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Find: New articles Process step-by-step Working practicesInterview with Jill EnfieldRecently a new book on alternative processes has appeared. Robert Schaefer takes a look at Jill Enfield's work.
Jill: "It was wonderful to have an excuse to be in the darkroom at all hours, but I never knew how hard it would be to actually write a book until I was immersed in it. All in all, it was a wonderful learning experience."Recently I had the opportunity to meet with Jill in her studio home in the Gramercy Park Area of Manhattan in New York City. First, I got a tour of her very spacious second-floor apartment where she lives with her husband and two daughters. It speaks of people who enjoy living with art. There is a lot of it on the walls including photographs by herself as well as Bernice Abbott, Tom Baril, O. Winston Link, J.H. Lartigue and a particularly wonderful image by an unknown photographer of Matisse gazing lustfully at his model. There is also a darkroom equipped with even a light box for her alternative process work. Today her darkroom is providing a nesting place for her four cats: Oreo, Creamsicle, Magic and the new kitten, Olive. In the living room we select a very comfortable sofa on which to sit for our interview.
Jill grew up in Miami Beach, and although she took the usual childhood snapshots, she had no major interest in photography until she was eighteen. It was then that she went to Europe with her sister and some friends. There was only one camera with a limited amount of film for everybody; many images she wanted to shoot had to remain conceptual. Immediately upon her return home she remedied the situation by requesting a camera for her birthday. This first camera was a Fujica, a simple SLR much like the popular Pentax K 1000. It was instant love, and she has been working seriously in photography ever since. However, when she finished high school, she did not immediately begin to study it. First, she went to the University of Arizona in the general curriculum. But she dropped out and went to Sun Valley, Idaho to take some photography workshops because the University of Arizona offered nothing in photography at that time. Then she went to Rochester, New York to take some courses at the Visual Studies Workshop with Nathan Lyon but says she was really not far along in her career to grasp how important it really was. She returned to Miami Beach and studied medical photography at Mount Sinai Hospital as a way to support herself. From there she followed her husband- to- be Richard Rabinowitz to Gainesville, Florida where he was in graduate school.
Jill has used most of the alternative processes as her book indicates, but she particularly enjoys creating cyanotypes which she often tones or combines with other processes. As mentioned earlier, all of the images in Photo Imaging - A Complete Guide to Alternative Processes have been printed by Ms. Enfield, and many of them are repeated in a different process. This prompts readers to try different alternative processes using the same negative or combining two processes with one negative. Jill doesn't feel that the current revival of alternative processes is just a trend but a direction of photography which will always be used by some photographers. She sees its future as a combination of digital methods along with alternative processes. For instance, she uses Dan Burkholder's procedure to create digital negatives which are given specific contrasts for whichever alternative process she is planning to use. Creating a negative using tools from the 21st Century to use for a 19th Century process is very exciting to her. However, a large number of her negatives are not digital, so Jill sees no reason to give up her darkroom equipment and go totally digital. She likes to utilize all possible tools to create her work. Jill: "One of the happiest days of my life was to see the book finally in print, I have to admit I am driving my family crazy by going into stores to see it on the shelves." Jill told me that the color in her work has been most influenced by Andrew Wyeth and Edward Hopper. This becomes evident in the muted colors found in her hand-painted prints used to illustrate the book's chapter on hand-painting. Some of her favorite photographers include Joseph Sudek, Bernice Abbott, Bea Nettles, Sarah Moon, Chuck Close and Sally Mann. When asked if she puts her daughters in her imagery like Mann, Jill replied that she rarely does portraits at all. She did show me one image in the book of Eve and Sally, but they are so far from the camera, that recognition is not possible. "My imagery just doesn't involve my daughters," she said, "however, I love what Mann does with her own children." Jill's photography has been exhibited in such galleries as The Washington Center for Photography in Washington D.C., the Sande Webster Gallery in Philadelphia, PA, and the Viviane Esders Gallery in Paris, France. It has also been featured in many publications including Shutterbug, Camera Arts and Zoom.
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UK/Europe: Buy 'Photo-imaging: A Complete Visual Guide to Alternative Process' from Amazon.co.uk USA: Buy 'Photo-Imaging: A Complete Visual Guide to Alternative Processes' from Amazon.com
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