This time I experimented with light in the photography studio at college. I used different coloured torches and a 20-30 second shutterspeed to capture the movement of the light.
Tuesday 11 December 2012
Photographers that use light in photography.
FAST SHUTTERSPEEDS
Photographers that use fast shutterspeeds to capture movement without blur.
Garry Winogrand
Shazeen Samad
Hughes Leglise-Bataille
LONG SHUTTER SPEEDS
These photographers have taken these photos using a really long shutterspeed of around 30 seconds. I have experimented with this style of photography which is inspired by these photographers..
Jacob Carter
Robokon GT
MICHAEL BOSANKO
Photographers that use fast shutterspeeds to capture movement without blur.
Garry Winogrand
Shazeen Samad
Hughes Leglise-Bataille
LONG SHUTTER SPEEDS
These photographers have taken these photos using a really long shutterspeed of around 30 seconds. I have experimented with this style of photography which is inspired by these photographers..
Jacob Carter
Robokon GT
MICHAEL BOSANKO
Wednesday 5 December 2012
Experiments with light.
I am SO happy with how these pictures turned out. I used a 30 second exposure for these photographs and used a torch to "draw" with light. Inspired by Michael Bosanko.
Tuesday 4 December 2012
Chesterfield To Leeds Project
My theme in my photography project is "photowalks". I decided to use a journey I do very often which is from my Mums house in Chesterfield, to my Dads house in Leeds. I used my my Canon SLR for these photographs. A lot of these pictures were taken from my chest because people act differently when they know they're being photographed.
Taken from my chest so the people in the picture didn't know they were being photographed, I had no idea what this photo was going to look like but I really like the composition of it.
I took this with the "night portrait" setting. It was starting to get dark outside so I had to make the ISO around 1600 which was making the photos grainy and the lights didn't show up as bright as I hoped so I used this setting. It uses flash but only seems to brighten the areas you want to be vibrant which I really liked.
I used a shutter speed of 15 seconds for this photograph. It would have looked better if there were more cars on the motorway as some lanes are empty. I am going to try this again in a busier place.
I used the "night portrait" setting again for this photograph. I really liked how it showed all the colours of the sunset. I then edited the contrast in photo shop to make the buildings silhouettes.
Photography Course November 27th
I paid to go on a day long photography course in Bakewell. It was a beginners course so a lot of the things we learnt were things I already knew but it was good to refresh my memory. We went out into Bakewell to two locations, one was a public garden and the other was near the bridge in Bakewell. The task was to take pictures using different apertures to see the difference that they make. I used a large aperture (F.3.5) for most of these photographs as I liked the blur in the background and the sharp focus on the subject.
We then went to the bridge and used shutter speed priority to capture the numerous birds there as they are flying. It was difficult to get the exact moment right and because it was a dull day, I couldn't use a very fast shutter speed because it made the photograph quite dark. I put the ISO to 1600 to get lighter images with fast shutter speeds but this made the photographs have a lot of "noise".
As a last resort I tried to take photographs of the birds with flash. This worked perfectly and captured the bird a lot stiller than it would without flash. The only thing with using flash that didnt make the photograph look as good was how bright they are, so when I got home I edited the bright photographs in photoshop.
I really like how they turned out, especially the flying pigeon.
The photographer that runs this course then asked me if I would like to help her do a wedding shoot next month, so I have my first photography job!
We then went to the bridge and used shutter speed priority to capture the numerous birds there as they are flying. It was difficult to get the exact moment right and because it was a dull day, I couldn't use a very fast shutter speed because it made the photograph quite dark. I put the ISO to 1600 to get lighter images with fast shutter speeds but this made the photographs have a lot of "noise".
As a last resort I tried to take photographs of the birds with flash. This worked perfectly and captured the bird a lot stiller than it would without flash. The only thing with using flash that didnt make the photograph look as good was how bright they are, so when I got home I edited the bright photographs in photoshop.
I really like how they turned out, especially the flying pigeon.
The photographer that runs this course then asked me if I would like to help her do a wedding shoot next month, so I have my first photography job!
William Klein + Daido Mariyama (College Work)
(Finding information about exhibitions from 3 different sources)
William Klein and Daido Mariyama Photography Exhibition at Tate Modern.
Description From The Gallery:
Explore modern urban life in New York and Tokyo through the photographs of William Klein and Daido Moriyama. This is the first exhibition to look at the relationship between the work of influential photographer and filmmaker Klein, and that of Moriyama, the most celebrated photographer to emerge from the Japanese Provoke movement of the 1960s.
With work from the 1950s to the present day, the exhibition demonstrates the visual affinity between their urgent, blurred and grainy style of photography and also their shared desire to convey street life and political protest, from anti-war demonstrations and gay pride marches to the effects of globalisation and urban deprivation.
The exhibition also considers the medium and dissemination of photography itself, exploring the central role of the photo-book in avant-garde photography and the pioneering use of graphic design within these publications. As well the issues of Provoke magazine in which Moriyama and his contemporaries showcased their work, the exhibition will include fashion photography from Klein’s work with Vogue and installations relating to his satirical films Mister Freedom and Who Are You Polly Maggoo?
http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/william-klein-daido-moriyama
Review From Sean O'Hagan (The Guardian):
As you enter the first room of this ambitious exhibition devoted to two pioneers of postwar photography, it is one of William Klein's early films that serves as a deceptively gentle introduction. Made in 1958, Broadway by Light is a homage to colour, light and the now nostalgia-tinged magic of the giant flickering advertisements that throw their dazzle and shimmer on to the rainy sidewalks of midtown Manhattan. It is a playful film, a kind of extended visual jazz riff on the nocturnal cityscape that so entranced the restless young Klein. The film gives little indication of the photographs that follow, which give full expression to Klein's free-form exploration of movement, energy and graininess. That energy is punctuated here and there by the occasional moment of stillness, mostly in his portraits.
Moriyama had already extended and subverted Klein's fast-moving approach, often making books where the idea of context – and even subject – was jettisoned in favour of something more impressionistic. Moriyama's cityscapes are realms of the imagination, full of dark suggestion and ominous shadows. On the walls of Tate Modern his work does not work the way it does in his myriad photobooks, which shape – you could even say curtail – his frenetic style into a series of impressionistic diaries. Without the book format the images often seem unmoored. Moriyama's best known book is Farewell Photography, the title of which gives some idea of his radical approach. In it, as Minoru Shimizu notes in his catalogue essay for this show, "grainy, blurry, out-of-focus is a method of annihilation: no meaning, no expression, no sense of the photographer".
Review From Richard Dorment (The Telegraph):
You can see why Tate Modern’s curator of photography thought that staging side-by-side retrospectives of the American photographer William Klein and his Japanese contemporary Daido Moriyama might be a good idea. Both are powerful artistic personalities fascinated by the throbbing, shifting spectacle of street life in big cities; both work mainly in black and white; and both embrace a no-frills realist aesthetic. But, for all their obvious similarities, this back-to-back presentation only succeeds in highlighting their differences. That would be no bad thing, except that Moriyama suffers by being shown after Klein.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/art-reviews/9594623/Klein-and-Moriyama-Tate-Modern-review.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/art-reviews/9594623/Klein-and-Moriyama-Tate-Modern-review.html
Tuesday 20 November 2012
Traces
Part of a task at college to use a compact campera and photograph "traces" that people have left in and around college. It was difficult to get the detail on the photograph as it was a 10 megapixel digital camera and the outcomes are blurry from camera shake.
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