Some Assembly Required: Ursula Ferrara’s Camera Van

This series focuses on those who take the making of pictures a step or two further, creating their own photographic tools.

Ursula Ferrara, Italy

Italian artist Ursula Ferrara is embraces experimental photographic techniques. A lover of analogue processes she has made a career modifying equipment to suit her needs. She has converted instant film cameras to make tintypes, photographed with expired Polaroid films, and perhaps most ambitiously, turned her camper into a camera. To bring her portrait studio to her subjects, Ferrara converted an old Renault Trafic camper into an all-in-one mobile camera and darkroom.

On the back of the van Ferrara mounted an Aero Tessar lens used by the military during World War II to a large piece of plywood. The subject poses outside within a few feet of the lens. The long exposure times record subtle shifts of light across their face for a dreamy, ethereal portrait. Each photograph is one-of-a-kind, shot onto 16 x 20 inch Harman positive paper which is mounted to the back of the van’s interior. After the exposure, Ferrara transforms the van’s interior into a functional darkroom simply by covering the lens. This allows the photographs to be developed on site immediately where she often hanging them to dry from clotheslines on the nearby trees.

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View more of Ferrara’s work on her website.

Have you made or modified your own photographic equipment? Let us know at info@donttakepictures.com