I Read the Light | Photographer Marianne Engberg | Louisiana Channel

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Louisiana Channel

Louisiana Channel

Жыл бұрын

"I once sat in my lounge 24 hours with a packed lunch, so I didn't have to move. I'd recommend it to everybody. It's just amazing, following the shifting light in your own home."
New York-based photographer Marianne Engberg has been making pictures for six decades, and she doesn't plan to stop.
Marianne Engberg was educated as a portrait and fashion photographer in the 1960s when she started experimenting with the pinhole camera. A pinhole camera is a small light-proof box with a small hole in one side where light from a scene passes through the aperture, which projects an inverted image on the opposite side of the box. Marianne Engberg wanted to create her kind of pinhole camera, and it took her ten years to develop:
"I've made thousands of holes. People get very offended when I say I don't want to share my method. It's not because I'm scared of the competition. But I learned so much through the experimentation process that I want others to have the same chance. Don't just copy Marianne Engberg. Make something else." She explains that working with the pinhole means minding where the light comes from: "I'm so experienced now that I know exactly where to stand. That's my strength. I know what I want. I never take three shots or seven, as people may think. I take one."
"I like to zoom in on things. It goes for my landscapes as well: It fascinates me more, capturing some of the landscape than the whole of it. I like the calmness in the picture. The silence. It fascinates me having just one thing and nothing else," Engberg explains.
"I'm not normally a patient person. But I tell you: I can sit for two days and wait for the light to be just right. I'll sit in the same spot and wait so that I can set up my pinhole camera. I think my way of looking at light is different somehow."
Marianne Engberg explains why her pictures are often soft and a little blurred: ”I don't actually like photos that are too sharp. I prefer a soft focus. I realized that what I aim for in my art is the way my eyes see the world. I can close my eyes, see the image and then produce it.”
"The light in a picture means more to me than most other things. If I see something interesting outside - be it a shape, a tree or something else - I'll stay put and wait until the light changes until it's just right. No matter where it's coming from ... People say: "Aren't you going to retire?" But I'll keep making pictures as long as I'm here. My whole life is about making pictures."
Marianne Engberg (born 1937) has a background as a portrait photographer in the 1950s and a fashion photographer in the 1960s for Vogue in London. At the same time, she began experimenting with pinhole photography and had her first exhibition as a Fine Art photographer with the Bertha Urdang Gallery, Manhattan in 1984. In the 1980s Engberg traveled the world with her pinhole camera and exhibited images from Israel, Greenland, China and Scotland. In 1999 The National Museum of Denmark showed a large retrospective of her work. After her shift to unique photograms - resulting from the Experimental' photo synthetism' process in the darkroom - she was represented by John Stevenson Gallery, Manhattan. Engberg's work is held by major collections, including the New York Public Library, Brooklyn Museum, Israel Museum in Jerusalem, Fogg Museum in Boston and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art. Marianne Engberg lives and works in Brooklyn, New York
Christian Lund interviewed Marianne Engberg in Tisvildeleje, Denmark in December 2021.
Camera: Rasmus Quistgaard & Johan von Bülow
Edit: Johan von Bülow & Marie Estrup
Produced by Christian Lund
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023
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Пікірлер: 15
@christinakentart
@christinakentart Жыл бұрын
Her devotion to living a creative life is so inspiring. To maintain a state of wonder and curiosity with the world, a desire to explore, to create, even after such a long career, truly incredible ❤
@petemc5070
@petemc5070 Жыл бұрын
She is a force of nature.
@kkfox7822
@kkfox7822 Жыл бұрын
Marianne is amazing! Her work and her philosophies are so beautiful. What a treat.
@Itscarlosocando
@Itscarlosocando Жыл бұрын
Such a beautiful spirit and way of living. I want to learn how to measure light without a light meter. Marianne is a true inspiration.
@geoffreypiltz271
@geoffreypiltz271 Жыл бұрын
It's easy. Just learn the diagrams they print on camera film boxes - Sunny 16 etc - and then carry a light meter to check your estimates against.
@maxsungwd
@maxsungwd Жыл бұрын
Best video I've watched in a long long time. Great.
@windrock
@windrock Жыл бұрын
Beautiful words and reflections of her thoughts. I think I have Marianne's perspective on photography. The light, the patience and beauty in abstract. Thanks for the video. Uplifting and inspiring ✨️
@geoffreypiltz271
@geoffreypiltz271 Жыл бұрын
Inspiring. I'll be out with a camera tomorrow.
@Stephen_Baker
@Stephen_Baker Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this.
@goldfinch2283
@goldfinch2283 Жыл бұрын
Interesting and inspiring.
@cchan8004
@cchan8004 Жыл бұрын
Marianne is truly inspirational and wise not only in the pursuit on her photographic career but also as a human being 💐 thanks for making such brilliant interview with her! P.S. I am sure I could recognise her works later on lol
@soakingwetwhore
@soakingwetwhore Жыл бұрын
Lovely video. Inspiring and affirming. I recently started shooting on a Yashica-D tlr- no meter. All the advice I've read so far stresses that I need to use an exposure meter, so it's nice to see a different perspective.
@drgopalbhatia79
@drgopalbhatia79 Жыл бұрын
Great
@majhoenborg4408
@majhoenborg4408 Жыл бұрын
❤️
@susannecromwell3461
@susannecromwell3461 Жыл бұрын
Det et unødvendigt og stressende med musikken
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