Tag: Daniella Dagnin

  • Blonde – a new photographic series by Marcia Elizabeth

    Blonde – a new photographic series by Marcia Elizabeth

    Like many creatives, Marcia Elizabeth was introduced to her passion when she was a child. Having received a set from her grandparents which included a snapshot camera, she soon became attached to the ability to capture moments through this device. During our conversation she recalled how this camera, and the old family camera she received from her aunt later, opened up her mind to imagining a future as a National Geographic photographer treading through forests clicking away. As she got older her career goal to be a photographer remained the same, but her areas of interest shifted. During university she got into band photography, and later dabbled with fashion. Her new series, ‘Blonde’ encompasses all the elements of the direction she is going with at the moment – that she describes as environmental portraitist work.

    Tying in with her recent focus on womxn and the female figure, ‘Blonde’ explores the narrative of trying to mould oneself to the desires of others, whether a lover or society as a whole, and how eventually the choice to embrace one’s true self is freeing. “Women have always been the painted but never the painters of our own stories, and I guess that is why it [portraying womxn] is so important to me, and it is important for me to document this specific time that I think we are in.”

    With a lot of her past work being digital, Marcia began experimenting with film photography for the first time since childhood when photographing the Fine Art Masters show of Daniella Dagnin last year. Slowly building up confidence, ‘Blonde’ is a project built completely through the textured softness of film.

    The completion of the series took a few months, which unintentionally added a layer to the work. Not only did the breaks between shoots result in her film photography improving, but it allowed her to take time to piece together a clear and concise story based on her initial concept. This also led to more experimentation. Looking at the images one can tell the difference in time between the photographs, and yet the series marries together well. This difference in time almost mimics the narrative of the series; that over time these young womxn will slowly free themselves by embracing themselves, therefore creating and projecting a different image to the world.

    In conversation about the narrative for the series, Marcia explained that, “The whole reason why the young womxn who were photographed had dyed hair was because I was trying to speak about this fake illusion of women trying to live up to these beauty standards that are not real…. You know, this idea that we are not good enough as we are.” This is represented by the white ring binder stickers placed on the faces of the models; the stickers are abstract ways of pointing out the scrutinizing gaze that society has on womxn.

    There are recurring elements that tie the series together, and are used symbolically. The majority of the images are taken in intimate spaces, such as the bedroom. Marcia explained that these are the rooms of the young womxn photographed, tying into her description of herself as an environmental portraitist. “I generally photograph people in their own spaces. Specifically for this series I wanted it to be very intimate, and I wanted people to show me who they were,” Marcia explained. Adding to the feeling of intimacy are this soft, lacey fabrics worn by the models. Marcia’s presence is included directly through the mirrors that some of the models interact with in her images. The series comes full circle in the last set of photographs where a young womxn is photographed in a garden. Being outside is representative of letting go and choosing to reject the box that she is “supposed” to fit into. One of the most important recurring elements is that of flowers. They are symbolic of feminine energy and feminine power.

    This series is an illustration of Marcia’s work as an amalgamation of capturing moods, telling stories from her own perspective, and viewing photographs as surrealist duplications of real life.

    Credits:

    Photography & Styling:  Marcia Elizabeth, Portrait of artist by Jemma Rose

    Models: Jemma Rose, Gemma Hart, Maren Mia du Plessis, Eline Sweg, Marcia Elizabeth, Fabiana Katz

  • Dollface: Subverting Gendered Norms // In Conversation with Daniella Dagnin

    Dolls fire our collective imagination, for better and – too often – for worse. From life-size dolls the same height as the little girls who carry them…to Barbie and her fashionable sisters, dolls do double duty as child’s play and the focus of adult art and adult fear.

    – Ellen Datlow

    A multi-sensory moment. Inflated. Disproportionate eyes, lips and limbs. Contorted constructions of misrepresented ideals. Dolls have a complex relationship to constructs of womxnhood, femininity and the female body. In an interview with Daniella Dagnin, she explores the relationship of different doll architypes in her work through the exhibition, Blue Lies White Truths.

    Photography by Marcia Elizabeth

     

    “It started with a script that I wanted to write, which lead me to a world that was slightly fictional. There were moments peeking through of a real universe.” Her interactive script of text, videos and gifs engages the reader in multiple dimensions. “Words would stop and then there would be a certain sensory element.”

    Blue Lies White Truths was a reimagining of this – a “visual context within the boundaries of a gallery.” “Thematically it had a lot to do with the female body, relationships, whiteness and the dimensionalities that exist within families. Those moments were pushing through between reality and fiction.”

    Photography by Marcia Elizabeth

    The Barbie Barbeque – an assemblage of Barbies trapped in a matrix of a braaing implement “was a kind of play on words. There are so many different elements that use dolls, but each represents a different thing.”The character played by Natasha Brown, “X was a kind of caricature of a womxn, she lacked the dimensionality of a full character. She was used to reiterate the stereotypes of female beauty.” Whereas Morgan Hall as Egg on the other hand, “was on the periphery of being male or female – yet he was totally exposed through his wardrobe. He was wearing this plastic top which showed his bedazzled nipples.

    Photography by Marcia Elizabeth

    A blow-up doll also featured in the exhibition. “Initially the blow-up dolls were supposed to fill the space. Ironically, they’re super expensive even the cheap disgusting ones. The dolls…had to do with transforming the object. It’s not a complete transformation because you can still identify that it is a doll, but there are still moments where maybe the doll is in the future or part of some other ritual or culture.” In this way, the sex toy transcends its original purpose and becomes symbolic of alternate projections.

    Photography by Marcia Elizabeth

    Of all the characters, “Micaiah [as Jessica Robinson] had the most dimension, but was also a younger character. The dolls brought her back to this kind of child-like world. A lot of it also had to do with this time element: Jessica Robinson is an adult, not a 14-year-old girl.  In terms of casting, it was either a choice of casting someone super young and fitting the characters within each role that they ostensibly should have in terms of age, or switching roles – which is why X is depicted as looking younger to subvert that.” The female characters in this narrative both undermine, but also mirror representations of doll-like-womxn in the media.

    Photography by Alison Martin

    Media imagery within the Western paradigm, “has such a skewed concept of womxn within itself…it needs to start representing what is real instead of this façade as a repetitious performance. ”Art has the potential to act as a space to reclaim the doll-image in a way that does not reproduce the same warped notions of femininity. Dolls can be used divisively as “symbols to represent a larger world.” Other works like Jane Alexander’s Stripped (Oh Yes Girl) 1995 and more recently Robyn Perros’ work with [wo]mannequins operate within a similar dynamic.

    Photography by Marcia Elizabeth
    Photography by Alison Martin
  • Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas

    Flashing lights and flickering TV screens. Smells of fried eggs, alcohol and fishfloated around the silver-wrapped gallery space. The exhibition space became a kaleidoscope, creating an overwhelming visual and sensory experience that enveloped the viewer, distorting time.

    Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas is the culmination of an intensive Masters of Fine Arts program by Daniella Dagnin. The exhibition and the performances which opened on the evening of the 27th of May were only the tip of the ice-berg though, the visual element of this show is based on a novel written in the format of Interactive PDF. The interactive PDF is comprised of videos, sounds and GIFS. The novel acts as a script or lens through which the visual component is experienced. This approach is rather exciting in the way that it presents new possibilities for engaging academic requirements in a form that is true to one’s artistic concept.

    Entering into The Point of Order we were redirected down a small corridor on the side of the space only to re-emerge on the opposite side from the entrance. This simple detour changed our perception of the space and the ways in which we were no forced to engage with it. Scattered throughout the space and suspended in mid-air, we were confronted with white picket fences, Barbie dolls clamped in a boerewors braai grid. Small TV monitors played repeated footage of donkeys braying, ocean views or the Rhodes statue being removed. And projections on the walls created vignettes into scenes and scenarios unfolding in some past which affected the obscure present. As Daniella wrote in her interactive PDF, Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas is centered in a dichotomous South African landscape; a landscape situated between both ocean and casinos, dry fynbos and television sets, the interconnected green lagoons and strip clubs.”

    Intensely curated and consistent in a particularly grungy aesthetic from the moment you set foot in the exhibition space, The Point of Order, there were a number of elements intended to antagonise. We are surrounded by broken bottles smashed on the floor, a hanging inflatable sex doll, a rocking horse from the afterlife and performances of characters descaling raw fish and choking on mussels. Blue Lies, White Truths and Grey Areas uses an amalgamation of characters, both real and fictional, to further obscure the lines between reality and fiction. Despite the overwhelming visual and sensory elements, there was a sense of vulnerability and sensitivity that permeated the narrative. A projected video of a wind-spun washing line flashed a portrait of a white police officer before our eyes. Speaking casually with one of the other viewers, he mentioned to me that the photograph was of his uncle, who had passed away a number of years prior in an “alleged” suicide, alleged due to the fact that he was left handed and the weapon was found in his right. Reality and fiction were being blurred before our eyes.

    What became interesting for me was the feeling that I myself was being sucked into this narrative, along with the other viewers of the exhibition. Having spent far longer in the exhibition that I do at most openings, a lull in the conversation being had in a group caused one girl to say, “Maybe the joke’s on us and we’re the artwork.” Perhaps the childhood rocking horse was just a donkey after all.

    Performed by:

    Koos Van der Wat AKA “Frank”

    Natasha Brown AKA “X”

    Jessica Robinson AKA “Micaiah”

    Solomzi Moleketi AKA “Tigger”

    Jennifer Winterburn AKA Busty Barmaid

    Magician: Neil Harris

    Disco Ball: Alison Martin

    Make-up Artist: Erin Bothma

    Photographer: Marcia Elizabeth