Thorsten Overgaard

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December 22, 2007 5:44 AM  (go back to main view)
Annie Leibovitz and HRH Queen Elizabeth II

Gee, I don't know what to think of this. In some sense I find her work disappointing. But also fascinating. I really can't work out what I think. Maybe I think it looks too fake for my taste.

Here is what I was looking at. But I was also thinking about the Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes shooting in Vanity Fair. It was five days work on site. The queen was 11 weeks of preparation and 11 assistants. And one (lousy) dSLR camra that is not even a Leica. I had expected a Hasselblad.

Anyhow, these are the four pictures released or approved by HRH Queen Elizabeth II:

Ooh, I don't know. It's facinating. Yet it's fake skies on no 1 and 2, and god knows what else is fake. She came from being chief photographer on Rolling Stones. In my book that's around and up, working with natural lightning and available light, available persons, available time and a lot of unavailable - much like White House photographers.
Now it's a truckload of assistants and hours of PS.
Hmm.
It's work like that that make people question if Apollo 11 actually ever landed on the moon. (But mind you this comment is coming from a guy who havent left film photography yet. I'm getting there but I'd rather not).
You know Hans Christian Andersen, the famous Danish poet who wrote The Emperor's New Clothes witht a small boy says "But he has nothing on!"
My take is "But she has no film in the camera!"

Okay, maybe not so. I'm leaving film these days. I might come back to that subject when I can talk about it comfortably without getting wet eyes.

Here's the video from the shooting which reveals a bit about setting, quipment and all. I find her personality somwehat a mixture of Woody Allen and Julia Roberts. She's an very intersting person.

What's your feelings on this?
Gentlemen Takes Polaroids
Blog Comments (20):
Posted by Valdudes on December 26, 2007 11:19 PM
Don't forget that Annie's original idea, the Queen on a horse inside the state apartments got rejected because obviously it was too awesome for the Queen's PR department. Now seriously think about how awesome that photo would have been. Annie is awesome just for intending to do that. I think Kira is right when she said, "I believe that many decisions concerning those photos were made due to limitations".
Posted by Rodolfo on December 23, 2007 9:17 PM
I don't respect fake backgrounds that pretend to be real...and I'm glad we don't have monarchs in the Americas..what a pain, all that ass kissing. Seems like a relic from a time gone by...
Posted by Darren Aba... on December 23, 2007 1:52 PM
I have to admit that I've never been a fan of her work. I don't think she does bad work, but I've always thought that she's a bit over-rated. I think a lot of her fame is to be credited to being at the right place at the right time. But, that can be said of most famous people, I guess. Either way... Fake skies? Can't respect that. She didn't make a photograph; she made a photo-illustration.
Posted by Treamus on December 22, 2007 12:28 PM
I see where Annie is coming from, to try achieve the look of an old master portrait.
But the final product looks plastic to me, and just does not work.

Many times a client will employ me to manipulate a portrait to look like a painting in which I use Corel Painter 9, I'm not a fan of it, but many people want a oil painting over the fireplace, a photo manipulation is the closest (cheapest) thing to it.

But as an effect it will look dated and kitch in the near future.
While the classical portraits of Karsh will be compelling forever.
Posted by Kira on December 21, 2007 5:08 AM
This might sounds extremely naive but i'll try to suggest to look at things a bit differently.
You were very disappointed with all the photoshopping done in those photos saying that "god knows what else is fake". Maybe,just maybe this was one of Annie Leibovitz's aims.Maybe the fake dramatic sky holds a deeper meaning than just being a heavility photoshopped sky. As much as her figure apparently presented as unshakable, the heavy editing make us doubt the truth and by that i apply to the whole series . The queen looks very lonely and vulnerable with that upcoming storm in the background (at least in my eyes) and on the other portraits when wearing all those royalty cloths-the whole thing just looks ridicilousl and fake (concept related) .
It was clearly seen in the video that there were more limitations than options in this project. I bet you've noticed the queen's reaction when suggested to take off the crown or be photographed on a horse. I believe that many decisions concerning those photos were made due to limitations.
I have no knowledge one so ever about how many assistans should be on a location of such project but my wild guess is that Leibovitz brought her squad for the queen to feel important :)
Posted by mahomo on December 20, 2007 6:59 PM
thanks for posting this as i hadn't seen it. coincidentally, she became our oldest ruling monarch today, and she's one of the few people i'd jump in front of a bullet for! i like the pose of the first shot. there was a t.v documentary a few years back that followed the queen around her royal residences. it was amazing to see her totally relaxed and laughing and joking, riding her horse and playing with her dogs. this is a side of her we very rarely see in britain, we only see her opening hospitals or such like, where she must get sick of the smell of fresh paint. it would be wonderful to see relaxed portraits of her, watching her favorite t.v shows with her feet up, but it's not the done thing, and it's a shame ;)
Posted by arthur on December 20, 2007 3:54 PM
what people said about them looking like paintings is exactly what i thought ... they also seem to be set up like old portrait paintings done of important people with the colors and the flow of the drapery and clothing ... but i like the one where HRH is outside ... it's got something that the other 3 don't have ... interesting photos for sure and the video was very cool to watch ... i generally really like annie's work ... these do look overly photoshopped though. thanks for putting this up thorsten!! :)
Posted by cassie.a.c... on December 20, 2007 1:09 PM
I think her work is meant to be a sort of set up like paintings and tell a story. The whole point of her work is to create stories, to which I think she is successful and I love that about her. Though I have to say, I much prefer working without extravagant setups and lighting etc.., but there is something to be admired and appreciated about her work.
Posted by Richard Po... on December 20, 2007 11:50 AM
I think that paintings would have been a better choice also. If you’re going to manipulate photos to make them look like paintings what exactly is the point?
Posted by Ovidiu Mor... on December 20, 2007 7:48 AM
I'm just curious what all those assistants did. That is just how I do not immagine shooting a queen. I understand this womans genius in understanding what she can recover or not with PS and so on but for Gods sake you're shooting a Queen. And if they want you for shooting her, you should be the one deciding what it's done. Think about when the Queens did hours and hours of standing in front of some painter. Half hour?????
If you take a look at LaChapelles photos you see them corwded but not cofused... I see her going around, doing random shots here and there, I would'nt have shot the queen inside a room full of "things" and then probably stitch her on some other background.
A white or blue background set works better... and you can choose your idea of composition before, thinking about what's in and what's not... dunno!
This is all considering she did not shoot using the available light.... Seems some sort of Draganization how they call them here in italy!
This said,
she's Annie Leibovitz. And tastes should not be discussed :)
Posted by Thorsten O... on December 20, 2007 7:13 AM
@Riccardo: Part of the way it was done might be that Annie Leibovitz' pictures has become accustomed to fit a double-page spread in Vanity Fair and the likes. I'll get back to the film thing which is sad but also has some interesting sides. But I still have 8 film Leica and a Imacon film scanner - and plan to keep them and use them. But more on that later.
Posted by Riccardo on December 20, 2007 6:05 AM
May I comment freely? Since I don't know that photographer well.
Those pictures are crap to me. An insult to photography.
While I appreciate the Painting-style composition, the result is too fake, too manipulated, too anything. Photography can be great when doing "important official portraits" but not this way. Karsh rules there.
You are right. For a queen, Leica or Hasselblad. Or Rollei. Or Linhof. But not just for the chrome or brass, for the concept behind it.

You are leaving film? I'm sad about that. Really.
Posted by Thorsten O... on December 20, 2007 5:16 AM
Thanks for the comments so far. I actually don't think there are any rules as to what can be done. I should post about the old (war) photographers later when I find those photos again; but they inserted or removed people in the darkroom to make their works stronger or clearer. I think todays Reuters rules, AP rules, etc about not editing pictures is a bit of a boy scout dramatization. There was this case about removing a foot that was seen behind a fence (an audience's foot at a football match where the center of interest was on the field. Big fuzz about it. I mean, what does a foot has to do with truth in a sports event. It was annoying, so the photographer removed it for clarity just like I remove dirt on a background wall if I feel it's disturbing the attention. The reason why news agencies are soooo drama queen about this is because they fuck up the truth left right and center in more clever and more 100% organized ways them self whenever their government ask them to for reasons of 'national security' and stuff like that). Also old painters removed people or changed their minds midway. We have a couple of paintings locally in the art museum where there are ghosts in the pictures (because of age you see those now) . The disappointment in these (later) works of Annie Leibovitz is the wow and the chill, then that you wonder if this really happened or if it's stitched together of 12 photos and some of the stuff is a PS drawing. The message and impact of the photo would be so strong that you would chill and cry if you didn't immediately start question the photo. You could say she's so original it ruins the communication in her work. It's impressing yes, it's for sure art, but there's something you don't know. That's the feeling. Reminds me of a book I saw the other day in the bookstore of "Photos that never happened" where you see real photos of real events and real people, but you know those things never happened because those of a celebrity must be staged, and another one of the queen is quite unlikely because she would never bee in that place where you see her. But as you don't get the real story (on how they manipulated those photos and you can't figure it out yourself, not even why they did them) it becomes something you don't really trust to spend time on looking at. All that said, I don't have a problem with 11 assistants and the money part of it. I actually enjoy in the video to see how organized five people or so fix the queens dress on the floor while Annie Leibovitz talks with the queen. It's extremely well organized and I think they planned exactly how they wanted it to look, and she happens to have enough assistants to run things smoothly and professional in a hurry.
Posted by CMphotogra... on December 20, 2007 4:21 AM
thanks for the video. it's always nice to see how professional photographers work.
i guess she uses a dslr for speed. half an hour to shoot isn't really much. too bad that the photos seem to be highly manipulated. i guess she also would've taken some good photos without the help of PS.
imho all those manipulations degrade the photographer in a way. if the photos are bad, someone else will fix it.
Posted by Robert Pri... on December 19, 2007 10:07 PM
Ok I really enjoy her early work, and I'm sure she is still fantastic, but well I have no words to say how I feel about the photos or the video of the shoot. I would have to say I feel sorrow in a way.
Posted by Rayray on December 19, 2007 8:49 PM
I hate it when photographers use fake work for there photographs, its just so boring and not as creative as using your natural surroundings
Posted by Stelios on December 19, 2007 8:45 PM
oh god photoshop!!! they could as well make a painting of her with brushes and stuff. i think it sucks.
and 11 assistants? I wonder who pays for that...................
Posted by gONZOm on December 19, 2007 3:35 PM
dont you have bigger pictures? im squinting here :P...those photographs look like paitings....kinda weird...the textures...the lighting...but they look pretty, one click behind the camera, one day behind ps...thats the shitty side............"the start of the session has been delayed 15 minutes" that made me laugh
Posted by Chris on December 19, 2007 3:34 PM
no matter my feelings about annie ... i still got chills watching her shoot. the whole crown/tiara mishap ... wasn't as big as i had heard that it was. the canon eos 1ds is not a crappy camera. the hassie is a pain in the ass to work with and it's slow. the glass is not zeiss any longer so ... i'd much rather shoot with the canon. the photoshop ... i think it's pretty damn photoshopped, in fact. i think annie gave up film long ago. i have a great story about her ... and ... the dreaded reshoot! hope you're well, brother.
Posted by KarenJK on December 19, 2007 3:34 PM
Thanks for posting that video. I have that issue of Vanity Fair, and was like yourself very interested in the shots. 11 assistants! And obviously quite a bit of manipulation, especially that second one, and it even looks like the last one too, since the background was a backdrop in the video??
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Comments
Jun 12, 2008 1:47 PM
Thanks for your comment, your work is very inspiring.
Jun 12, 2008 2:08 AM
www.myspace.com/sulleemusic
Jun 05, 2008 6:59 AM
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Jun 05, 2008 6:58 AM
are you ready for this, i finally found out what was going on with mike and his younger brother andrew. remember how they never had girlfriends up until this past year, now they are with different girls weekly, well i am the only one who has proof on what happened. they both have been taking enlarge pills from http://www.bolinu.com for many months now, i found 7 empty bottles under mike's bed and he caught me, forced me to promise i would never tell anyone about the pills. well i told dave about them 2 months ago, he ordered 6 bottles from http://www.bolinu.com and now he too is a ladies man overnight. none of these guys talk to me anymore so now i can tell you all about the pills and living proof that they work, they even guarentee your money back 100% if they don't work on you. go now to http://www.bolinu.com
Jun 05, 2008 6:57 AM
SLap
Jun 04, 2008 4:02 PM
I enjoy your work and writing...very clear sensibility and POV ala Thorsten. Bravo.
May 21, 2008 3:40 AM
Your work is profound. It was a delight to come across your page suggested to me by uber as 'similar pages' to my own, although my page is in its third day of infancy, so I really have nothing to show for it, however I look forward to seeing more of your excellent eye for detail. Cheers.

=Josh=
May 15, 2008 4:52 PM
Hello Mr. Overgaard,

TOS just released their debut music video - hope you dig the atmosphere,

Andrei
May 10, 2008 3:23 AM
Hey Thorsten hope you are doing well!
May 11, 2008 9:49 AM
Thanks, I'm good - and we'll soon have exiting photos to show the world!
May 08, 2008 7:47 AM
It has been, i confess, long overdue. But i have been procrastinating this simple task of leaving you a comment for weeks. I've been busy and only comment when commented.
I do admire your work and your blogs are quite the read.
congratulations on a wonderful page.
And. xoxoxox :)
May 02, 2008 6:04 PM
Super work! I will try and keep up w/ you. lol
Thanks for the invite.
xo - Tally
May 01, 2008 8:37 PM
I just wanted to say your work is brilliant! -V.Smith
May 01, 2008 4:08 PM
thanks for all the feedback, new friend! much appreciated from such a talent!
Apr 26, 2008 7:55 PM
hahah you have an awesome pic of george micheal...im still a closet fan of his lol
Apr 08, 2008 4:56 PM
Hi Thorsten

I just wanted to say hello and compliment you on your gallery. You've got a really great selection of pictures here, I really like your natural style and your use of light.
Lots and lots of interesting stuff to read too!
I reckon I'm going to be a regular reader.
Take it slow...
Mark
Apr 07, 2008 10:30 AM
Heeeeey... You're another one on here who I see has fanagled a way around (what I thought was the max) of 16 "Top Friends." How'd you manage that one, if you don't mind me asking? Whatever the case, very best of regards to you...CCx
Apr 04, 2008 12:02 AM
Thanks for the comment on my first post- nice to know I'm not alone in my technological woes! Love your photography- really beautiful shots you've got here.
Apr 01, 2008 5:44 AM
Hello.
Thank you for your kind words. I'm really glad to receive a comment from you.

Not all thinks the same, because I've received a lot of critics on flickr.

Regards, Ulissa.
Apr 01, 2008 12:20 AM
thnak you. I'm just collecting all the art i see in San Francisco... check out the new slideshow on TINGLETANGLE and WEMARNY sections on the nav bar menu of http://ozcillator.com. peace, franz
Mar 28, 2008 12:03 PM
Hello Thorsten. I've been doing a lot of uber-diving, and I must say that yours stands out as one of my top five blogs. It's so diverse and interesting! Keep up the good work! All the best,
Stewart
Mar 27, 2008 9:12 PM
Hi Thorsten,
Thanks for the great idea for a blog posting on how a designer comes to dress a star at the Oscars. I will have to write it! Continue to check my blog, I'm going to continue to add great stuff in the next few weeks.
xoNick
Mar 27, 2008 8:20 AM
Hello!Thank you very much for the invitation!I am going to read your blogs about digital photography - it is very interesting for me.
Mar 24, 2008 10:26 AM
ADDING NEW SLR PICTURES TODAY CHECK THEM OUT. WOULD LOVE TO HEAR FROM YOU. PEACE ...V
YSA
Mar 24, 2008 8:13 AM
Oh thank you so much! : )
Mar 23, 2008 8:03 PM
Hi Thorsten! :)
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Thorsten Over...
Male / 43

Denmark

Member Since: 6/17/2007
Last Seen: 7/2/2008

http://www.uber.com/thorstenovergaard

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