âThe Same Place as the Musicâ Lighting & Color
âWhere is the light coming from?â âThe same place as the music.â Andrew Lesnie, Cinematographer of LOTR
If I had to summarize the frustration I have with this topic in one image, I'd use JeCorey Holder's (queer Black creative!) meme:
Now here's the thing. I'm not saying you have to be a master at lighting. I'm surely not. Hell, I still play around with lighting in my art in ways that arenât the âmost realisticâ. You canât ask me the technical explanations behind âcolor theoryâ or 'contrast' without me doing some more reading. However⌠I donât think anyone needs an art degree to understand this point:
We should be able to SEE your brown skinned Black characters!
I brought this up in my lessons about skin tones and blushing, and it applies with lighting as well. If all of your other characters have focused light and shadows, so should your Black characters.
However, this does NOT mean making them lighter-skinned!!!!
It's not funny nor logical at all to suggest that they somehow can't be seen like your other characters when youâre the one creating the piece. It's like a classic fifth-grade racist joke, âYou blend in at nightâ. Har-de-har.
I was once rudely told to my face (well in the DMs) that a Black character that was completely Europeanized looked like that âbecause of the [sepia] lightingâ. So I'm going to give you all, gracious readers, an example to show that that's not true.
This is Ana FlĂĄvia, Afro-Brazilian model! Gaze upon her beauty! Notice how in both of these filters, Ana did not, in fact, turn into a white woman! Because, my friends, that is not how that works! At all!
Here are some other examples of Black people in non-color lighting:
None of these people vanished from the frame just because there was no color. They didn't have to paint on lighter makeup to be captured by the camera. What do they all have in common (in this example)?
Now letâs discuss different ways to think about and potentially try instead!
What I want you all to keep in mind, is that the art youâre painting:
And I know that's silly right, like yeah no shit Ice, we knew that. BUT my point here is donât be afraid to study photography, theatre, and staging for ideas. They actively work with light! Itâs why I share so many images of models; itâs purposeful, focused staging of light with many of these compositions!
Brown-skinned Black people- brown-skinned people in general- GLOW in the light! Our skin reflects environmental light! Thereâs so much opportunity to play with that, and you can see different examples in those mediums.
Here are a couple articles of lighting in film focused on Black actors.
When lighting a person with dark complexion, the answer is not LIGHTENING THE SKIN, itâs understanding how light reflects off of dark skin.â -Nilah Magruder
Nilah Magruder (Black creator!) has an ENTIRE, thorough and wonderful essay on the topic, far better than I could give! She incorporates the use of cameras, lighting, painting, and more- so rather than be redundant here, I'm going to spotlight (ha see what I did there. It's okay, I know I'm funny) her and her explanation.
Incorporating Blackness in Color/Colorful Lighting
@dsm7 has an excellent and short visual explanation of how picking certain colors will lead to washing out or whitewashing Black characters, and how certain lighting and backgrounds (think the black and white photos on brighter backgrounds) will change the way their skin tone looks.
@nicosbighead has one of my favorite images on here, that shows how many different colors can still be used to convey the image of Blackness. Notice how all those pinks still worked?
@gaksdesigns has a beautiful picture here that I feel utilizes the light in a very minimal yet effective way to show highlights even on a palette that's fully brown.
This article approaches from a lighting perspective via filmmaking, but essentially Sade Ndya suggests instead of increasing the amount of light, change the color/lens of the light based on your characterâs skin, as well as for the circumstances of the scene. They'll remain vibrant that way, and youâll still capture what you need.
I know one way I do this on CSP (I think Iâve mentioned this but I canât remember) is to use the Add Glow tool with the same or a similar shade of the characterâs brown skin tone as a highlight under natural light, or maybe use different colors or filters depending on the sort of light on their skin at the time.
Hereâs a reddit about it too, just because I know yâall value Reddit on here, and someone else discussed the topic that both Nilah and Sade discussed.
There are going to be times where you intend for the light to be minimal. Maybe itâs a style choice. That should still show purposeful composition. Hereâs an interview with famed Black director Ava Duvernay discussing the intentional darkness on Black actors in the prison scene in the movie Selma. To show that they're both trapped in prison AND that Martin is temporarily low on resolve- it's a part of the story that's being told.
I'm always talking about this: there is a difference between intention (and following through), and neglecting to think about it at all. And neglect isn't what we want, because often we can tell visually when it is- when an artist simply did not think to do it for one versus the rest.
Sidenote, on Youtube in the suggestions after Ava's interview, are also plenty of videos discussing lighting for dark-skin as well- why not take the chance to look?
We do not lack for light! We arenât flat and lightless when you see us in life. It's actually a pretty awesome part of being brown-skinned. If youâre giving proper, flattering lighting to everyone else, give it to us as well. Study and experiment with ways to highlight brown skin.
You already know what Iâm going to say. Itâs going to take practice, same as anything else, because itâs the thought that counts, but the action that delivers!