Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Beauty In Nature

Beauty in nature is when the horizon goes on for as far as the eye can see, never ending. When there's not just one aspect about the scenery that is beautiful, but every little aspect of it catches your eye, from a single blade of grass to the faint wispy clouds in the sky. Everything about the image leaves you in awe. The lighting in the sky compliments or contrasts with everything in the foreground, and enhances what you're seeing. Beauty in nature can't be captured in a single photograph, there's no such thing as "picture perfect" with this. Beauty in nature is what causes you to get lost, and mesmerized by what's in front of you. A view that you could wake up to every morning and never get tired of it and still get the same feeling it gave you the first time you saw it.

Images that I've taken that made me feel this way:
Taken in Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii
Taken at the Cougar Reservoir, Oregon
Taken at Cannon Beach, Oregon
Taken in Downtown Portland, Oregon.

Although this image was not taken in Nature, it appears to be never ending.
Taken in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Although the photos above were edited I feel like true beauty in nature can't be edited, can't even be captured. If captured editing can enhance different things, bring out details you can't capture with a camera but true beauty in nature really can't be altered digitally.

Contemporary Street Photographer : Marius Vieth

Mask Of Society, Marius Vieth, Dusseldorf, 2013
An Ant Called Arthur, Marius Vieth, Dusseldorf, 2013
Retro, Marius Vieth, Dusseldorf, 2014
Escalating Red, Marius Vieth, Dusseldorf, 2014
Bio: "Marius is a highly active international Fine Art Photographer focused on Street Photography from Germany who is currently based in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. He is founder of NEOPRIME International Fine Arts Label and also owner and publisher of his own magazine called NEOPRIME Contemporary Fine Art Photography. He also writes books about street photography and finding your creative soul, has won 21 international photographic awards so far, teaches workshops and he loves pugs!"

Photographer's Website: Marius Vieth

Contemporary Street Photographer : Valerie Jardin

By Valerie Jardin
By Valerie Jardin
By Valerie Jardin
Bio: "Valerie is a French Street Photographer that lives in Minnesota in the United States. She is an extremely active person who is very interested in humankind and the beauty that surrounds it. Valerie never rests! She teaches workshops on an international scale, constantly traveling from one big city to another and is also the hostess of the street photography weekly podcast Street Focus! While not teaching and recording her podcasts she writes for an Australian-based dPS magazine (Digital Photography School). In addition to all the above she has had her work exhibited in both the USA and Europe, featured in magazines and many websites, written countless blogs posts, and has been interviewed on shows, the radio and podcasts. She influences hundreds of people with her work on a daily basis."

What I like about these three bodies of work is the angles and the abstraction in the first and second image. I like how you can tell the silhouette's are from/of people but you don't know who they are yet you can tell that both subjects are in motion. She has a great use of gradient color, use of reflection/light that give her work unity.

Photographer's website: Valerie Jardin

Contemporary Street Photographer : Rui Palha

Carefree by Rui Palha
Unknown title, by Rui Palha
Unknown title, by Rui Palha
Bio: "Rui is a Street Photographer from Portugal. He has been shooting since 1967 and is highly devoted to the art of Street Photography. He has had his work exhibited and published countless times. He has won quite a few Photography awards. Rui has been a huge influence to the wider Street Photography Community for many years."

Photographers website: http://www.ruipalha.com/

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Art History: Alfred Stieglitz - Photography as Art

Untitled, Alfred Stieglitz, 1905
Alfred Stieglitz was born in Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1864. His main goal was to prove that, "photography was a medium as capable of artistic expression as painting or sculpture." Alfred Stieglitz was married to the famous painter, Georgia O'keefe.

Friday, February 19, 2016

Art History: W. Eugene Smith

Littlest Survivor, W. Eugene Smith, June 1944, World War II/The Pacific Campaign, Battle of Saipan Island
Japanese Island, W. Eugene Smith, April 1945, World War II/The Pacific Campaign, The Battle of Okinawa
I chose these two images because they resemble one another yet are photographed during two different battles. The soldier in each image is dressed the same and is holding a survivor. W. Eugene Smith was born in December of 1918. Smith was a photojournalist and photographed many intense moments in history all over the world, but specifically is famous for the ones taken in World War II. He brings his subject matters to life and each image itself tells it's own story.

Prework Part 1 : Backlit images

Photographed by: Yelena Yemchuk
Model: Karen Elson
Magazine: Lula Magazine

In my opinion this is a properly exposed backlit image. I think the photographer took the meter reading in the middle of the plant photographed at the light. On the plant there is a gradient where it's really light/bright at the top and gradually gets darker at the bottom of the photograph. I believe the mood the photographer was going for based on how she used the light is a enticing and elegantly seductive one. I love how you can see a mere silhouette of her body through the fabric and the light that shines through her hair. If the photographer had metered on the sun the model would have been washed out/very dark, we wouldn't be able to see much detail if not any detail at all.
Tree #11, Myoung Ho Lee, 2005
I am absolutely in love with Myoung Ho Lee's tree series. Although you can still see some details in the leaves, I would say overall this is a backlit silhouette. I think the photographer metered on the light in the center because if he had metered directly on the light the tree would be pitch black and be less defined. If he had metered on the tree or on the grass we would be able to see those things in more detail and it wouldn't be as dark. I think the mood is meant to inflict awe and evoke one to have their own personal interpretation. The concept is simple. By framing the tree's with canvas,' and separating the tree from it's natural environment, it's almost like he's creating natural paintings. "The series includes diverse species of trees photographed [...] in a variety of seasons at different times of day. Mr. Lee allows the tree's natural surroundings to fill the frame around the canvas, transforming the backdrop into an integral part of the subject. Centered in the graphic compositions, the canvas defines the form of the tree and separates it from the environment. By creating a partial, temporary outdoor studio for each tree, Mr. Lee's 'portraits' of trees play with ideas of scale and perception while referencing traditional painting and the history of photography." - Yossi Milo Gallery

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Prework Part 2 : Light, Shadow, and Reflection

Self-portrait, Florence Henri, 1983
"From the 1920s to the 1940s, Florence Henri made her name as a major player in avant-photography. Born in New York 1893, she settled in Paris in 1924, where she played with mirrors and light to create these beautiful mind-trick masterworks."
Lark Ford, Shadows
Unknown, Found on Pinterest. Back lit photo, silhouette

Silhouette
My photo
Reflection, found on Flickr (linked)
Photo by: Colton Allen

Silhouette, Kuperberg, Found on pinterest

Do you believe a single photograph change someone’s viewpoint / the world?

"Because this calf lives in a dirty, fly-infested veal crate."
Personally I don't believe that a single photograph could change the world but I definitely believe that it could change someone's view point. Photographs capture real life moments, therefor like science are fact. If someone has a preconceived idea about something, seeing a photograph could change their opinion. For example, PETA uses animals in poor conditions to try and change your mind about eating meat(see photos in post). Photos tell us stories, everyone interprets them differently and they can impact people in a multitude of ways.
"Because this rescued cow escaped from a burning transport truck bound for slaughter."