{"id":10139,"date":"2021-09-07T17:34:40","date_gmt":"2021-09-07T17:34:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=10139"},"modified":"2021-09-09T08:33:29","modified_gmt":"2021-09-09T08:33:29","slug":"sharing-the-light","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=10139","title":{"rendered":"Sharing the Light, Embracing the Shadow: Visual Art through the Cinematographer\u2019s Lens"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n

Sharing the Light, Embracing the Shadow:\u00a0Visual Art through the Cinematographer\u2019s Lens<\/h3>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
by D.Amari Jackson<\/pre>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Ever seen the \u201cNuncaland\u201d episode of Terence Nance\u2019s breakout series Random Acts of Flyness<\/em> on HBO? Or Nike\u2019s \u201cBeginnings\u201d commercial with LeBron James? How about Common\u2019s \u201cBlack America Again\u201d video?<\/p>\r\n

Well, that means you\u2019ve seen the work of cinematographer Shawn Peters. The talented filmmaker, who began his career shooting music videos for such artists as Kendrick Lamar and D\u2019Angelo, has worked on projects with a wide variety of clients and celebrities including Nike, Mercedes, Alicia Keys, Calvin Klein, Muscle Milk, Solange, and many more. Peters\u2019 film projects have premiered at Sundance, the Rotterdam International Film Festival, Berlin Film Festival, Tribeca Film Festival, and Toronto International Film Festival.<\/p>\r\n

Impressive, right? By all means. That acknowledged, right about now you are probably wondering, \u201cBut what does a\u00a0<\/em>cinematographer actually do\u2026?<\/em>\u201d If so, you should not feel ashamed given the answer to that question is neither singular nor simple, and can depend on which cinematographer you ask.<\/p>\r\n

Generally, a cinematographer, otherwise known as the \u201cDP\u201d or director of photography, plays a varied and critical role in a film project as the individual most tasked with giving visual life to the director\u2019s vision. As a camera operator and technician, the cinematographer is the chief of the camera and light crews and the one primarily responsible for what we literally see onscreen. Responsibilities commonly include shooting the film, lighting and photographing each scene of the film, arranging and properly equipping camera shots and angles, color correction and color grading, and ensuring the project conforms to storyboard requirements and director specifications.<\/p>\r\n

Clearly, as photographers charged with shooting, lighting, and, yes, painting<\/em> the scenes of a film, cinematographers are artists. And some enlightened ones, like Peters, clearly recognize the connections between motion pictures and what we traditionally label as \u2018visual art.\u2019<\/p>\r\n

\u201cLight and shadow is everything in photography,\u201d promotes Peters, who attended Morehouse College before pursuing a MA in Media Arts and Photography at the University of South Carolina. \u201cOne of the things I tend to tell young cinematographers is that the darkness reveals the light, not the other way around. You see the light because there\u2019s darkness around it,\u201d clarifies Peters, noting that \u201cyou visually see a streak of light coming in from the window because, above that streak is shadow, and below it is shadow. It\u2019s not that light comes in and reveals the darkness because, obviously, you don’t see the darkness anymore once the light comes in. The darkness and shadow reveal the light and shape it, so I\u2019m conscious of that in my work.\u201d<\/p>\r\n

In comparable fashion, through light and shadow, painters or visual artists are \u201cable to trick the mind and conjure a memory,\u201d offers Peters, stressing \u201cthat\u2019s really what it comes down to. In order for someone to believe something, to a certain extent, it\u2019s because they have a recorded memory of a certain scene or moment, and that\u2019s what really goes to the emotion or to the heart of the viewer.\u201d Simultaneously, \u201ca lot of what we know as the visual world or reality is the interplay of light and shadow, and how that intersects with form, texture, and color. We store trillions of these scenes and memories from our daily travels, and that data is accessible,\u201d he explains. \u201cSo when you see a painting, the computer that is your brain or your subconscious recognizes something and, if it has an emotional memory, that\u2019s when you like something\u201d and you\u2019ll say things like \u201cI don\u2019t know why, but I have a feeling about this painting,\u201d continues Peters, adding \u201cyou\u2019ll often hear that, and that\u2019s what that comes from.\u201d<\/p>\r\n

Over the years, Peters has encouraged other practitioners of light and shadow to delve more deeply into collecting art, including his close friend and industry colleague, Bradford Young. An Academy Award-nominated cinematographer for the 2016 blockbuster, Arrival<\/em>, starring Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, and Forest Whitaker, Young\u2019s many films include such noted projects as Selma<\/em>, Solo: A Star Wars Story<\/em>, Pariah,<\/em> Mother of George<\/em>, A Most Violent Year<\/em>, and the Netflix docuseries When They See Us<\/em>.<\/p>\r\n

Fittingly, the two filmmakers have shadowed each other\u2019s moves for decades. Both attended Historically Black Colleges & Universities\u2014Peters at Morehouse, Young at Howard. Both own homes in Baltimore while splitting time in Brooklyn. Both have become prominent, in-demand cinematographers in the film, TV, and video industries. Both collect, work with, and associate with numerous African-American artists from Titus Kaphar to Kerry James Marshall to Amy Sherald to Khalif Thompson. This past month, both filmmakers purchased works by the talented Thompson.<\/p>\r\n

\"Thompson,<\/a>

“Selah” by Khalif Thompson 78 x 56 inches handmade paper, mixed media, oil on canvas (2019)<\/p><\/div>\r\n

Further, Young, like his \u201cbig brother\u201d Peters, is adamant about the important connections between visual art and motion pictures.<\/p>\r\n

\"\"

Bradford Young<\/p><\/div>\r\n

\u201cIt\u2019s really about how can the art inform the cinematography,\u201d offered Young, in an exclusive interview<\/strong> with BAIA\u2019s Najee Dorsey. \u201cFilmmaking itself is such a young art form, and it\u2019s an art form that\u2019s prospered at the expense of Black people. That\u2019s why I think Shawn and I are attracted to figurative art; because it checks the box around representation that Black filmmaking has not been able to achieve at such a scale. We are so fascinated with Kerry James Marshall as cinematographers, because it\u2019s such a feat to try and get that density and complexity, and be allowed to bring that density and complexity into the images,\u201d explained Young, noting that \u201cin the art world, it is unapologetically Black people\u2019s moment, and nobody is telling us what is or what isn\u2019t. When you render a Black figure on a canvas, it is everything that it is there in front of you.\u201d So, in the film industry, \u201cI\u2019m trying to be as bold and as significant as the Black artists.\u201d<\/p>\r\n

While such comparisons shed light on the historic and ongoing challenges of autonomy and definitional authority facing Black filmmakers, they also speak to the bottom line of any industry. Money.<\/p>\r\n

\u201cIf I didn’t have art making friends, being a filmmaker would be a lonely, lonely, lonely place because I don’t get to self-determine the way my artist friends get to self-determine, I don’t have the same amount of sovereignty or autonomy as they do, and if I wanted to just be a straight savage and go get money, I don’t even have that opportunity,\u201d Young told Dorsey, acknowledging how cinematographers are traditionally underpaid, particularly given the relative salaries of their colleagues on set. \u201cSo I\u2019m also trying to use these moments to inform how I operate in the film world as my whole language around my body of work and what is monetary value in the film space is, right now, totally informed by what my Black art friends are making in the art world.\u201d<\/p>\r\n

Pointing to how contemporary white film producers pay large sums of money to collect works by Black visual artists, and how top fashion magazines also pay hefty amounts to photographers, Young stressed how cinematographers are both artists and photographers who are not being compensated as such. \u201cWhy do you see me any differently? I\u2019m an artist, I\u2019m a Black artist, I\u2019m here making it happen for these movies. If there\u2019s no cinematographer, there\u2019s no film, it\u2019s just radio.\u201d<\/p>\r\n

Accordingly, for African-American cinematographers like Young and Peters, the Black art world helps shine a light into the remaining shadows of a film industry still clinging to its gnarled and entrenched 19th<\/sup> century roots. For such is the process of light and shadow in its eternal cosmic dance, the former ultimately revealing what has always been there in the dark, a space far from empty, teeming with energy, be it good, bad, or ugly, yet ever true. It is this type of revelatory interplay between light and shadow that Peters gravitates toward with African-American visual artists like Khalif Thompson.<\/p>\r\n

\"Thompson,<\/a>

“Glenn, 1978” by Khalif Thompson 5.5 x 6.5 feet. Oil, pastel, chalk, spray paint, foil, wax, fabric, leather, newsprint, stencil, stamp, handmade paper (abaca, cotton) on canvas (2021)<\/p><\/div>\r\n

\u201cI kind of went right to a piece with his brother called Selah<\/em>,\u201d recalls Peters, who had almost bought a different work from Thompson until seeing the ethereal image of the artist\u2019s brother on canvas. At the time, not knowing it was his relative, Peters reached out to voice his interest and was told by Thompson that the piece was \u201cvery special\u201d to him because it was his brother. \u201cYou see like this ghost of another pair of hands, like a spirit,\u201d depicts Peters, noting \u201cit feels otherworldly in some ways, as part of his body has become spirit or deformed. So I was wondering what that\u2019s about.\u201d While he has yet to find out why the artist rendered his brother in this fashion, Peters acknowledges, \u201cI want to hear more about it, but just the fact that he said it was special to him personally and that it was a portrait of his brother sort of tipped my desire to buy because I\u2019m often more interested in the story behind the piece than just the aesthetic beauty of it.\u201d<\/p>\r\n

Ultimately, for Peters, the creative navigation of light and shadow in both film and visual art is to reveal the one thing that most artists spend their lives seeking\u2014truth.<\/p>\r\n

\u201cI think your responsibility is to tell the truth, whatever that is,\u201d promotes Peters, and \u201cthat\u2019s sometimes good, bad, or indifferent. I think when you start getting into a sort of \u2018respectability\u2019 art, you\u2019re already considering someone else\u2019s gaze,\u201d someone that\u2019s \u201cusually not Black.\u201d Because, he adds, \u201cyou wouldn\u2019t care if it was just among us, right?<\/em>\u201d<\/p>\r\n

\u201cSo, essentially, the only responsibility is to tap into the truth,\u201d reiterates Peters. \u201cAnd if it comes out of Black people, it\u2019s already coming from a certain ontological position. If you love your Blackness and Black people, your gaze is already different\u2014even if it\u2019s something that may be negative, positive, or whatever, as all that stuff is subjective,\u201d continues Peters. \u201cIf you do love Black people, you love the totality of Black people and you\u2019re not going to be limited to tropes. You\u2019re not going to limit it to simplicity, or oversimplify a life.<\/p>\r\n

\u201cYou understand that it\u2019s complex.\u201d<\/p>\r\n