Sunday, February 13, 2011

Sarah Moon

I love how these images use movement as a central part in creating the composition. They have a dreamy feeling due to the low contrast and soft focus. I feel this could work well with my concept. My previous images had a focus on keeping the details nice and sharp and making sure the colors and lighting are exactly how they should be. This was partially so that no one could say that I didn't mean to have something look a certain way and had just screwed up since i am taking self portraits. I feel though, now i can experiment with my process more, most likely in photoshop so I can still use my images from last semester. I like the borders and the mucking of tones, that adds to the dreaming feeling in Moon's work. Even in her color work, the colors are not vibrant and perfectly balances and perfectly in focus, the images work because they are purposely not any of these things.


Biography:


"Texture, surface, seeing, believing, dreaming. It is difficult to summarise Sarah Moon’s fantastical photography - almost thirty years of image making has made Sarah Moon a legend in her own lifetime. Well known for her very personalized commercial work since the early 1970s, Sarah has continued to investigate a world of her own invention without repetition and also without compromise."


Quotes:


"The dream world is quintessential to her work; her images lead us into a world bewitched. When men appear, her pictures move towards a more disturbing surrealism and a dangerous mystery is inferred. These are photographs in which the bizarre and unusual confront ordinary reality."- Michael Hoppen Gallery


"Sarah Moon’s current project Circus brings together the powerful ingredients of fairytale darkness, beauty and tragedy"- Micheal Hoppen Gallery











Monday, February 7, 2011

Julie Blackmon

Julie Blackmon's work was suggested to me in my individual meeting, as an artist to look at that uses a digital technique to change their work. Using some form of collaging and photoshop could change my images without the time consumption other techniques would require. I also am interested in her window scene. I feel using the idea of looking into a room from the outside of the house could be an interesting element in a photograph in my series.

Biography: 

Julie Blackmon is a photographer based in Missouri. Her work is inspired by growing up in a large family which explains her use of collage images into one image. Blackmon uses her family members to play the parts in her images, which center on family life and the hypocrisy of the family dynamic.

Quotes: 

" We live in a culture where we are both “child centered” and “self-obsessed.”  The struggle between living in the moment versus escaping to another reality is intense since these two opposites strive to dominate."

"I believe there are moments that can be found throughout any given day that bring sanctuary.  It is in finding these moments amidst the stress of the everyday that my life as a mother parallels my work as an artist, and where the dynamics of family life throughout time seem remarkably unchanged. "








Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Color

Color plays a huge role in any artwork. Whether it is the decision to use grayscale or the decision to use vibrant colors. The color of an image plays a huge role in how other perceive it. What message and mood each color gives off to the viewer is a huge part of setting the mood of the image. I would not want to portray a dark concept and use colorful pastels. On the other hand, if I were to portray the happiest day of someone's life, I would try not to let my pallet contain mostly grays and blacks.



"Indigo is often associated with the right side of the brain; stimulating intuition and imagination."


"These olive green colors remind us of decay and death and can actually have a detrimental effect on physical and emotional health. Note that sickened cartoon characters always turned green."


"Psychology Color." Thinkquest. Web. 2 Feb. 2011. <http://library.thinkquest.org/27066/psychology/nlcolorpsych.html>.
This article gave great general examples of what feelings certain colors trigger. It had a very psychological perspective which does have a lot to do with art.  

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Elijah Gowin


Bio from Website:
"Elijah Gowin uses photography to speak about ritual, landscape and memory.  His photographs are in the collection of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Center for Creative Photography, among others.  In 2008, he received a John S. Guggenheim Fellowship.  Presently, he is an Associate Professor in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Missouri-Kansas City where he directs photographic studies.  Gowin is represented by the Robert Mann Gallery, New York and Dolphin, Kansas City."
Quotes:
"Gowin collects amateur photographs through the internet and collages them in multiple layers before printing small paper negatives which are cut by hand and then scanned, causing the paper fibers to become a part of the final distressed image. The photographs appear to be both old and new, confusing to the eye and yet hauntingly familiar."--Robert Mann Gallery on the series Of Falling and Floating
"They look blurry and papery and scarred because the pieces of the paper image, which have little bits of pulp, when they’re scanned those pieces of pulp [are visible] as well. So you see the distress and blurriness of the paper as well as the image. Because I hand-cut the image, the funny shapes on the edges stay, but on the scanner they fight it out and start to get these stripes and bars—the scars and interaction between the old and new technology. It’s just like old people meeting young people—there’s miscommunication. "-- Elijah Gowin





Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Symbolism



This semester I wan to take my concept a step further, by using objects other than just the light to become subject. i want the light to play more of the deliverer by transforming throughout the series into other objects. Symbolism will pay a huge role in this series if I go this route by correlating to ideas of obsession, oppression, and triumph. I want my objects to have mulitple meanings that have to do with the lighting as well as symbolism for every day life.

Quotes:
"Symbolic photographs can trigger multiple meanings, depending upon who may be looking at it, because symbols can often mean different things to different people. For example, people who might have little interest or knowledge of the Great Depression or World War II might see entirely different meanings in those two images. This is not a weakness of expressive photography. It is a strength. Images that offer multiple meanings will often challenge the imagination of viewers in unexpected and provocative ways."-- Gallery Twenty Eight

"Any image that encourages thought, moves the emotions, or stimulates the imagination can be a valuable experience. It all depends on how the photographer has used symbolization and how the viewer understands those symbols. "-- Gallery Twenty Eight


Bibliography:


"Gallery Twenty Eight: Using Symbols and Metaphors to Express Meaning Photo Gallery by Phil Douglis at Pbase.com." PBase.com. Web. 26 Jan. 2011. <http://www.pbase.com/pnd1/symbols>.

This article worked well in giving examples in the gallery of symbolim found in artwork. It doesn't necessarily have to be planned before the image is taken, sometimes one finds symbols in images that already exist.The artcle also addressed how symbolism can be very specific or it can be extremely general, such as with the photograph "Schoolroom". Symbolism can be portrayed by the existance of something in the image or by the absence of something. Symbolism is extremely open ended and can be interpreted differently by each viewer.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Anna Tomczak

Tomczak's work intrigues me because it uses the polaroid transfer as well as other alternative processes and is able to give her images the right amount of mystical qualities through this. I love the colors that are in the picture which show that she obviously picks each prop and subject for the color scheme and contrast that is particular to these processes. Also her use of the borders and imperfections due to the processes add rather than take away from the images.

Biography:

"For over 15 years artist Anna Tomczak has utilized the 20×24 camera to make hauntingly beautiful constructions.   Drawing on a large personal collection of unique and eccentric artifacts Tomczak creates an assemblage that only exists in time long enough to be recorded on large format Polaroid film.   These timeless compositions are heightened by her use of the Polacolor Image Transfer technique.   This process interrupts the normal peel apart development by separating the negative from the positive film earlier than intended and placed instead in contact with wet watercolor paper.   This technique mutes the color and softens the image, producing a more dreamlike and antique sensibility."- 20x24 Studio (http://20x24studio.com/?page_id=119)


Quotes:


 1."The Polaroid large format (20 x 24) transfer process lends a tactile quality to the photo imagery, and a one of a kind work on paper." - Anna Tomczak


2. With the impressive 20 x 24 Polaroid camera, I am able to paint, construct, envision, fantasize, and 'transfer' my ideas onto the piece of paper...There is a certain richness of color, combined with the visual clarity achieved with this camera and process, that I intend to explore as thoroughly as possible." - Anna Tomczak








Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Polaroid Transfers

Over winter break I have been thinking about how I visually want to represent my images. I like how my concept has developed, but I feel the way in which I show this concept falls short. These images are meant to have a magical, other realm feeling, which the digital prints do not give. I am looking into other processes in photography, especially processes in the darkroom or that use film. I have had experience with the process of Polaroid Transfers, but have not used the process in years. My only dilemma is finding a way to create large prints, since unfortunately my equipment only makes 4x6 prints.


Quotes: 


1. "Polaroid transfers have a unique visual style that is a little ghostly, a little impressionistic, and often very moody"- Sarah Wichlacz


2. "t’s a fun way to spice up found slides and staged photos" - Sarah Wichlacz



Wichlacz, Sarah. "Polaroid Transfer Tutorial at Sarah Wichlacz." Sarah Wichlacz. Web. 19 Jan. 2011. <http://www.sarahwichlacz.com/?p=5>.


This article was extremely helpful in refreshening me in how to go about this process. The mixture of writing as well as images of how to complete the process will prove extremely helpful if I decide to experiment with this process. This article was also extremely helpful because through reading the comments I was able to find a place that would rent equipment to make 20x24 polaroid transfers.