Tag: alter ego

  • Photographer Hana Jayne Sho’s series Boys in Light // The Intimate Moments of Collaboration

    Photographer Hana Jayne Sho’s series Boys in Light // The Intimate Moments of Collaboration

    Forms of flesh awash with pale pink hues, steeped in the sounds Lana Del Rey’s youthful lullabies. Tendrils of smoke twist and turn off the tips of cigarettes, held gently between tentative fingers. Nostalgic desire captured by the grain of film. Intimacy found in those moments of home.

    It was a Tuesday night. Photographer, Hana Sho, ventured over to a friend’s apartment in the Cape Town city bowl. Armed with only a studio light, a desk lamp, DIY gels and a few rolls of film she adopted her usual modus operandi of spontaneity and experimentation. “We’re all friends, and during the shoot it kind’ve felt like what they would usually do before going to a party, except I was documenting it. Have a few drinks, smoke cigarettes and try on each other’s clothes…It almost felt like a mini production team. Adam turns out to be a hella good Art Director. Alex popped in for some Art Direction, and Mziyanda pulled through with some bomb styling.”

    Hana’s photographic work spans the space of portraiture, editorials, fashion and documentary style images. “When I shoot it’s always a collaboration.” She often goes for a walk with the model before the shoot – as a means to put them at ease. “I find that walking around and getting to know somebody makes them more comfortable, and whatever mood their feeling in that moment reflects in the photographs.” Hana also values collaboration as a space of learning, “from my experience, collaborative work is always better and has other layers of meaning that I wouldn’t have thought of… I’ve learned so much from the collaborators I’ve had the pleasure of working with.”

    After discovering her mother’s old Nikon from the 90s, she bought some film and started taking photographs of her friends. “I realized film gave a more three-dimensional affect. I can’t describe it, but it’s so much more textured and alive.”

    For Boys in Light, Hana took the opportunity to play with light and explore expressions of youth on film. “My concepts are always based on people and how they portray themselves – everyone’s just trying to figure themselves out; experimenting, having fun, making mistakes and learning from them. I think I’ve managed to capture those sweet in between moments where everyone kind of forgets.” She described a shift in the atmosphere when the lights used in her images were turned on, “It felt like we stepped into another realm where everyone could express their alter egos.”

    “I think collaboration is definitely an important part of learning and developing as a young artist, whatever the medium may be.”

    Credits:

  • Hello Nice: Natalie Paneng invites you into the world of her alter ego

    “Babes. It is never good to be sour babe. Take the power and don’t be sour. Kinda rhymes but not because it should”

    These are the words of multidisciplinary artist Natalie Paneng’s alter ego, Nice. Nice only exists in the coded world, with the search box on YouTube instructing algorithms to invite us into one of her constructed environments. She often explores themes through the use of colours. Spaces and objects that should be familiar are made foreign through the use of distortions. Natalie shared with me how Nice came into her life.

    Having always wanted to study something in the arts, Natalie secretly applied for Drama at Wits University. Her other major is Set and Costume Design. “I really enjoy creating spaces that allow new stories to play out,” she explained. Having found her first year as a drama student quite difficult, she was looking for an avenue which would allow her to perform without physically having to be in front of an audience.

    The birth of her vlog Hello Nice came in conjunction with a desire to learn more about photography, videography and editing. “I’m still learning and sometimes I make mistakes and end up using them to my advantage. My work ends up looking pretty amateur but I use that to my advantage too,” Natalie explained. With a concoction made up of her obsession with vaporwave gifs she found on Tumblr, a new camera and her alter ego, Nice, Hello Nice came to life. “I asked my cousin to film me doing random things in the kitchen,” she explained, “My aesthetic choices are silly sometimes but I realized that they give Hello Nice its own unique look.”

    Describing Hello Nice as “genre-less”, a “fragmented short film” and “about something and nothing at the same time” the spontaneity that goes into filming each video allows Natalie to develop the character Nice organically. “I find topics on the spot and look for backgrounds which look cool. Sometimes I add a few props and those end up being what the videos are centered around. I am constantly looking for bits and pieces which will mesh well together and complement each other.”

    Natalie’s experimentation with distortion leads some of her videos to come across as abstract and trippy, as if we have been invited into one of Nice’s dreams. However, performing the persona requires interaction, “that is where the quirky, conversationalist elements come into play.”

    To experience the constructed mini worlds where Nice dances, balances oranges on her head, and has conversations about the importance of keeping hydrated, check out Hello Nice.