Solarigraphy

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Solarigraphy is a concept and a photographic practice based on the observation of the sun path in the sky (different in each place on the Earth) and its effect on the landscape, captured by a specific procedure that combines Pinhole camera|pinhole photography, digital processing and worldwide spreading by the Internet.[1][2] Invented around 2000, solarigraphy —:es:Solarigrafía|solarigrafía in spanish and other languages, :pl:Solarygrafia|solarygrafia in polish, and also known as wiktionary:solargraphy|solargraphy— uses photographic paper without Photographic processing|chemical processing, a pinhole camera and a scanner to create images that catch the daily journey of the sun along the sky with very long exposure times, from several hours to many months.[3][4] Solarigraphy is an extreme case of long-exposure photography. From the start, it has vocation of dissemination, cooperation and sharing between enthusiasts throughout the world, mainly due to Internet channels: the initial website [http://solarigrafia.com solarigrafia.com, blogs, social networks e.g. several groups in Facebook) or specific projects on particular pages.[5]

Beginnings

In 2000, Diego López Calvín, Sławomir Decyk and Paweł Kula started a global and synchronized photographic work known as "Solaris Project". This work, which mixes together Art and Science, is based on the active participation through the Internet of people interested in the apparent movement of the Sun, that is photographed with artisan pinhole cameras loaded with photosensitive material and subjected to very long exposures of time[6] Previous experiments with long exposures on photosensitive papers and with registration of the sun arcs in the sky were done at the end of the 90's in Poland by the students Paweł Kula, Przemek Jesionek, Marek Noniewicz and Konrad Smołenski and in the 80's by Dominique Stroobant in Italy, respectively.[7]

To do this they invented the word SOLARIGRAFIA, SOLARIGRAPHY, whose root "SOLAR" refers to the object of the study: the Sun. The suffix "GRAPHY" indicates the possibility of writing and the link "i" refers to the INTERNATIONAL nature of the project, as well as to the INTERNET, this being the method they used from the start to make the concept available and to get people from around the world to participate. Since then, as other photographers or amateurs have known of it and practiced it, new projects, workshops, exhibitions and collections on the web and physical spaces have been developed, about solarigraphy.[8]

Singularities

SOLARIGRAPHS are images that show us something we cannot see with the naked eye, they represent the apparent trajectories of the sun in the celestial vault due to the rotation of the Earth on its axis. They are mostly made with pinhole cameras and very long exposures, from one day to six months between the winter solstice and the summer solstice or vice versa. The images show the different paths of the Sun the observer has according to the respective latitude over the earth's surface.[3][9]

The cameras are loaded with photosensitive materials (mainly photographic paper in black and white) so that the sunlight produces a direct blackening on the surface. The trajectories of the sun and the landscape image appear directly on the surface of the paper forming a negative that is digitised and treated with an Image editing|image processing software for later publication. These images also provide information about the periods in which the sun does not appear to be shining as it is hidden by clouds, which provides information about the weather.[1][3]

In López Calvín words: "In these images, nature looks at itself beyond the limits of our perception. It is a kind of vision that will bring us closer to what is important within a landscape seen through the eyes, if they had them, of stones or trees. People, animals, clouds or rain are too ephemeral. Everything moves very fast and we lack details that need more time to be perceived. Thanks to this concept, we discover a way of seeing something that cannot be seen with the naked eye. The Sun is a clock that invites us to reflect on the relationship between light, space and time."[10]

Technical basis and procedure

The key to the technique is the nature of photographic paper that darkens by direct light without having to develop it, thus giving the ultra-low Film speed|sensitivity necessary for such long exposures. Although lenses can be used in obtaining solarigraphs with exposure times of a few hours, for longer exposures a pinhole or small hole through which the light enters the camera is more convenient, allowing the use of homemade cameras, usually using empty drink cans, film canisters or recycled plastic tubes.[9]

A photographic paper for black and white is placed inside the container that acts as a camera, and once the camera is fixed in the chosen place, usually pointing east, south or west, the pinhole is uncovered allowing the light to enter until the camera is collected.

The image, already visible at that time on the paper, is negative and ephemeral, since the light continues to expose the emulsion if it is shown, so it is necessary to protect the paper from the light and scan it so it can be viewed in a useable format.This second digital part of the process includes inverting the image to make it positive and usually increasing the contrast. Different circumstances make solarigraphs to show different colours depending on the colour of the light and the paper chosen, but also on conditions such as temperature and humidity at different times of impression, in addition to chemical changes in the paper during exposure.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Joglar, Jesus (2017). "Solargraphy". Revista de la Societat Catalana de Química. 17: 38–44.
  2. Dodwell, Lucy (1 October 2008). "Solargraphs show half a year of Sun". New Scientist: 46.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 LUKASZ ZAPIÓR, MACIEJ (1 January 2016). "Solarigrafía" (PDF). Paralajes, Revista del Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias. 1: 48–51 – via Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias.
  4. Hermoso, Borja (24 April 2013). "El tiempo cabe en una lata". El País Semanal – via El País (Journal).
  5. See, for instance: -Targa Trygg, [http://www.solargraphy.com/ The Global Project Of Solargraphy -Facebook group [https://www.facebook.com/groups/solarigrafia/ Solarigrafia -Luciana Silva, [http://www.solargrafia.com.br/ Solarigrafia-trilhas solares. Expo-solar-Brasil 1 y 2
  6. "La solarigrafía, qué es y cómo se hace". Fotógrafo Digital. 27 June 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. Robson, E. "Solarigraphy" (PDF). edinburghlofi.com. Retrieved 10 March 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. See, for instance: Dahlia Ambrose, March 29, 2017, [https://www.lightstalking.com/kristian-saks/ "Solargraphy – Sun Trails and Long Exposures Like You Have NEVER Seen" Chris Gampat 20. Feb. 2016 "[https://www.thephoblographer.com/2016/02/20/tomasz-cuncvir-solarigraphy-with-random-cameras/ Tomasz Kędzierski: Solarigraphy With Random Cameras" Ortega, Lieya (4 March 2012). "[https://www.xatakafoto.com/trucos-y-consejos/solarigrafia-registrar-el-movimiento-del-sol Solarigrafía, registrar el movimiento del sol". Xataka foto. Retrieved 10 March 2020 Trygg, Targa, "[http://www.alternativephotography.com/solargraphy-catching-the-suns-path-pinhole-camera/ Solargraphy – The art of catching the sun’s path through a pinhole camera". AlternativePhotography.com
  9. 9.0 9.1 Sellers, Vince (13 September 2018). "How to make a pinhole camera". BBC Sky at Night Magazine.
  10. López Calvín, Diego (22 September 2020). "Solarigrafía-Solarigraphy". Academia.edu.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

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