Nalina Moses

ARCHITECT, WRITER, CURATOR

  • BLOG
  • SINGLE-HANDEDLY
  • WRITINGS
  • EVENTS
  • ABOUT
  • CV
  • CONTACT
Is it the end of photography?  Earlier this year Kodak declared bankruptcy.  Then a few weeks later the start-up Lytro began shipping its new new digital image-making device that is not, according to press copy, a camera.  It certainly doesn’t…

Is it the end of photography?  Earlier this year Kodak declared bankruptcy.  Then a few weeks later the start-up Lytro began shipping its new new digital image-making device that is not, according to press copy, a camera.  It certainly doesn’t look like a camera.  Most point and shoot (P&S) digitals mimic point and shoot film cameras, which have oblong bodies to accommodate the spooling of a film roll.  The Lytro does away with that anachronism.  Its slim profile resembles that of a slide viewer, a photographer’s magnifier, or a one-eyed View-Master more than a digital camera, and it uses a square image format like a Polaroid.  It stirs up instant nostalgia for old-fashioned photography.

The Lytro doesn’t catch images on a single curved plane, like the lens of a conventional camera, but catches an entire “field of light,” so that you can point and shoot without focusing and then adjust the image for resolution later, on the device’s 1 ½" x 1 ½" touch-screen, or with software on the computer.  The Lytro-produced images on the company’s website all dramatize the contrast between foreground and middle ground, obliterating elements in the distance.  The device takes in a very small part of the world and gives it a funky, fish-eye artsiness.  The images are distinctive but they look like they could have bee produced with a PhotoShop effect or a mobile phone app.  They’re digital photographs, just a little bit twisted.

March 27, 2012 by Nalina Moses
March 27, 2012 /Nalina Moses /Source
PHOTOGRAPHY, Lytro, AESTHETICS, Polaroid, Kodak, optics
Comment