Since the inception of technology, it has become inextricably linked to art because it produces a range of avenues for artists to explore and transcend reality. For this reason, photography and digitally manipulated images have become mainstream in contemporary art; there is a sense of superficial realism in photography that cannot be captured through other media, and computers allow artists to alter the visual language and subjects in their photographs. One artist who manipulates digital media to enrich his photography is Tom Chambers, who utilises photomontage to create his images. In his 2009 series, Entropic Kingdom, Chambers successfully makes a statement about the fragility of the zoomorphic network, continually weakened by humans, who refuse to help. Technology permits Chambers to enhance his visual language, which engages his audience. Additionally, by using digital manipulation, Chambers is capacitated to distort reality in surreal contexts and transcend reality. These two things help to elicit a response from the viewer and reinforce the intended meaning of the works in Entropic Kingdom. Chambers exploits the relationship between technology and art by using photomontage; it enhances his work and allows the audience greater insight into their socio-political and environmental context.
Chambers enriches several elements of visual language with technology, including space, desaturated contrasting colours and balance, to appeal to his audience. His photograph, Saccharine Perch, demonstrates these elements of visual language in Chambers’ personal aesthetic. The use of photomontage in Saccharine Perch adds dimensions that would not have been possible in standard photography, while creating a sense of symmetry and balance. With a precise distinction between the fore-, middle- and background in this image, the viewer is given a greater sense of perspective; seen in the dissimilarity between the birds in the fore- and background. Without this sense of space, the birds in the distance could be confused with the frightened birds in the foreground, instead of appearing large and foreboding. Space is also important when considering the contrasting colours Chambers employs. The cake featured in the foreground strongly contrast with the dress in the middle ground, but harmonise with the purplish, yellow clouds in the background. The murky and desaturated colours contribute to the foreboding feeling cast by the image. The enhanced visual language assists in drawing the viewer into Chambers’ haunting reality, by delivering a visually stunning and exaggerated world. In this respect, photography eclipses traditional mediums by providing the viewer with a seemingly realistic image that then makes them reassess the reality offered. Technology aids Chambers in manipulating visual language to create an apprehensive mood that enhances the meaning of his series, and draws in the viewer by altering reality.

Saccharine Perch (2009) photomontage, size and print medium unstated
Chambers’ subject matter relies on technology to create meaning, and contributes to the surrealistic qualities of his pieces. Surrealism was an movement during the 1920’s, where art adopted a dreamlike nature; commonly seen in an exaggeration of the physical world or creation of impossible images. Chambers uses surrealistic devices to fabricate unnatural relationships, generally between humans and animals. Chambers writes, “I desire to move beyond documentation of the present, and rather seek to merge reality and dreams in musing about possibilities of the future” (Chambers, 2010), referring to his use of surrealism. This merging of reality and dreams is apparent in Goatherd, which features a young girl reading, surrounded by live goats. The realistic quality of the animals in this unnatural situation would not have been captured, had it not been for Chambers’ use of photomontage and ability to employ technology to transcend reality in a realistic way. This creates a very surrealistic image that would have otherwise been unfeasible, and enhances the meaning by fabricating the dreamlike relationships between humans and animals in the lifelike context of a photograph.

Goatherd (2009) photomontage, size and print medium unstated
The use of visual language and the dreamlike, surrealistic atmosphere aids the viewer to draw meanings from the pieces and articulate a response. Having interviewed several people on the nature of Chambers’ pieces, there is a unanimous consensus that the foreboding mood captured in Entropic Kingdom, and the surrealistic elements of his work, help the viewer to understand them. Chambers claims that the purpose of this series is to create an “emotional connection in the viewer” by offering images of a “disturbed eco-system created by man’s self-serving interests” (Chambers, 2009). A strong emotional affiliation is created between the viewer and the image in the digitally created photograph, Camouflage. This piece is an accent of Entropic Kingdom that almost summarises the statement Chambers is trying to make. It features a scared teenage girl who has been digitally placed behind a defiant-looking deer, hiding. The image uses colour and strong tonal contrast to create a mood of fear and foreboding as with Chambers’ other images, as well the effective use of space. As aforementioned, surrealistic elements are key in this image, with the relationship between the girl and the deer being dreamlike and unreal; however, this is where the piece draws its meaning and where the audience is drawn into Chambers’ fabricated world. The girl is hiding, scared, behind the protective deer from an oncoming character who appears to be threatening the two. She is abdicating care for the animal, putting herself first and out of harm’s way, as is seen on a daily basis in social-political and environmental conflict. In his artist statement, Tom Chambers has written, “the tension [between animals and people] has escalated with man’s increasing disregard for the fragility of the environment and abdication of his responsibility to care for the earth” (Chambers, 2009). Here, photography is more powerful than paintings, adding weight and credibility to the portrayed reality; photographs have the power to alter the perception of the audience. Chambers’ enhanced visual language incorporation of surrealist devices engage the viewer and draw an emotional response, due to the perceived realism of the images.

Camouflage (2009) photomontage, size and print medium unstated
Tom Chambers manipulates technology to enhance his artwork; photomontage allows him to create and engage his audience by transcending reality. His heightened visual language captures the intended mood and draws the viewer into his surrealistic, dreamlike world. These consequences of technological use assist in eliciting an emotional response from the audience, allowing the message of the works to become apparent. Chambers has constructed a series that highlights his environmental and socio-political concern for ecology; it is a zoological tribulation, forgotten and unaided by humans. The surrealistic reality Chambers creates draws a parallel between the animalistic fragile world and the temporal, via technology. Digital media is becoming prevalent in art because it creates a world easily comprehended that can evoke a strong emotional reaction. Unlike traditional mediums, the nature of photography is capturing the tangible, therefore surrealistic photography has greater power to transcend reality. Chambers relies on surrealism and technology to visually enhance his series, Entropic Kingdom, stimulate his audience and deliver a message of socio-political and environmental importance.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Chambers, T. (2010) Photomontage, http://www.tomchambersphoto.com/portfolio.html (7-11-10)
Chambers, T. (2009) Entropic Kingdom, http://www.tomchambersphoto.com/portfolio_entropic_kingdom.html (7-11-10)




