For this assignment we have been asked to produce 5 final images and submit them to Fujifilm Student Competition. I have been taking photographs of Molly, I have been taking some simple portraits. I wanted them to be pure and smooth as I like simple portraiture, and as I was not sure about my idea it is always good to take some simple images so then you have a wide range of work and ideas that will make your photograph look like you want it to look. My work is also about stitching on images. From the start my idea was the same, I wanted to take portraits and stitch on them from the start so it did not really change at all. I was going to do some cut ups but then I didn't so I just left my images as they were. There are few equipment I have used in this project such as.; film camera, film, scanner, Mamiya RB67, softbox, snoot, needle, thread. Basically, I have used Mamiya for the first time and I loved it! It is not as complicated as I thought and when you get to use it more often it becomes as easy to use as digital camera. There was one problem I had to deal with in this assignment namely it was a photoshoot that did not work at all because one of my tutors told me to experiment with aperture so I did and all my images were under exposed I think only two of them worked but there was no point in scanning them into a computer because them two images were not the ones I wanted to use as my final images. I had no more time to arrange another photoshoot so I just left it as I was happy with them images I took of Molly. There is definitely an artist that have influenced me in my work which is Maurizio Anzeri as I was inspired by his embroidery work. If i done this assignment all over again I would probably do more photoshoots than I did this time to make sure I have a wide range of images to pick from. I am happy with my final outcomes but it could always been better than it is now.
Fujifilm
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Kevin Corrado
Kevin is a young photographer from Connecticut. He is currently a graphic design student at the University of Bridgeport. In one of his interviews he said that he really really likes long exposures and he explained how he doeas it and why he likes them so much - "I use a tripod, since the exposure is so long, it would be blurry otherwise. Unlike using a narrow depth of field with a blurred background in shorter exposures with large apertures, in long exposure photography the subject is emphasized with a wide depth of field. By allowing water to flow still or letting clouds blur together, you can bring out the subject of the photo by decreasing the distraction of the background (and at the same time making it more beautiful). Star trails from long exposures bring out your photography subject more too, since the subject will be the only sharp object." he also says that he personally prefers black and white work to colour, but that doesn't make him any different. Also, here are some other questions that caught my eye:
Water is simply amazing. Its a great representation of time in photographs.
What lens would you recommend for landscape photography?
That’s sorta difficult to say when currently I’m just working off my 18-55 kit lens and 55-300 telephoto. I guess I could go online right now and find you guys a good one but since this is “Teenage Photography” and you guys are probably all in the same boat I am with money, that’s probably not necessary. Anyways I usually end up using a very low focal length but with something in the foreground or taking up most of the frame. With the low focal length you will really get the feel of dimension.
Nick Lepard
Nick is basically a new artist that just begins his professional career. Some people say that his style is raw, competent and confident beyond his years. like the work of artists he admires, for example, the American writer Charles Bukowski, a 'hard-boiled anti-hero', and British painter Jenny Saville, who 'constructs painting with the weighty heft of sculpture' - "he paints with gusto and verve. he has moved beyond his earlier photo realist style to a more courageous approach that is part 'happenstance' and very much about the process of moving paint around, while still maintaining artistic control. " - says Diane who was very impressed with his work when she first saw it. Lepard’s parents immigrated to Canada from England. Both a Canadian and a UK citizen, he was born in Vancouver in 1983. Lepard graduated with a B.F.A. from the Emily Carr Institute of Art & Design in 2008. His work is the product of a true artist, it reflects the mentality of the man behind the masterpiece. He paints into a style of more abstract concepts like the influx of media and information on the human being onto the canvas. He produces pieces that reflect the process more so than a planned product: “I find my art never really turns out the way I plan, which I chalk up to the fact that there are a lot of things influencing me that I am either unaware of, or that I don’t want to give credit to.” This is his own style.
Monday, March 31, 2014
The competition research
For this years competition, students are allowed to do anything they want, as soon as it has been taken with a original Fuji film. Students can have a wide range of choices because they can do whatever they want, whatever their idea is they can upload and submit the image. In previous years it has been different because there always has been a theme, but this year is totally open which is very very good because not everyone likes to take photographs of the same specialization or theme.
Here are two of my final embroidery images, first one is my favourite as I like the colours and patterns better on this one, but on th second one I like patterns that I done with yellow thread. I have subbmited both of these images to Fuji, I am very very pleased with my final outcomes as i was not quite sure if they will look ok because I prefer to shoot digitaly than with a film camera, but they are not as bad as I thought they would be so this is a good point about it.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Tommy Ingberg
Tommy is a self-taught photographer, who works with photography and digital image editing creating surrealistic photography dealing with human nature, feelings and thoughts. What Tommy does is he leaves the interpretation of his work up to viewers but also says,
"For me, surrealism is about trying to explain something abstract like a feeling or a thought, expressing the subconscious with a picture. The Reality Rearranged series is my first try at describing reality trough surrealism. During the two and a half years I have worked on the series I have used my own inner life, thoughts and feelings as seeds to my pictures. In that sense the work is very personal, almost like a visual diary. Despite this subjectiveness in the process I hope that the work can engage the viewer in her or his own terms. I want the viewers to produce their own questions and answers when looking at the pictures, my own interpretations are really irrelevant in this context. "
In the last couple of years he has received international recognition his work shown in many publications and receiving awards and honorable mentions from many different competitions. I think is work is surprising, different, abstract and makes you think about it for a long time thinking what it means and what message is behind it.
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Mamiya RB67
These are my final images which I took in the studio, I have asked Molly to be my model as I wanted to stitch on them and Molly was the best person to do that with as I done it so many times before. But when I actually scanned them into the computer they look much more nicer than when I stitched on them. I will upload them stitched ones later to compare. I am quite pleased with them because they turned out exactly how I wanted them to be. I have used Mamiya RB67, and the film I have used was Neopan 100 Acros. To be fair when I scanned those images onto a computer I thought they are not as well taken as I thought because they seem very dark and grey, but when I have tried to edit them on Photoshop they started to look better and better, but i had to remember to not edit them too much because when you do that it just gets worse and worse. There are only 10 images on the film I have used and some of those I took are blurry but I actually managed to get as many as I need. As there was only 10 images on this film I brought another one but as my tutor told me to experiment with the aperture I did but that made my images completely unexposed and I think that only two of them worked so I decided to just leave it and don't even scan them because they would not work anyway. For the other photoshoot i have asked Lauren to do some modeling for me as she's got blond hair and I wanted some difference in my photos and see what it would look like to sew onto hair like hers. But unfortunately I did not had a chance to do this. In my previous projects I think I have sew onto a photograph of Lauren anyway so I kind of know what it would look like.
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