Some Assembly Required: Meghan Duda's Trailer Obscura
This series focuses on those who take making of pictures a step or two further, creating their own photographic tools.
Meghan Duda, Fargo, ND
While attending architecture school, Meghan Duda found herself inside a room in an 18th century Swiss villa. Heavy curtains darkened the room except for a small opening in the curtain facing the street. “Suddenly I found myself inside a camera.” She says. Later, while pursuing an MFA in photography, she wanted to give her students that same sense of discovery. Duda opted for a portable camera obscura that she could bring it to the three schools where she taught—thus, the Trailer Obscura was born.
Duda first experimented with the trailer by mounting some stitched-together photo paper on the back wall and exposing the image for the duration of her hour-and-a-half commute. In 2010, she spent 72 hours converting a 5 x 8 foot enclosed trailer into a pinhole camera. She installed a small door on the exterior wall to serve as a shutter, behind which is a steel plate with a 1/16 inch hole drilled in the center for the pinhole. The most challenging part of construction was the design of a vestibule that would allow Duda to enter the camera without exposing the film. The Trailer Obscura allows for images as large as 4 x 6 feet, but so far Duda has only produced images at 4 x 4 ½ feet.
With this camera on wheels, Duda marries process with product, making exposures while driving. Duda tows the camera behind her car along the highways and back roads of North Dakota. The pinhole renders an image across a grid of 24 letter size sheets of silver gelatin paper. The resulting images are impressions of landscape, embracing atmosphere and time in their tonal range that can be a smooth transition of gray to white or a sharp shift from white to black.
View more of Duda’s work on her website.
Have you made or modified your own photographic equipment? Let us know at info@donttakepictures.com