Pearl John

Pearl John
Artist Working with Holography

Saturday 6 September 2014

Martina Mrongovius - talk at the camera club


The Royal Photographic Society, 3D Imaging and Holography Group
“Holographic Collaborations”
Ana Maria Nicholson & Rudie Berkhout Collaboration 1989. Dr Martina Mrongovius 6 September 2014

Martina described the background to the current exhibition at Jonathan Ross’s Gallery 286 (which I hope to see on Tuesday) “Holographic Collaborations” with artwork by Ana Maria Nicholson and Rudie Berkhout.  Martina described the creative backgrounds of both artists – and how their collaborative work had influenced their individual practice. 

The holograms in the exhibition had been found during a clear-out at the Centre for the Holographic Arts in New York.  Martina works there as the Director for the Centre – (and also teaches holography in Cologne).

Rudie Berkhout was a prolific artist, he produced dynamic holographic artwork with his own visual language.  His early transmission holograms made in the 1970s consisted of Holographic Optical Elements (HOEs) beautifully composed with great depth and rich colour.  His work was inspired, at that time, by the cosmos and light or photons and presented incredible dynamic images of light.   

In the early 1980s Rudie worked on a sand table and produced artwork which captured ridges in the sand and included mirror elements – such as  the study for ‘New Territories’ 1984 which is held in the Rudie Berkhout Collections.  This work was made when he moved from Down Town Manhatten to the Catskills area – his work became more influenced by the land and featured shadowed forms and silhouettes.  The work included a mountain path, different elements and colours and a solid light plane for the sky.  Different images were viewable up close and farther away.  The 30x40cm holograms on Agfa holographic plates had tremendous depth and animation. 

 Ana Maria Nicholson came into holographic portraiture through working with Lloyd Cross.  Ana Maria was the Director of the portraiture gallery at the Museum of Holography in New York.  She made holograms of artists (Martina showed us a holographic portrait of Keith Haring) and spiritual leaders amongst others, Ana Maria aimed to capture the essence of people.  The Holocenter and Museum of holography had very different pulsed laser portrait cameras so their work can easily be identified.  The Museum of holography had a single overhead object beam, while the Holocenter’s had two object beams on either side of a sitter’s face. 

Rudie walked into Ana Maria’s studio and both their lives were transformed.  Both artists were interested in the healing processes and their work was a creative dialogue between the two.  They were both interested in the question; “what is a portrait?”  And “what makes a portrait a work of art?”.  Ana Maria made Rudie’s portrait.  She cut holes in a piece of cardboard and showed his hand bursting through in works in 1987-1989. She wanted to capture a person’s essence and thought of portraiture as different from fine art, its own genre.  Rudie made a portrait of Ana Maria.  He wanted to produce images about feelings/dynamics – his portrait of Ana Maria used curved film – which when straightened out for display showed a warped wobbly image. 

Working together Nicholson and Berkhout produced holograms which were unpredictable images.   They had replaced the diffused light which illuminated the sitter in pulsed portraits and put cardboard masks on the object beam – allowing slits and slivers of light to illuminate the face.  What they had produced were shells of light – the viewer peers around behind and seemingly inside the person in the portrait.  The artwork traces the face, your eye follows lines around the face – discovering different parts of the sitter.  The holograms were reflection and colour mixed, a master was produced then copied using red and green pre-swelled plates.  This colour mixing was characteristic of Ana Maria’s work.  Rudie didn’t like the process – his work was meticulous transmission work– hers messy reflection with chemicals and pre-swelling. 

After 1989 the artist’s work diverges again.  Ana Maria wanted to capture more movement by double-exposing.  She was inspired by dancer.   The image suggests the sitter coming alive opening up and then curling up – it referenced the barrier of surface of skin to the spirit and the plight of women.  ‘Into the Night’ 1994-1995 colour mixing blue and reds. Her work suggests that there’s more than the physical body there, a spiritual/light body.  After working with Ana Maria Rudie’s work developed using a system of mixing alcohol and water and two colour exposures and reflection holography.  Rudie died in 2008. 

The Holocentrehttp://www.holocenter.org is a non-profit arts organisation.  Its core objectives are to provide a place for artists to be able to make holograms and to preserve its history and holographic art collection. 

In 2009 the holographic equipment was moved from Long Island to Ohio State University allowing artists to make work there as part of a residency programme.  There are courses which give artists and educators an introduction to holography, a development course which allows an artist to explore a concept and a pulse facility for experienced holographic artists.  30 Artists have been through the programme. 

In 2009 the Holocenter had an exhibition in the Flux Factory – an artist’s collective with an artist’s run space.  The space for the exhibition was enormous a 3,000 sq foot space on the ground floor of a bank vault.  A giant holography exhibition was put together by local artists and called “Interference Cohexistance”.  The exhibition explored how artists deal with the concepts of interference.  Work was provided by the MIT museum such as Betsy Connor’s “Light Rain”, multimedia work with computer fans.  The show had great press, lots of vistors, a and sponsors allowed the exhibition to be extended.  Phillippe Boissonet’s work was included ‘Certain Worlds’ which explored the concepts of ‘here/there/where and place.  How we know the position of things and where we are.  Mapping and a sense of community.  To view his work you have to trigger the lighting to come for another viewer to see the hologram – you can only trigger light for someone else not yourself.  You work with others in the space to see your hologram. 

Eventually the building was sold and the exhibition moved to a new home on Governor’s Island; a historic house and a summer-time museum.  Other buildings on the island which can be reached via a $2 ferry ride include a Photography Centre and Museum of Mathematics.  Upstairs from the exhibition there is a screening room, for 3D screenings and workshops.  There are 3D courses for drawing technology, view master workshops, intro to holography workshops and physics of holography courses.  It’s a network of people sharing techniques and ideas; a vibrant community.  The public get a better sense of the medium of holography when it’s exhibited with hybrid technologies.  They can work with ideas of 3D. 

The talk was thoroughly inspiring – and I look forward to seeing the show.