Pherograph by Carlos M. Fernandes Face 16, 2008. Inkjet on paper.
Timor Mortis Conturbat Me
- Artist
- Carlos M. Fernandes (b. 1973)
- Date
- from November 1st 2008 to February 12th 2009
- Description
-
In 1844, Talbot defined light as The Pencil of Nature. Inside the camera obscura, the artist's pencil was being replaced by light and silver. Photography had just born, from the camera and
chemistry, and the apparatus was no longer used exclusively for drawing
lines on top of projected images. But nature has other pencils and the
scientific progress of the last decades opened the gates to new worlds,
to artificial and simulated environments based on natural phenomena.
Several research fields are advancing and cooperating in order to
understand how natural systems behave (and self-organize) and how these
lessons may be applied in real-world problems. Ants, for instance, are
known for being able to act as a swarm, find food and build rather stable travelling paths; ants draw lines
on the environment. In 1994, scientists Dante Chialvo and Mark Millonas
presented a swarm model with a dynamic behavior that may be tuned in to
a region that lies between chaos and order, were paths/lines emerge in
a plain environment. As in nature, ants communicate by pheromone (here,
artificial), which they deposit on the environment and tend to follow
as long as they detect it. Other researchers followed this line of
work, and modified and applied the system to grayscale images, in order
to look for alternative means to deal with image processing tasks.
However, new ideas arise when looking at the aesthetical and metaphoric
potentialities of the pheromone fields created by ants. Like the
pencils of camera obscura, ants draw lines along the contours of the
image, by laying more pheromone were contrast is higher (thus
attracting other ants that will reinforce pheromone in that area). Like
light, silver and film development, the process is gradual, starting
with a blank pheromone landscape were slowly emerges an image, a sketch
of the original picture.
The "fields" in this project were obtained by evolving the swarm on black-and-white negatives found in a flea market. The ants can draw over any image, and an artifact/camera to capture it directly is possible, but this way we recycle old photographs, in a kind of ecology of the image. In addition, the stage is given to those anonymous people whose faces are locked up in photo albums. All photographs are memento mori, Susan Sontag wrote. By recovering and working on these images, we try to provide them with a last breath of life.
Buy Pherographia book
Photographer work
Previous exhibitions
- Work Out
- Diagrams
- Gesta Hungarorum
- Manoel J. Florenço – Out of the Box
- Urban Angels / Anjos Urbanos
- Amor Cachorro (puppy love)
- Victor Palla | Platinum Age
- Timor Mortis Conturbat Me
- Vintage Nudes from the 60s and the 70s
- Terra Incógnita
- Secret Names
- One or Two Photographs
- Telegram | Leaving and Returning Home
- Atlas | A Photographic Essay
- Portuguese photography [1900 - 1960]
- Colonies. Ca.1950 | Photography exhibition
- Vamos em Grupos
- interiors
- Art and Religion
- Body-mouth | portrait
- Maria Matos — A History of Portuguese Theatre

