Tuesday, 8 December 2015

My Pinterest

My home page:






  On here you can see a variety of landscape photographs from all over the world.  They vary from cold mountain ranges to warm oceanic sun sets.




Taken at the Vermillion Lake, Banff National Park, Canada




Taken in Portugal

Saturday, 5 December 2015

Emulation Plan

 Taken by Sandra Senn



 Taken by Galen Rowell



Taken by Lois Conner




  This photograph was taken in Shanghai, China, in 1999 using a film camera.  I like how the statues are highly detailed in the foreground, and the background is slightly blurred due to a light layer of mist.  This is effective as it directs your eyes naturally towards the statues of the men, almost forcing you to absorb the detail they hold.  I also like how there is a mixture of swirls and curves combined with the straight, rigid lines that some of the buildings hold.  This makes the photograph almost natural, yet it's of an urban jungle.  I also think that the monochromatic colours take away any distractions, and draw your eyes towards the detail within the photograph, creating more of an impact when you view it.

  To be able to do my own photo shoot of a cityscape similar to the one above, I will need to use my analogue camera to be able to catch the same sort of effects Lois Conner has created in his photograph.  As I do not live in china and cannot revisit the place as shown, I will have to look a bit closer to home.  My thoughts on this would be to try and find a similar setting near the River Severn, and to capture my photograph there.  I will try and keep the layout the same, but for obvious reasons, I will have to change the subjects in the fore and background.

Artist Research

Artist Research - Lois Conner


 Taken in China, 1985



Taken in Yuanming Yuan, China, 1998



Taken in Summer Camp Xiahe, China, 2002



  With all of these photographs being taken on an analogue camera, they all possess this look as though the camera has a milky filter on the lens, as they all hold lots very white and not so contrasting layers within the images.  With each photograph, I think that Conner is trying to portray the sense of nature, and because the world we live in is so massive, you can travel it and find new things you haven't seen every time you stop and absorb your surroundings.  The photographs taken in 1985 and 2002 both show off how much space they hold by including a range of mountains.  This gives you the thought of being an ant compared to these huge, toned mountain ranges.  As they are in the background of both images, they are faded and not as detailed as the foreground, but they still hold this sense of them watching over you as you concentrate on what's in the foreground.  All three of the photographs use the rule of thirds well, and contain a good mixture of natural and man made lines.  I also like how the film has been developed in monochromatic colours, as this takes away any distractions within the photograph, and allows your eyes to see the details that Conner really wants you to see, and by doing this it means that the photographs are more real to us, and allow us to make a more fonder memory of the subjects within the shot.

Thursday, 3 December 2015

Double Exposure

With double exposures, you take one photograph and lay it over another, but with the opacity turned down so both images show.  In this case, I’m taking my photo of a friend and combining it with the leaves off a tree, and this should give me the effect of the leaves being inside the outline of my friend.



Add these two photographs together and you get...


...This, a double exposed photograph in which you can see both images.




  This photograph was taken by Andre De Freitas, which is the artist I have based my Work on, as he has taken some really good double exposures, such as this one below.