Thursday, October 27, 2016

Warhol








I believe warhol would make political work about this crazy election (probs some donald trump themed works).

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Self Portraits


Picasso Self Portrait Facing Death (June 30, 1972), crayon on paper

 I've Got it All (2000) by Tracey Emin. Photograph: Neville Elder/Sygma/Corbis

Wanda Wulz "Io + Gatto (self-portrait)"

Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987)
Self-Portrait, 1978 
acrylic and silkscreen ink on linen
40 x 40 in. (101.6 x 101.6 cm.)

Stab Binding






EXIT = needle pointed DOWN and ENTER = needle pointed UP
=====
enter 1 (leave a tail, but don’t knot it), wrap around spine
enter 1 again, wrap around right edge
enter 1 again
exit 2, wrap around right edge
exit 2 again
enter 3, thread needle through loop from 1, point RIGHT
enter 3 again, wrap around right edge
enter 3 again
exit 4, wrap around right edge
exit 4 again
enter 3
exit 2
enter 5, wrap around right edge
enter 5 again
exit 4
enter 5
exit 6, wrap around right edge
exit 6 again
enter 4
exit 6
enter 5
exit 2
enter 1
exit 7, wrap around spine
exit 7 again, wrap around left edge
exit 7 again
enter 8, wrap around left edge
enter 8 again
exit 9, thread needle through loop from 7, point LEFT
exit 9 again, wrap around left edge
exit 9 again
enter 10, wrap around left edge
enter 10 again
exit 9
enter 8
exit 11, wrap around left edge
exit 11 again
enter 10
exit 11
enter 12, wrap around left edge
enter 12 again
exit 10
enter 12
exit 11
enter 8
exit 7
tie off

Monday, April 25, 2016

Urban landscape

Joel Tjintjelaar
Joel Tjintjelaar is an award winning B&W fine-art photographer from the Netherlands. His work has been published on many online websites and in magazines like American Photo, Black + White Photography magazine UK and Dutch magazine Digifotopro to name a few. The artist loves Black and White photography because with the removal of color the essence of objects, situations, scenarios and people can become more visible. http://www.photographyoffice.com/blog/2011/06/the-art-of-black-and-white-photography-by-joel-tjintjelaar
https://www.flickr.com/photos/tjintjelaar/
Alessio Trerotoli
I am an italian photographer, born in Rome. Graduated in 2009 in Disciplines of Arts and Cinema, in the same year I started to travel in Europe and in America, taking pictures and making experiences. My first exhibition was in 2010, since then my pictures were shown in several italian galleries. In 2012 I published my first book, “Fuori dalla caverna”, with notes and pictures of my travels and at the end of the same year I began my most important project, "Urban Melodies", where I depict, through superimpositions, an abstract vision of urban scenes from modern metropolis like Rome, New York, Paris, Berlin and many others. In 2013 I won Abstracta Festival with the picture "There is a light that never goes out" and the year after I won another prize in Urban International Photo Contest. In 2015 I realized other projects like "Roma Coast to Coast", a 21km walking trip through my city, and I finished my first 365 Project on Instagram. My "Urban Melodies" project has been featured by FubizThe PhoblographerSRL LoungeNeoprime MagCamerapixo and others international webmagazines. Now I live and work in Rome, waiting for the next travel… http://www.alessiotrerotoli.it/aboutme.html

‘I love to travel. Traveling to me is an act that simultaneously brings different emotions such as excitement and loneliness. My works show different images of the places where I actually visited, so that I am allowed to express various emotions and the moments that I physically experienced through the journey.’


Jieun’s personal feelings are described in the form of painted ink marks or better described as calligraphy, which are instinctively spread and dropped on the surface of the paper. She then starts creating comparatively realistic images of the cities within the abstract ink marks, adding colors to convey the emotions she felt at specific moments of her trip – be it happiness, loneliness or eagerness.

Jieun’s cityscapes are at times dull, yet there is something that shines through; and though there are no signs of people living in the beautiful cities in her works, the expression of light, color, greenery and skyscapes makes her work alive. She also recalls moments where she felt emotionally overwhelmed and strong feelings of loneliness as she looked down upon the cities from a vantage point. She adds, our cities are changing very fast while we are busy with our lives. Hence, the dull feeling of the buildings portrays the people in hectic daily life, where she believes only meaningless everyday conversation exists. http://www.redseagallery.com/artists/jieun-park/featured-works?view=slider

Fan Ho
Herbert Bayer
Tom Manley

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Landscape Photography

Artist and landscape images I like:

Michael Kenna
Mark Schneider Design
Edward Weston
Definition of natural beauty: Unrefined uncontrolled raw moments of inhuman creations nature presents.

EG:


Ansel Adams
My experience: I was backpacking with a friend in the Goat Rocks Wilderness. We went on a 15 mile day hike the second day up to the top of Old Snowy, a mountain. After reaching half way my mother got tired and decided to go back but my friend and I decided to make it to the top. We finally reached the base area of the mountain and looked up. The mountain was huge, looming over us. I could make out two small specks of hikers making their way down the steep slope. An hour later we made it to the half summit after an exhausting struggle up the trail. The last half mile we climbed on out hands and knees up a wall of loos rocks along the final ridge. Finally we made it to the top. Standing on the tip of the mountain I could see the entire world. Green forest rolled over hills like a carpet. Snow coated the tips of tall mountains. Below us Goat Lake was an opaque turquoise gem, shimmering in the sunlight. My breath was taken away. No human could ever create something quite so beautiful. This artwork could only be made by thousands of years of changing nature, perfect and uncontrolled. 

Friday, March 4, 2016

Visual Metaphors

Andy Warhol
A) I am Andy Warhol. I was getting ready this morning, pulling on my pants, when my underwear caught on the door knob of the bathroom and ripped. I was so mad that I just stormed out of the bathroom without pulling up my pants. Why even bother, they'd probably rip too. I looked in my bag for a new pair of underwear and found my favorite record sticking out so I grabbed it to play while I finished getting dressed. That was when my roommate laughed and said "hey", looking at me with my pants down, "that would make a good photo". So I set up my camera and took the photo. I am still annoyed and my face shows it. I made Mike stand in the background of the mirror because it was his idea to take the photo.

B) I am Andy Warhol's underwear. I was minding my own business while he was getting dressed, being good, awaiting the comforting caress of my friend Corduroy Pants. That caress never came. The door knob had it out for me from the start. I know it. It came at me with vigor, striking hard, grabbing me and ripping. The pain was excruciating. My only job was to cover Andy's butt and I failed. His crack gaped and I knew I was done for. He would throw me out, never to wear me again; I would eternally live on, useless. When he walked out of the bathroom I thought Andy would take me off and let me rest, but no, my humiliation was not over. Mike, of course, had to have the brilliant idea of taking a picture for all the world to see what a horrible pair of underwear I am. I guess it's what I deserve.

C) I am Sydney Denham. I immediately connected to this photo. Andy Warhol's exposed rear end brought me back to a fond memory of mine similar to what I perceive happened in this image. I was at my friends house and bent over to grab my backpack when my pants ripped down the seam, revealing a good twelve inches of polkadot underwear. I had to run around the house covering my hinny to escape the cameras and laughing faces of my friends. Andy and I have a lot in common, although my underwear was not ripped. I can also relate to the annoyance that Andy obviously felt in this situation.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Henri Cartier Bresson-The Decisive Moment



Henri Cartier Bresson was born in 1908 in Chanteloup, France. He traveled around the world photographing culture and war. He was a major artist of the twentieth century. He went to school in Paris and Cambridge University to study the arts. He photographed in Africa and loved to photograph with a naturalist style- no artificial lights or props. In the 1930 he had work in Mexico, New York and Madrid galleries. 






Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Alfred Stieglitz-Photography as Art

http://www.phillipscollection.org/research/american_art/bios/stieglitz-bio.htm

Alfred Stieglitz was born in 1864 and died in 1946. He influenced modern art in early twentieth century America. He was born in New Jersey but moved to Manhattan and Germany during his life. He learned about photography by taking a photochemistry class and began his interest in photography. He managed and edited Camera Notes in New York and was apart of the Camera Club. He founded three New York galleries where he exhibited the work of other artists. He did a series of cloud photographs. He married Georgia O'Keeffe. During the thirties he slowed and stopped photographing to die.





Tuesday, February 2, 2016

W Eugene Smith


Steelworker, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1955 by W. Eugene Smith. [1280x926]
  • introduced to photography by his mother and after his father committed suicide he became obsessed 
  • at a young age a local newspaper hired him
  • wanted pictures to show the terrible aspects of war
  • photo jounalist 
  • he had strict ethical values he would not break
  • photographed images of suffering 
  • He photographed 26 carrier combat missions and 13 invasions 
  • he immersed himself in his subjects (unlike most other photojournalists)
  • he resigned from Life magazine because he wanted more rights over his images
  • he did photo essays (one was over 11,000 photos of Pittsburgh
Can a single photograph affect the world for change?

I think that one photograph can be extremely impactful and make people think or change their ways. Say for instance a graphic image of a war is released to the public. People would start protesting the war and possibly make a change to stop the war. I do think there is a limit to how much an image can change the world because not everyone will see that image or care or decide to make a change because of the seeing that image. Large problems cannot be solved with one picture but they can be improved and work it toward a solution.

Monday, February 1, 2016

Project 5: Light Shadow and Reflections


Silhouette: Pinterest
Brassaï
Backlit: Pinterest
Johan van der Keuken
If this image was taken with the metering on the darker areas such as the back of the person or wall then the light would be blown out. The detail in the curtain would become white and detail would be seen more in the darker areas such as the wall and the back of the person. The balance of the picture would be lost and would become less interesting if the artist chose to take the image this way. 
Reflections: Pinterest
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Shadow: Pinterest
Matteo Angelotti
André Kertész

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Margaret Bourke White


Blurb:
  • Born 1904
  • Photographed for Life magazine (first woman)
  • Worked during the depression and dust bowl
  • photoed Auschwitz tragedies
  • fist woman documentary photographer 
  • started photographing as a hobby
  • photographed design in factories and industrial architecture 
  • photographed in Germany for Fortune magazine
  • went to Russia during industrialization and photographed for Life magazine 
  • married to novelist and worked on photo projects with him
  • did photo essays of Dust Bowl, Germany, and Soviet Union
  • photographed WWII and in India with Mohandas Gandhi 
  • very modern women for the time she was living