very poor, as above, not helped by the fact that it is difficult to ensure the distance from the lens to the paper matches that from lens to ground glass when swapping backs. To counter this, for the image below, I made an aperture plate from a piece of card with a hole punched through it which significantly improved the definition of the image. As a subject for these photographs, to test the new back for the camera obscura, I used my ticket from the Vermeercentrum–a cut-out of the figure of the Maidservant Pouring Milk.



Bibliography
Ian Christie, A Matter of Life and Death, British Film Institute, London 2000
Daniel A. Fink, 'Vermeer’s Use of the Camera Obscura - A Comparative Study', The Art Bulletin, Vol. 53, No. 4 (Dec., 1971) pp. 493-505
David Hockney, Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters, Thames and Hudson 2001, and BBC television film
Tim Jonze ‘Honey, I flipped the garden: how I turned my house into a camera obscura’, The Guardian, Firday 24th April 2020. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2020/apr/24/lockdown-culture-camera-obscura-photography 28/9/20
Martin Kemp, 'The Science of Art'
Wolfgang Lefèvre ‘The Optical Camera Obscura: A Short Exposition’, in Wolfgang Lefèvre (ed.) Inside the Camera Obscura – Optics and Art under the Spell of the Projected Image, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science 2007, p6
Jonathon Janson, 'Essential Vermeer' website: http://www.essentialvermeer.com/
Abelardo Morell, ‘Camera Obscura’ series, 1991-2019. https://www.abelardomorell.net/project/camera-obscura/
Charles Seymour, Jr., 'Dark Chamber and Light-Filled Room: Vermeer and the Camera Obscura', The Art Bulletin, Vol. 46, No. 3 (September 1964), pp.323-331
Philip Steadman, Vermeer’s Camera, Oxford University Press, 2001
Arthur K. Wheelock Jr, Vermeer, Thames and Hudson, London 1988