about side effects

über side effects

Walter Benjamin attested to its „magical value,“ Susan Sontag described it „as something magical,“ and for William Henry Fox Talbot it was a bit of „natural magic“ come true.
They were referring to the analog photographic process, which, of course, has fascinated me from my discovery of it as well. Looking through a magnifying glass at a roll of developed reversal film there was the relieving assurance of having captured what you were after but also, now and then, the elation caused by something totally unexpected – an undesired exposure, contrast that was too high, motion blur, unwanted light reflections.
Those were images on an entirely different level that had nothing to do with technical prowess. They were images of a different kind altogether. Alexander von Humboldt spoke of the first daguerreotypes as „objects that paint themselves“ and of „light, forced by chemistry, to leave lasting traces“.

Some of these magical „traces“ kept catching my eye.
They appear at the beginning of a roll of film that is advanced manually after releasing the shutter several times before the first picture is even taken. These exposures are made at the exact transition to the light sensitive emulsion on the film. Usually overexposed or underexposed, they are pastel or blood-red colored blots of color that „seep out“ onto the black uncoated film surface and, with certain films and developing processes, lead to absolutely unique forms that are reminiscent of cosmic or microcosmic structures. Precursors to modern abstract art.
They are, however, not subject to any purpose or creativity - they are all one-of-a-kind
„side effects“, so to speak, of the magical interplay of chemistry and light.
They usually remain unnoticed or are cut off and discarded. I have been collecting them for over 40 years. These enlargements are my first adaptations of these analog phenomena, in which the layers of color are given new life. In the absence of a pre-existing term, I call it “photographic analog expressionism.”
What remains is pure interpretation.

Joachim Schmeisser, July 2022

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