Friday, 20 December 2013

Composition and Light


Florescent Light. 

Natural Light.



Colour.

Frame

Pattern

Lines

Available Light.

Depth of field.


The Genius of Photography: Snap Judgements.

Question 1: How many photographs are taken in  a year?

80 million 7 years ago but it is thought that through out the year 2014 880 billion photos will be taken.

Question 2: How does Gregory Crewdson work?

He works as if he was on a film set with a production crew (for a film set.) He uses cinematic lighting. He has his own camera man and director of the image. He doesn't hold the camera, he is only interested in the image. He is successful as his prints sell for about $600,000.

Question 3:

Which prints command the highest price & what are they called?

Vintage prints can sell for up to $100,000. However a photo called 'Pond Moonlight' taken by Edward Steichen sold for $2,600,000. However Andreas Gursky's photographs have sold for $4.3 million before.

Question 4:

How does Ben Lewis see Jeff Walls photography?

Ben Lewis sees Jeff Walls photography as the way he sees things. He like to work to life size and life scale.
Jeff Walls took photographs back to the 19th century. He didn't photograph everything. There was a lot of thought put into which moments to take. He set up his pictures and used to photograph them over and over again to get one where something happens. He photographed the way Artists would paint.

Question 5:

How many photographs Andreas Gursky produces and what scale (size) are they?

Andreas Gursky's photographs take up many square metres of the gallery wall. Her picture that sold for 4.3 million (Rhine II) was 3.5m X 2m.

Question 6:

Seydou Keita - What is different in his pictures in Africa compared to images you usually see?

The images highlight the African cultures well, presenting their style and colourful clothing as well as having a very full background. The content of the photograph is a lot fuller in comparison to other images one would normally see.

5 Photographs by Andreas Gursky:







Monday, 9 December 2013

Photo Montage.

Iron Man

Scrap yard

The final photo
Spider Man
Breakdancing
Spriderman Breakdancing.


Impossible Photography

The finished piece.
Lipstick to use instead of the bollards.

Bollards to use, for the background.

Sunday, 1 December 2013

'Ways of Seeing' John Berger overview.

Ways of Seeing by John Berger overview.

“Perspective unique to European art; Perspective makes the eye the centre of the visible world but the human eye can only be in one place at one time.”

        John Berger, Way’s of seeing.

Since the invention of the camera, valuable images that only ever hung in one place at one time have been reproduced, as a result, we now see these paintings like no-one has ever seen them before. The invention of the camera not only changed what we see, but how we see it.

The camera has demonstrated its ability to zoom in and altar and image time and time again, which changes the original meaning of the original work. For example, Botticelli’s painting ‘Venus and Mars’ hung in one place, and the viewer had no choice but to take in the picture in its entirety. However a reproduction of this painting has famously consisted of Venus’s portrait only. Her face has simply become a representative of any other pretty girl that may be seen in a magazine or advertisement now. The image can be seen in a million different places, by a million different people all at the same time now. The camera has changed the way art is taken in and viewed.

Painting’s lost their desire to be viewed when the camera began replicating them. The original still held its unique value and sustained its ability to deliver the sense of awe provided to the viewer whilst taking in the original picture in a gallery or Church. This uniqueness was substituted to a certain extent after the camera made them reproducible.

The mimic the camera provides of the original image can alter the image by making details of bigger, busier paintings different stories altogether, like the image of the thieves being carted away to be nailed beside Jesus was extracted to become a painting on its own.

The camera has changed the way we look at things. It has influenced many different ways of looking at things, and altered many meanings carried by the paintings but it is not the only device; music has had an influence on the paintings also. Even when music is played to art it makes it ambiguous. Reproduction can be used to communicate our own lives through particular paintings. Children look at paintings and images and interpret them directly the their own experiences.


The camera is an amazing invention that skillfully provides anyone to capture a moment in time and allow an audience of millions to view the same thing at the same time. However, it did change the face of art and images by reproducing them to their millions. I find that it is amazing how the images have been completely altered and the meanings have changed because of the reproduction provided by the camera.    

5 images from the John Berger Programme: 





Monday, 18 November 2013

We Are The Family. (The Genius of Photography.)

Question 1: What kind of work did Diane Arbus do?

The work that Diane Arbus produced showed that she was interested in people's faces and their lives. Her work didn't necessarily flatter people, it was just interesting. Arbus felt that you can't help what people know about you, so she preferred to study despair, concern and dismay in people's expressions and her works.

Question 2: Do you think that photographers stand to prey on vulnerable people?

In my opinion, some photographers do stand to prey on vulnerable people, in some of the actions they take. For example, they just literally take pictures of people on the street. But in another way, it is just the curiosity of people that takes over when capturing their own moments of fascination through vulnerable people. Some photographers see a reflection of their own selves within others.

Question 3: What is Larry Clarke's Tulsa Project about?

Larry Clarke's Tulsa project captures moments of his own life of drugs, guns and getting laid. He began a Diary of his life through his photography. This included intimate pictures from 1971.

Question 4: What is the title of Nan Goldin's most renowned work?

'Ballod of Sexual Dependency.'
It was an insiders account of of transvestites, transgenders, drug addicts and 24 hour parties.

Question 5: What does Araki photograph now? And what is his philosophy?

The 1971 Promiscuous photographer, Araki is photographing a detailed picture of his daily life.
His philosophy is to shoot what he wants to remember and capture memories in black and white photographs that capture the past, present and future in one shot.

Question 6: What is Richard Billingham's Work about?

Richard Billingham was interested in capturing family moments, but not how they aught to look. There were no fake smiles in family albums, which were the back glimpses of chaos.
He also captured moments in time, and took pictures to paint the scene they captured, they mostly involved his father, as he wouldn't sit still enough for long periods of time.

5 Images of work by Diane Arbus:





Airbrushing and Slimming.

Before Airbrushing.

After Airbrushing.

Before Slimming.

After Slimming.