My second egg x |
07:24 | 0 Comments
Im just in the process of narrowing down over 500 images to about 20!!! Bare with me, here is one I made earlier x
Nan Goldin
15:15 | 0 Comments
I knew from a very early age, that what I saw on tv had nothing to do with real life. So I wanted to make a record of real life. That included having a camera with me at all times. - Nan Goldin
An american photographer, Nan Goldin is famous for her documentary style photography of her close friends and family in the gay and transsexual community
Her photographs are honest, truthful and raw. She photographs her friends, lovers and family, embracing life as they know it.
When viewing some of her images you can instantly feel the emotion the subjects were feeling as these were not taken in a forced artistic manner, but in a more natural documentary style.
Her images take you through her journey of life, through the happy times and the not so happy times. She carries you through the decades of her teenage years in boston in the lte 60's, through to the fun free spirited late 70's in New York, onto the drug and sex fuelled 80's and 90's which led to some devastating results of dear friends who fell victim to the AIDS crisis or drug overdoses.
Through her images she shares her life with you, taking you on her journey without words. She needs no words, these images are raw and full of emotion. The composition of most of her images are just shot naturally as in the eye of the beholder, no clever angles or fancy lighting, just available light.
Her work is often presented in a slideshow format and her first in 1986 being The Ballad of sexual dependency which was 45 minutes long with a series of 800 images shown.
An interesting documentary about Nans work I found was I'll be your mirror documentary
Gotscho kissing Gilles in Paris 1993 |
Joanna laughing in Paris 1992 |
Cookie at Vittoros casket |
Nan one month after being battered 1983 |
Picnic on the esplanade 1973 |
Christmas at the otherside |
Me and Brian |
I have not gone into her more recent work and career, it was during these decades mentioned above that caught my attention.
One of her most recent interviews for the Guardian she quotes
“I don’t photograph adults so much any more. I don’t have a child and, psychologically, my focus on them is a lot about me wishing that I did. But I am a godmother to friends’ children around the world – in Berlin, New York, Sweden and Italy. I don’t remember much ever feeling like a child, so maybe photographing them triggers memories. They are wild and magical, as if from another planet. And they haven’t been socially conditioned yet, so they can scream and express how they feel publicly. Sometimes I envy them. When I am in a group of people, the children and I find each other’s eyes, and end up laughing at the same, unspoken thing.
I’ve been taking pictures of children since the early 1980s, and it’s become increasingly important to me. I see a continuum in the children of my friends, some of whom have died. It’s about hoping that my friends will bring up a new species of people.”….I certainly think that my work comes from a humanistic vision of the world, rather than some kind of manipulative, theoretical version of art. It’s about the people and places I love, and that haunt me.”
The Guardian has an interview with Nan Goldin by Sarah Phillips
I think capturing images in a photo-journalism way will create more raw emotion and a more candid outcome.
This type of photography is normally used when documenting historical events but I feel it will work well for my assignment.
Artistic photography is simulated, producing ( using props, manipulating the composition of the image) an image that you want the viewers to see.
Filling my boots!!
12:20 | 0 Comments
I'm really struggling to keep my shutter speed nice and fast, to enable me to capture my little toddler on her hairy missions. Once a get the right exposure (lounge on an evening) its great for still shots but as soon as she starts to move I get a big blob of human mass floating around the image :(
I've adjusted my flash compensation and exposure and changed my AF mode. Ive also changed my lens from the 50mm prime to my kit lens 18mm-55mm vr lens. I've done this as I found the DOF was too shallow and I also struggled to focus on a moving object (Evie) as its manual focus. Argh!!!
I WILL get there eventually as I'm persistent and very stubborn.
Wish me luck guys and if anyone has any feedback please don't hesitate to comment x
Plan of action
11:39 | 0 Comments
Having researched family documentary style photography and photographers renowned for capturing their families, I feel inspired and ready to start taking photos of my family. With inspiration from others like BILLINGHAM i will try my best to capture the moment and essence of my family members character and their relationship to me.
I intend to just keep my camera round my neck and have my 18-35mm kit lens attached. Should I shoot in shutter priority? I was thinking this may be best under the circumstances of documentary style photographing? Any feedback would be greatly appreciated but in the mean time I will just experiment until I've got it right
I spend most of my weekends with my family so it shouldn't be too hard to collect and fill my boots...I am at my grandfathers 80th on Sunday and will try to take a few shots there too, should be fun x
Update: after much appreciated feedback from my tutor I've decided to revert to my original plan of aperture priority, going no lower than 2.8, this should be easy as the lens I've chosen to use only stops down to 3.5 anyway.
I thought is was quite apt to post this as it merges my last two tasks together into one. Family photography and self portraits.So, lets say you have no photographs of your family or ancestors? Well why not impersonate said family members and take self portraits to create a family album of your own?Thats exactly what Rafael Goldchain did in his album named I AM MY FAMILY.In this series he impersonates and captures the image of each family member.
The self-portraits in I Am My Family are detailed reenactments of ancestral figures that can be thought of as acts of “naming” linked to mourning and remembrance. I Am My Family proposes a language of mourning through self-portraiture and through the conventions of family portrait photography. In reenacting ancestors through a relationship of genetic resemblance, and through the conventions of the portrait photograph, the self-portraits in I Am My Family suggest that we look at family photographs in order to
recognize ourselves in the photographic trace left by the ancestral other.
Self-Portrait as
Motl Yosef Goldszajn Liberman
b. Warszawa, Poland 1902
d. Santiago de Chile, 1959
Self Portrait as Malka Ryten
b. Lublin, Poland, 1884
d. Tel-Aviv, Israel, 1974
Self Portrait as Pola Baumfeld
b. Ostrowiec, Poland
d. Poland, early 1940's
Self Portrait as Naftuli Goldszajn
b. Krasnik, Poland, early 1800's
d. Krasnik, Poland, late 1800's
Motl Yosef Goldszajn Liberman
d. Santiago de Chile, 1959
d. Tel-Aviv, Israel, 1974
d. Poland, early 1940's
d. Krasnik, Poland, late 1800's
Jacques-Henri Lartigue
03:15 | 0 Comments
The story of Lartigue is a fascinating one. For most of his life Jacques-Henri didn’t think of himself as a serious photographer. He kept his amazing photographs in family albums on the bookshelves of his Paris apartment and he’d only occasionally show them to friends.
As a boy |
all grown up |
Jacques-Henri’s photographs of his family were mostly taken when he was between the ages of eight and twelve.
His family were eccentric and very unique which has helped produce some amazing images.
Zissous bat |
First wife Bibi, Autochrome |
Cousin Simone on land bobsled |
Cousin Simone and her bobsled skids |
Boyhood photos |
Brother Zissou and his tyre boat invention |
Later, as a teenager, Lartigue sold a few pictures to sporting magazines but decided to become a painter rather than a photographer. Luckily, he continued photographing his life, including his three marriages, his many mistresses and his very famous friends.
Over the years, Lartigue would show his photo albums to friends but it wasn’t until 1963, when he was 69, that they were seen by John Szarkowski, then curator of the photography department at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Szarkowski recognized Lartigue’s genius and arranged an exhibition of his work at the museum.
Richard Billingham
02:57 | 0 Comments
Bill, our tutor introduced us to an artist by the name of Richard Billingham.
He is renowned for his fly on the wall documentary style photographing and videography of his family.
Richard Billingham (born 25 September 1970) was born in Birmingham UK, about an hour away from me. He studied at Bournville College of Art as a painter. He stumbled across what he is now famous for by taking numerous photographs of his family in action to then select just one single image to paint for his assignment. When showing his tutor the images, his tutor told him he was done, that ALL of these images were his final piece of work and needed to do no more AND THAT WAS THAT!
He went on to to take CANDID PHOTOGRAPHY of his family which finally became a book called RAYS A LAUGH (his fathers name being Ray)
I found after looking at his images, my first impressions of his parents were that they were alcoholic, selfish people with poor hygiene. Once viewing one of my favourite videos the FISH TANK I looked at tem from a totally different light. The dynamics and essence he captured through his photos and films is unique. The close up shots, almost following where you would be looking naturally if you were there are unique.
You become for the duration of the move, a part of his family.
His family became totally oblivious to his filming and photographing after some time and I think this is what created the unique natural shots that he captured.
Dad Ray & cat! |
Liz |
RAY & LIZ |
FAMILY
02:09 | 0 Comments
As part of this assignment I have to research and examine the meaning of family of family in the modern context. Asking myself:
What do families consist of, immediate family, extended family?
What types of families are out there...blended. typical 2:4, lone parent etc etc?
I will also research some well known photographers who have used their family as their subject, explore their techniques and researched how they capture the essence of their relationshi with each family member and the dynamics of the family on a hole. I feel that if I do this it will lead me to produce great photographs.....which leads me to the next art of the assignment.
I need to 'fill my boot' with images of my beautiful family in acton. preferably no posed shots, more photojournalism/documentry style instead.
Wish me luck and I will keep posted with my prgress
TTFN X
I think he is a very unique artist, which is obviously why he is known worldwide for his work.
Below are the 12 portraits featured in this post
I love the way each image has captured his personality in different ways, almost like representing the different sides of is personality. I will take this into account whilst experimenting with my own self portraits.
Self portrait |
Self portrait |
Self portrait |
Self portrait |
Bernard Gotfryd 1980s |
Nancy Schiff 1981 |
Self portrait 1979 |
Richard Avedon 1969
WeeGee 1965 |
Self portrait 1979
Stephanie Chernikowski, 1984
Robert Mapplethorpe, 1986
Leanne visual elements.ppt uploads from Leanne Tipton-Clark
I was given a mini task to do over the weekend. This was to put together a small 5-10 minute presentation summarising the last two weeks research on the visual elements.
I thought it would be easier to break it down if done in powerpoint so I wouldn't start going off on a tangent (which comes naturally to me)
I presented the above power point to my class on Monday, it seemed to go well although I need make a massive BOOBOO in one of the elements, see if you can spot it in the slide show....Enjoy x
I was given a mini task to do over the weekend. This was to put together a small 5-10 minute presentation summarising the last two weeks research on the visual elements.
I thought it would be easier to break it down if done in powerpoint so I wouldn't start going off on a tangent (which comes naturally to me)
I presented the above power point to my class on Monday, it seemed to go well although I need make a massive BOOBOO in one of the elements, see if you can spot it in the slide show....Enjoy x
I have been given a project on self portraits, taking into account the visual elements. I thought I would add a twist by doing a collage of symbolic self portraits instead, I mean, who wants to look at my ugly mush!??
Texture: Cookie...I love my GF choc chip cookies
Texture & Pattern: My snake Ang has a lovely red black and yellow pattern and Ive managed to catch the texture of his skin too!
Pattern & Colour: In my retro pop bottles, taken in one of my fave sweety shops on the Albert Dock. I love Jelly Beans
Form & Tone/Value: My pregnant belly!
Line & Colour: My lips, I love wearing bright lipsticks
Shape: Me and my girls, one of my favourite places with my favourite people in the whole wide world!!!
Importance of colour
09:50 | 0 Comments
Learning how colour works together and how it affects us as humans will help create feeling in our images.
So this post is about my findings on how colour can be used and manipulated to help produce an awesome image!
This colour chart explains how colours work and how they can work together in harmony.
You have your PRIMARY colours of RED, YELLOW and BLUE
You then have your SECONDARY colours ( two primary colours mixed) of ORANGE,
GREEN and PURPLE
Your tertiary colours (mixing 1 primary with one secondary, or two secondary colours) are your colours in-between like bluey greens etc
This wheel also explains your warm and cool colours.
Now lets explain in detail:
The WARM colours in the chart are welcoming, they are advancing and appear to approach you in a photograph. COOL colours in the chart above create a variety of emotions but the one thing they have in common is that they are receding, they mainly play a background role. They work beautifully in the background of an image and together with warm colours can help the WARMER colour advance even more!! Orange and blue is a good example of warm and cool working together as these are also COMPLIMENTARY colours too. Complimentary colours are colours that are opposite to each other on the colour wheel. A great example would be red and green, as its coming up to Christmas I thought it to be quite apt.
Your warm colours RED ORANGE and YELLOW create feeling of energy, cool colours such as GREEN, BLUE and PURPLE are said to be calming.
Yellow and blue is another good example: Thats why road signs look so effective, the sign represents a strong energetic object while the background of the blue sky creates a calmness and recedes, helping the advancing yellow sign come towards the viewer.
Self portrait <3
09:44 | 0 Comments
I created this image when I noticed my reflection in my microwave window. I grabbed my phone and seized the moment. I was originally gazing out of the window so I tried to capture the same 'thinking' pose.
I love the way the mesh on the inside of the microwaves window has created texture in the image and the blue tones picked up are a great representation of the cold winters day outside.
Artist-draws-dozens-bizarre-self-portraits-high-drugs.
Click on the link above to see more...................
An artist by the name of Brian Lewis Saunders from Washington decided to do a portfolio of self portraits whilst under the influence....below are some examples and a link to see the full collection.
Bath Salts
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I think the variation is massive and some downright scary, especially the portrait named bath salts, a nick name for the drug MDPV, reason for calling it bath salts? This is because bath salts are not for human consumption and apparently this isn't either!!
This Xanex one is quite nice, mellow and happy....might give it a try hahaha
“I make photographs to see how things look like” said Garry Winogrand, and I wonder whether this might be also the aim of self-portrait photography, as if we wanted to see how we “really” look like; we stop trusting the reflected image, - because there is no way we could objectively judge anything that is happening at the same time that is being analysed- but neither any representation of ourselves through photographs taken by “the other”.
There are so many variations of self portraits I couldnt list them all. The basic ones tend to be posed or mirrored but even them are varied from on extreme to another, especially when photoshop comes into the equation.
I haved decided to have a little play around with photoshop whilst doing my self portraits, I will them continue to explore a more hands on approach with the manual settings of my camera.
Along the way I have come across a few images that stood out for me......one of them being the russian photographer Lena Aliper. Her portraits were a project. 20 days of silence although each day she captured an image of herself conveying the mood she was in.
http://lenaaliper.net/20days.html |
I like this method as the self portrait then has a meaning and a story to tell behind it....I may have to use this idea for mine.
So I hit the web to see what I could find about self portraits.
Before I started snapping away at er myself, well I wanted to understand where it all began....
Ok, so a self portrait is what it says it is...a portrait of oneself. This could be in many forms ie painting, photography, solo portrait or a portrait of oneself within a group of other people.
In the history of art, one particular artist stood out when it came to self portraits and they went by the name of Albrecht Durer.
He was a prolific self portraitist.
The earliest is a silverpoint drawing created when he was thirteen years old
He portrayed himself more often than any artist before him, producing at least twelve images.
It appears that Durer then set a trend, with other well known artists following suit such as Rembrandt and Van Gogh
Rembrandt 1628 |
Van Gogh |
My first attempt at a wacky self portrait! What ya reckon? |
I created this image in Photoshop by layering two images on top of each other. The first image/layer was taken of me lookin straight on into my camera. The second image/layer in the same position but with my forearm placed across my eyes. I then erased the eye area on the second layer, allowing the eyes to.come through from the bottom layer. I neatened it up with various blending tools then merged layers together. I then created the high key action by adjusting the curves and a few fill layers to.bring out my eyes. I chose to do this self portrait as it represents me. I'm a quite secretive person who doesn't trust easily (arm protecting my face) but am always keeping a watchful eye out for the opportunity :D
Self Portrait
14:59 | 0 Comments
As photographer we rarely put ourselves on the other side of the camera. We prefer to capture than to be captured.
However, there is a long tradition in art of the self-portrait.
For this assignment I have to research a range of photographers and artists that have used themselves as the subject.
Discuss their use of material techniques and processes as well as their use of the formal elements and the principles of design in their composition.
How effective is the image and does it communicate a message?
I will be given an essay/presentation task in another unit along with a lecture to help me achieve this.So keep an eye out in future blogs for these too!
During my initial research I will be capturing and editing a series of self-portraits that help me explore and demonstrate what I have discovered.
Tone/Value
14:04 | 0 Comments
Tone/Value
Now lets just establish the difference between tone and value, as they are very similar and appear to be the same.
Value -- the range of light and dark within either neutrals or colours. Black is at one extreme, white at the other.
Tone -- is a colour mixture where both colours are not of primary hue, not black and not white. This mixture is an intermediate (please refer to my COLOUR blog). In other words, if you were to take a pure colour and add grey, you would have Tone.
To help me understand the basic principles of this element I had to get my head around the terms used when describing tones/values and how to use them. I have added these terms below:
SHADE: A colour (hue) with black added.
TINT: A colour (hue) with white added
TONE: A colour (hue) with grey added
VALUE: The amount of lightness or darkness in colours.
The element of value or tone is, in its simplest form, the juxtaposition (being side by side) of light and dark. It is defined as the intensity of lightness or darkness in anything that is visible.
Balancing all the different values of lidarks, whites and greys is very important when wanting to create a three dimesional object to be portrayed as 3d in a seemingly flat image.
Value in visual arts is the light and darks tones. Lights tones are know as high, dark tones known as low (hence low key and high key)
In art this can be achieved by shading, crosshatch and stippling. I found a great site that explains these techniques click here
I also enjoyed a lesson with my class learning how to create tone and value in flat objects. We were given an object to draw, we had to attempt to draw it and create a 3d image.
Bill our tutor then showed us how to create a 3dimensional rectangle, created by charcoaling shadows. The outcome is demonstrated in my sketchbook
In photography this can be achieved with correct lighting techniques and photoshop, Here is a link to Rembrandt lighting technique as a example introduction-to-rembrandt-lighting-for-portrait-photographers
Texture & Pattern
13:32 | 0 Comments
Texture:
Texture is one of the most over looked elements in photography, even though it is very important and if used correctly can convey emotion and depth in an image.
wiki: In the visual arts, texture is the perceived surface quality of a work of art. It is an element of two-dimensional and three-dimensional design and is distinguished by its perceived visual and physical properties. Use of texture, along with other elements of design, can convey a variety of messages and emotions.
Tactile texture is what we feel, it is three dimensional and we can touch to feel the texture of that given object.
Visual texture is the illusion of a texture in something we see. Its what tactile texture looks like on a two dimensional level. (sounds like a script from red dwarf!)
How do we see texture??? We can feel texture but how do you show the texture of an object/s in your photographs/image?
The answer is light!!! All surfaces have either light absorbing or light reflecting qualities or both, this creates a PATTERN (we will come to that later), so therefore creating the appearance of texture. The next step after understanding why is how to create texture by using correcting lighting and camera angles
Texture is made more visible with the use of side-lighting, which will create shadows on a surface in proportion to its roughness, so you can get excellent textures during dawn and dusk when the lights are low and angled.
Midday sun is also good for enhancing texture on certain objects such as brick works, tree trunks etc.
Tactile Textures by Wooblet Deviant Art
This image above is a perfect example of tactile texture. The lighting which appears to be coming from the top left highlights the patterns and texture of both the leaf and ladybug. As I mentioned earlier, all objects carry light absorbing and light reflecting qualities, this image portrays the both. The light reflecting off the ladybug portrays visually that the bug is smooth to touch, the light reflecting and absorbing on the different levels of surfaces on the leaf highlight the fluffiness and where the veins have more shadow portrays to the viewer that those veins are more prominent that the lighter ones.
If this image was taken completely in a shadow with an overcast light it would be very hard for the viewer to pick up on all of these different textures.
Vincent Van Gogh Room of Arles |
Roy Lichtensteins version |
I thought these two images would be an excellent example of how you can create tactile texture in different ways. Although this is art, you would use the same principle in photography also.
Pattern
Pattern is all of the above elements.....Patterns, both natural and man-made. They create rythmn. Patterns appear whenever strong graphic elements—lines, colours, shapes, or forms—repeat themselves.
Since researching the visual elements of photography I'm seeing them everywhere, for example patterns...brick walls, pavements, symetrical windows on buildings, patterns on birds wings, butterflies wings etc...
Lighting is another key factor again. For example, the image below on a dull overcast day would appear flat and you would be unable to see the pattern created by the plowed furrows of the field, my mate Rob a farmer gave me this one as an example!
The key to highlighting a pattern in an image is to isolate it from its surroundings, zooming in on the key patterns can create an amazing image at times.
For eg. If I was to take a photograph of the whole building from a distance, the viewer would take the whole size and structure of the building into consideration Since I zoomed straight in, the viewer is left to appreciate the patterns only.
by ME
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