This was my interpretation of Alexander Rodchenko's photographs. I concentrated on subject matter which included repetitive shapes that form from the buildings architecture. Like several of Rodchenko's photographs the perspective I shot of the building was looking straight up above at the image this allows you to the patterns of the spine of the buildings and makes it look slightly abstract. As I took this image on a Digital SLR I altered the contrast and gave it a filter grain to give it that film effect as well as putting the camera settings onto a high ISO. From looking at his photographs most of them aren't symmetrical in composition which also makes it look less flat.
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
Alexander Rodchenko
This was my interpretation of Alexander Rodchenko's photographs. I concentrated on subject matter which included repetitive shapes that form from the buildings architecture. Like several of Rodchenko's photographs the perspective I shot of the building was looking straight up above at the image this allows you to the patterns of the spine of the buildings and makes it look slightly abstract. As I took this image on a Digital SLR I altered the contrast and gave it a filter grain to give it that film effect as well as putting the camera settings onto a high ISO. From looking at his photographs most of them aren't symmetrical in composition which also makes it look less flat.
Eugene Atget
Eugene Atget was a French photographer who photographed Paris closely looking at street passages as well as architecture. The medium he used was a large format wooden bellows camera, this effect gives you a shallow depth of field and allows you to distort the shape of the image by skewing the film plane,as this medium is heavy therefore he would have used a tripod as it was not easily removable. Through using film his images are high in grain and some of the edges are slightly distorted, in most of his photographs the contrast is medium to high. The photographs he took vary in composition from straight on, to a side angle view. Atget photographed in the pictorial style with his images having a soft misty focus with some areas being reduced in clarity. His picturesque images symbolise tradition also with his framing.
This is my interpretation of Eugene Atget's photography. However the scenery is more of a contemporary version as the architecture and streets have changed dramatically in the last century, although the composition, perspective and texture is the same. As I shot on a Digital SLR I put the settings onto a low aperture so everything wasn't too clear like Atget's images giving them a soft misty focus, I had the ISO settings on high to give a grain to the image as well as giving it a slight grainy filter in post-production. I also changed the image to black and white in post-production. The perspective of the photograph is to the side of the street going down, with the camera level at my eye view like the two images of Eugene's above, also with in this perspective and angle it shows the top of the high buildings like his.
Monday, 11 March 2013
Rinko Kawauchi
My interpretation of Rinko kawauchi’s images started with the subject. After looking at her image of the hand holding the spoon I decided to take a photograph of a water being poured into a glass as the everyday task isn't something we linger on or class as a moment. I took the photograph digitally as I wasn't able to use the same medium as Kawauchi, therefore I just changed the format to match by cropping. Like Kawauchi's images that I researched i gave my subject a shallow depth of field with the foreground high in focus creating a delicate, soft atmosphere as the water pours into the glass which produces a similar vibe to Rinko's. the post production process involved altering the white balance and lightness to fit with the theme of Kawauchi's photographs.
Martin Parr
British photographer Martin Parr is known for his varied
documentary projects involving our British culture. I am looking at his recent photograph developed from his black and white images. From watching a documentary
on Martin Parr from "The Genius of Photography" I understand the technical aspects that he uses as
well as his subject matter. I look at his documentary photography on how he
captures traits of our nationality through consumerism and Britishness. The
particular series I will be looking into to interpret is his ‘common sense’
series which he shot both in the UK and abroad portraying global consumerism,
his intention as a documentary photographer is to ‘exploit reality of place
and a mythology of a place.' His photographs give off a pessimistic view on
the world avoiding faces and concentrating more on the subject. I looked into
his photographs of food which are highly saturated, he shot these using a macro
lens and ring flash which bring out the colour and detail of the food as well
as giving a shine to the texture of it making it look less appealing.
To interpret one of Martin Parr's images of food I looked at the two above and others from his series and I decided to go with chips covered in sauce, the reason for this choice in subject matter was because I find it a popular food that my generation in Britain choose to eat when in actual fact the taste and how its made isn't appealing at all therefore I portrayed that in a Martin Parr style. Using a Macro lens and ring flash which highlighted the texture of the sauce and corners of the chips, I then angled the camera slightly over the food with not too much negative space and then saturated the colours in post-production. Next time to improve the image in relation to Martin Parr I angle the camera slightly higher over the food avoiding the backdrop.
Daido Moriyama
Daido Moriyama is a Japanese Photographer whose approach to
photography is different to many that I have researched. After watching a
documentary on him in Japan I understand his way of taking his
photographs. Referring himself to a stray dog as he goes around Shinjuku with
a compact camera taking his photographs: as to other people it isn't
intimidating. His choose to look through the lens at what he is
capturing varies therefore they do not always turn out straight with
a landscape view. I also looked at his photo book ‘ByeBye’ photography which shows
his images full bleed and you feel as though they are going to burst out the
pages as you flick through them which revert to how he takes his images. His style of images of his New York
photographs are similar to the ones taken in Japan. His Images are shot on black
and white film with a high contrast.
From looking at Daido’s photography through the street alleys of Japan and New York especially the two above; my interpretation on his photography involved exploring the busy New York City and in Times Square I began to take images to capture the busy streets from different angles and directions and like Moriyama not giving to much away of anything specific which is why there is a slant to my image showing little bits of cars, people and then buildings. As I shot in digital and not film, I put the camera to a high ISO to give a grainy effect like his. It was in post-production where I turned the image to black and white as well as altering the levels to give a high contrast to the photograph.
From looking at Daido’s photography through the street alleys of Japan and New York especially the two above; my interpretation on his photography involved exploring the busy New York City and in Times Square I began to take images to capture the busy streets from different angles and directions and like Moriyama not giving to much away of anything specific which is why there is a slant to my image showing little bits of cars, people and then buildings. As I shot in digital and not film, I put the camera to a high ISO to give a grainy effect like his. It was in post-production where I turned the image to black and white as well as altering the levels to give a high contrast to the photograph.
Tuesday, 4 December 2012
Photography Style
Sunday, 25 November 2012
Surrealist Photography
Brassai's 'Sculpture involuntaire' 1933
Surrealism was a movement based in Paris in the mid 1920's.The unconscious mind was what the surrealists wanted to gain access to. These involved a persons desires, ideas, wishes and their thoughts that were socially 'unacceptable'.
This theory of 'the unconscious' relates to Freud's overall understanding of how the unaware part of us affects the things we are aware of. 'The methods he proposed' to unlock these chain of thoughts were what other surrealists used in their work. From this it shows how from surrealism art and language come together. The chances to freeze the process of the
rational mind are what surrealist's were able to do through photography.
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