Monday, 20 November 2017

AO1-AO3 Thinking about presentation of my photography work


  • Incorporate external art to compliment the photographs 
  • Paints and acrylics used 
  • Clear individual style
  • Creative
















































Friday, 17 November 2017

Brutalism

Brutalism

Flourished from the 1950's to the mid 1970's, from the modernist architectural movement of the early 20th century
The term originated from the fFrench word for "Raw"
Brutalist buildings are usually formed with repeated modular elements

Belgrade, Serbia 

Habitat 67



Photographs of brutalist architecture display some of the following characteristics:
  • Low angles
  • Leading lines
  • Symemety and using the rule of thirds
  • Deep depth of field
Photographs of brutalist architecture connote some of the following:
  • Lack of empathy
  • Working class culture 
  • Bleakness of working class estate
  • Desolation
  • Communism
  • Utopia and the future
  • Dystopia
  • Science Fiction
  • Post WW2 'concretopia'
Brutalism photographers include: 
  • Simon Phipps
  • Nick Rochowski
  • Nigel Green
  • Peter Chadwick

In this photograph I wanted to show brutalist lines and corners and also capture leading lines and the golden spiral. The golden spiral composure lets the viewer follow the stair case round naturally. Following this the pipe on the right hand side follows the staircase up; acting as a leading line. The location of this photograph is a bleak concrete carparks stairway to the top floor.

This photo was taken with a 50mm fixed lens this created a sharp image and allowed me to create a large depth of field. This stair case was poorly lit and had very little natural light. To not underexpose the image I set it to F3.5 and my shutter speed was at 1/50. This image denotes a dirty brutalist stair well. However it connotes a confined, uncomfortable space that the viewer does not know if they're looking up or down. The feeling of discombobulation  is strange and interesting.

Monday, 13 November 2017

Impressionism

Impressionism

a style or movement in painting originating in France in the 1860s, characterized by a concern with depicting the visual impression of the moment, especially in terms of the shifting effect of light and colour.  This art movement captures movement. it is a documentary style of photography. 

The development of impressionism can be considered partly as a reaction by artists to challenge presented by photography. It is based on the practice of painting outdoors and spontainiouly 'on the spot' rather than in a studio. 

The term 'Impressionism' comes from a painting by Claude Monet. 


Impressionism artists: 
  • Pierre Renoir
  • Claude Monet
  • Alfred Sisley
  • Edgar Degas
  • Edouard Manet
PHOTO IMPRESSIONISM

Recreation



My recreation of impressionism is a photograph of a lady in the streets of Sheffield on her phone. It was late afternoon and the sun was setting behind the buildings so light was limited. This forced me to use a high F25 and quite long shutter speed at 1/3, to capture movement of the passers by and create the look I was aiming for. This photo denotes a still subject on her phone with blurred public in the foreground and background. The photo connotes time passing and the subject being unaware of her surrounding; giving off the visualisation of time passing due to technology. Making the photo look like the women is in a alternate universe.



Early impressionist photographers:
  • Stephen D'Agostino
  • Eva Polak
  • Kat Clay
  • Christopher Dydyk
TECHNIQUES:
  • Camera shake and panning
  • Long exposure
  • Selective focus on wide aperture
  • Zoom and long shutter speed
  • Taking pictures through water/ glass
  • Layering on photo shop



Cubism

Cubism

Cubism was one of the most influential visual art styles of the early twentieth century. It was created by. Pablo Picasso. (Spanish, 1881–1973) and Georges Braque (French, 1882–1963) in Paris between 1907 and 1914.

Pablo Picasso and Georges Braques  introduced this revolutionary style of modern art.

Cubism artists:


Jean Metzinger
Georges Barque

Pablo Picasso



Albert Gelizes

Main characteristics of Cubism are...

  • Fully abstract
  • Brighter colours
  • Simpler lines and shapes
  • Collage is used alongside paint
  • Broken objects down to grid
  • Flat geometric shapes
  • A range of textures: as well as collage, the cubist artists and photographer uses a wider range painted, digital and mixed media elements.

Dave Murray

The picture Dave Murray has created denotes a picture of a man of authority like Donald Trump. He does this in abstract triangles and many different shade/ tones of the same repeated colour scheme. His portrait connotes corruption of power in the use of the light skin colour contrasting into a dark sinister tone of blue. 

Recreation

My recreation was inspired by Dave Murray because, I loved the colour transition from left to right; blue fading into skin tone. It also gave a clearer meaning behind the photo and I tried to capture this in my work.

In my recreation I wanted a more natural fade in colour so I found a shady ally on a overcast day with a beam of light covering half of it. I placed the subject so the light landed oh an quarter of his face to get the desired look.

After taking the photo I edited it in Adobe Photoshop. To start this edit I used the polygonal lasso tool and started to make triangles all different angles and sizes. Much like my postmodernism recreation I took the eyedropper tool to get the highlighted areas colour and with this, filled the triangle. I did this for the whole face and took my approximately two and a half hours. After the face I repeated the last two steps of the face process and applied it to the rest of the models body and lamppost.  Lastly I cut,  pasted and resized random squares of the of the photo.

This photograph connotes dark thoughts and sorrow that is slowly taking over the subject; the slither of light represents happiness and hope. Also the picture denotes a cartoon student leaning on a wall in the style of cubism.