ASSESSMENT: NOTE TO THE ASSESSORS

Nicola South   Student number: 514516

Dear Assessors,

Thank you for taking the time to evaluate my work.

All of my work for Documentary is contained in this blog: https://nkssite5.photo.blog/

THE BLOG IS IN THE STANDARD FORMAT OF DESCENDING DATE ORDER, HOWEVER ALL ENTRIES CAN BE ACCESSED USING THE CATEGORY TABS ON THE HEADER BAR.

To view my final assessment documents click on the “FINAL ASSESSMENT” tab. However immediately below this post is my entry to evidence the Course Learning Outcomes: https://nkssite5.photo.blog/2021/07/31/assessment-learning-outcomes/

And below that my entry for Course Reflections and Evaluation: https://nkssite5.photo.blog/2021/07/31/assessment-course-reflection-and-evaluation/

To view my final assignment submissions click on the “SUBMISSIONS” tab, select the relevant assignment from the drop down menu. This category also includes Tutor reports and reflections on formative feedback.

To view the draft assignments click on the “LEARNING LOG: ASSIGNMENTS” tab, select the relevant assignment from on the drop down menu and then the horizontal “Assignment _ Draft” tab.This includes a learning log entry for each assignment and my self-reflection against assessment criteria.

To view my Learning log research and reflections click on the “LEARNING LOG: RESEARCH AND REFLECTION” tab and chose from the drop-down menu. There is a link here to my Documentary Journal, all extra research, photographer talks, events, and relevant meetings.

To view my Coursework click on the “COURSEWORK” tab and select from the drop down menu.

MY DIGITAL SUBMISSION HAS BEEN UPLOADED TO MY ALLOCATED G DRIVE:

Learning outcomes

Creative work:

Assignment 1 “Provisioning and Protecting”:

  • Document with a link to assignment 1 on my blog with artist statement, commentary, and thumbnails of images (they will open expanded in a new tab when clicked on).
  • Images #1 to #10.

Assignment 1 “Provisioning and Protecting”:

  • Document with a link to assignment 1 on my blog with artist statement, commentary, and thumbnails of images (they will open expanded in a new tab when clicked on).
  • Images #1 to #10.

Assignment 3 “Breathe in Breathe out”:

  • Document with link to assignment 3 on my blog with, artist statement, commentary, and   blurb book as a video.  
  • PDF of book for clearer versions of the images and back up.
  • Back up link to mp4 video of the book should the blog links not work.

Assignment 5 “Layers of Truth”:

  • Document with links to assignment 5 on my blog with artist statement, commentary, and video of slideshow of work.
  • Back up mp4 video should the link not work.

Assignment 4 – Critical review essay:

It is one thing to write about seeing the world in a grain of sand, and an eternity in a flower, etc., and another thing to make a convincing picture of it” (Szarkowski, 1976:174). How does this apply to the work of Minor White?

Course Reflection and evaluation

Tutor reports (6)

Thank you

Nicola South

ASSESSMENT: COURSE REFLECTION AND EVALUATION

Nicola South   Student number: 514516

I chose to take this documentary course as I thought it would be a contrast to the landscape course which I’d enjoyed so much, and to extend my knowledge base and photographic toolkit.

Reflecting now, this is exactly what it did, though I’ll admit I struggled to enjoy it until I reached assignment 3, when my learning and research began to propel me forwards.

I started the course exactly at the beginning of the UK Covid pandemic (a context that continued throughout), which initially forced me to change my subject for assignment 1. I felt constrained and tense, but adapted, and photographed my own community at home. This began my documentary journey, as both a participant and observer, photographing the mundane. I am surprising how meaningful these images are 18 months on, and having seen many Covid19 series since, I appreciate that my work is less cliched than I first feared. This work signalled themes that were to continue and develop in my work throughout the course: personal response, funnelled observation, attention to the banal, and a desire to trigger responses in others.

Peer support and critiquing were crucial to my progression during the course. The first half of the course was completed over a longer period than usual due to unusual domestic and family occurrences, and a mid-way loss of my initial tutor. These events interrupted my workflow, however as I increasingly shared with peers, and in turn challenged and supported others in their work, my confidence and creativity grew; retrospectively I can see how this helped to shape my work and contributed to developing my own voice.

Part way through assignment 3 I found I was able to immerse myself again; this either coincided or resulted in a growing enjoyment in my learning. I was motivated as I felt I had a story to tell and relished turning another mundane subject into a visual narrative. I had confidence in my concept, contextualised more intuitively, used my personal and local understanding, applied recent and broader knowledge of other practitioners, thought creatively about presentation, and realised I did have my own voice, personal and visual style.

The period of the course was a time of rich learning, especially as so much was available virtually. Assignment 4 was a welcome springboard, where I was able to build on themes from my coursework and other research, but particularly at that time, the Lumix festival talks which concentrated my thoughts on how visual storytellers can create impact with their photographs. My tutor feedback challenged me to go narrower and deeper with the critical review, and this helped me to focus and substantiate my conclusions on how documentary photographs can move beyond just highlighting issues, to benefiting those they photograph.

As I began to work into assignment 5, I felt it was all “coming together”. My fascination with the representation of truths led me into my personal project “Layers of Truth”. By that point I had the tools to realise a personal project which I had been working on since the outset of the course. I extended previous work by researching more deeply, using my insider-outsider position, considering ethics, different truths and choosing a method to present the project that would provoke thought.

Throughout the course I focused on the mundane, observing the extraordinary in the ordinary. Though this and my subject matter of local communities remained throughout the course, as did the context of the Covid19 pandemic, my perspective shifted as did my methods of presentation. These were greatly influenced as I learned about the practices, motives and ethics of other photographers, which enabled me to think hard about my own practices. The cultural and political space of the photograph, and how people can take control of it, has become clear to me. I now have a greater understanding that documentary photography can provide different representations of reality, and am motivated to make conceptual, creative, and visual choices as well as communicate concisely for my audience, to encourage viewers to ask questions of images and give meaning to my work. I am also minded to be clear about the role of any project; should it seek to change or just highlight something?

When asked for learning tips by students at an event, I shared that feedback from tutors and peers helps to force you out of your comfort zone, whilst talking with others helps you to focus your thoughts. I also shared that I’ve learned to have confidence in my own ideas, experiment and trust my instincts; this how I have begun to find my own voice.

Next post: https://nkssite5.photo.blog/2021/08/02/assessment-note-to-the-assessors/