Slovenian artist Ziga Koritnik honored the JAM this year with his jazz photo exhibition. Under the title Cloud Arrangers, the exhibition was set up in Center of Contemporary Art of Montenegro, Perjanicki Dom premises. Over two decades of his work are summed up in this exhibition, and the photos tell a magnificent story of his experience of music and musicians. Different jazz style artists feature the photographs: from mainstream, through modern all the way to improvisation.
Born 1964 in Ljubljana, Koritnik started his career back in 1990, with solo and collective exhibitions in Slovenia and other countries, from Italy and Germany, to the USA and Japan. During this period, Koritnik was the official photographer of many international jazz festivals.
Opening the exhibition in Podgorica, the author told us how happy he was to be in Montenegro, and told us an interesting detail about his beginnings, his first international success: over twenty years ago he made a photo at the Ada Bojana nudist beach, and it was this photo exactly that prompted his first international exhibition that happend in Japan.
About his work on Cloud Arrangers, in his own words:
Cloud Arrangers
Žiga Koritnik
Being a jazz music photographer is very interesting. This work is my priority: to be close to musicians, to become their friend… Emotions are always very close to the surface, especially since the music often carries positive or negative messages.
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I started documenting the jazz scene in 1987, when I went to the Belgrade Jazz Festival with a friend of mine to hear Miles Davis. Before that I mainly listened to rock music. Frank Zappa was—and still is—one of my favorite musicians, a real genius. I quickly had the Ljubljana music scene under control. In those days it was still possible all different types of music, and there weren’t a lot of organized concerts. Pat Metheny came to Ljubljana—unexpected and nearly unannounced—with his first solo project. His three hour concert totally impressed me. This was my first discovery of the never-ending story of jazz. Later on came “world” music, and I still manage to mix in a rock concert here and there.
What I like is not a specific type of music, it is quite simply, good music.
Parallel to music, photography has always been a passion of mine. Wherever I went, I carried a camera—to parties, with friends, and of course at concerts. I carried a camera on my journeys and was always practicing. I began getting official credentials to cover concerts and started coming into direct contact with musicians. By publishing my photos, I was fulfilling obligations both to concert promoters, but also to the musicians, whose souls I was “taking.” You need to be very careful that you treat this “soul” very gently—you nurture it but never exploit it. At the same time I helped support the local music scene.
To be a jazz photographer you need to travel a lot and associate with many different types of people (often late at night). Your equipment always needs to be ready, and you always have to have lighting and focus in mind. On a piece of photo paper you need to bring to life something that happened only once, but which gives the viewer the opportunity to creatively imagine that moment. Photographers are like fishermen who wait for a fish to swim by that they really want to catch.
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In the beginning I was fishing only in shallow waters. Now, years later, I prefer to go hunting deeper. I try to capture the atmosphere created by concerts. At good festivals and concerts this process puts me in the right mood, and I begin to “see.” I am interested in presenting the best side of the music. If I feel I cannot do this, I often will not shoot at all. You need to be in a certain state to capture good shots. Of course, you also need technical knowledge, good equipment and experience—so that pressing the shutter becomes automatic.
At first I paid out of my own pocket to travel so much. Later, I began to get invitations from some festivals—which eased the financial burden, but brought also additional responsibilities.
For this Tivoli Park exhibition, I am presenting an opus of my 24 years as a music photographer, featuring pictures taken at festivals in Slovenia and abroad: the Ljubljana Jazz Festival, Saalfelden Jazz Festival, Skopje Jazz Festival, the Vision Festival in New York, Druga Godba, Musique Metisses, Womad, Konfrontationen in Austria, Metelkova concerts, festivals in Sardinia and elsewhere in Italy, and more…
I present musicians from many different jazz styles, from mainstream to modern to improvisational. I give honorable placement to African musicians that are my great love. These photos were used for reportage in magazines and newspapers, on CD covers and booklets, for posters and festival announcements. I am also presenting photos from my archive that have never been published, but which have gained value to me over time. Some photos are action shots, taken during performances, others are from backstage and still others are more formal portraits.
A common theme among music photographers is that we like good music—and all that surrounds it—as much as we like photography. We like being with company we are never bored with and can always rely on. Concerts are ever-changing atmospheres.
In most cases photography holds a uniting and/or educational meaning. We encounter and accept different cultures around the world, acknowledging that we all similar underneath our skin. Until I feel the creative excitement that comes with this, I am often unable to make a good photograph. I still love the feeling of going to new festivals and discovering cultures unknown to me—this always draws me in close.
The title of this exhibition—“Cloud Arrangers”—came to me years ago while I was lying on the shore of Lake Bohinj, admiring the clouds above me. A friend of mine from Scotland rowed past with his kids in his canoe. We greeted each other, and his son said “Who is this?” He responded, “This is the cloud arranger.” I immediately made a connection with music, photography and the atmosphere found at truly great festivals. I said to myself that this might become the title of a future exhibition, or maybe a book title…
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The way I see and hear musicians, they are also somehow arrangers of clouds—of the atmosphere in our minds. Every listener develops his own emotions at concerts, the music adjusts these moods, and can put us all on the same wavelength. These are the most beautiful moments, where the created energy stirs within me, and it is then that I can make a good image—a moment of photographic greatness.
Enjoy the show. Music is the best.
Žiga Koritnik