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Preparation For Mock Exam

Mood Board

Image result for romanticism photographyImage result for romanticism photographyImage result for romanticism photographyImage result for romanticism photographyImage result for romanticism photographyImage result for romanticism photography

Brainstorming

For my final photographs I want to produce pictures of natural landscapes with a moody, dramatic feeling to them.

  • Sunset
  • Cloudy
  • Storm
  • Beach
    • Devils Hole
    • St Ouens
    • Greve De Lecq
    • Gorey
  • Rocks
  • Trees
  • Cliffs
  • Hills
  • High contrast
  • Dark image

Ansel Adams

Ansel Adams (1902 – 1984) was an American photographer and environmentalist. His photos of the American West are often seen on calendars, photos and books.  Adams founded the photography group ‘Group f/64’. He was part of the romanticism movement and produced lots of striking landscape photographs in black and white, often involving a pathway of some sort and interesting weather.

Image result for ansel adams

Image result for ansel adams

My Favourite Photograph

Image result for ansel adams

This photograph was taken using natural daylight with the clouds blocking the harsh sun from the camera, resulting in dramatic contrast between the mountains and the river being brought into the photograph. It appears that a wide angle lens was used to take this photograph as this is what was typically used by the romantics to capture landscape photographs. It looks like a deep depth of field was used as the whole of the photograph is sharp and in focus. A shutter speed of 1/60 – 1/150 was possibly used for this photograph due to no motion blurs being in the photograph. A low/medium ISO appears to have been used as the photograph is not grainy and is quite dark, which will have been intended. There is lots of texture in the photograph, from the grassy bank to the flowing river. It seems to be quite a cold and isolated photograph as there are no signs of civilization around.

There is no colour in this photograph, which allows the viewer to focus on the range of tones, textures and shapes in the photograph rather than the colour. There is a wide tonal range in the photograph ranging from the dark silhouettes of the mountains to the white reflection of the river. It is quite a 3D photograph due to the trees in the foreground and the river running throughout the photograph, leading the viewers eyes from the trees in the foreground all the way to the mountains in the background. There is no rule of thirds used in this photograph, to me this is because Adams is trying to show that it is natural and nothing is set up.

Adams was a big part of the romantic movement in the late 1700’s, typically the romantics would photograph striking black and white landscapes with the idea that there is a deeper meaning than what appears behind everything. Romanticism was a rejection of the Enlightenment movement which took emotion out of writing and art, Romanticism wanted to challenge this by depicting emotions such as horror and untamed nature.

I think that in this photograph, Adams was trying to emphasise the natural beauty of the environment and to show that no editing was needed on the image, it is as it appears. He is trying to challenge the Enlightenment movement by doing this.

My Photographs

Top 5/Edits
My Favourite Photograph

In this photograph I used natural lighting which allowed contrast between the correctly exposed cliff face and the over-exposed sky. This created a very wide tonal range in the photograph. An aperture of 18 was used which allowed the whole of the photograph to be in focus. I used a shutter speed of 1/40 with an ISO of 100 to create a photograph with the highest quality possible. There is a slightly cold undertone in the photograph due to the white balance.

There is no colour in this photograph as it is in the style of the romantics – the lack of colour helps to bring our more contrast and a wider tonal range in the photograph. The texture of the cliff face can be clearly seen which creates a more interesting photograph. There is a slight 3D effect in the photograph due t the shapes and depth within the cliff face.

I took this photograph at Devils Hole. I chose this as the location as it has a rich history and has lots of interest cliff faces surrounding it. I tried to create and edit this photograph in the style of the Romantics in the sense that it is black and white, has dramatic contrast in it and shows only nature. This photograph is similar to the work of Ansel Adams in the sense that it shows the untouched nature in a black and white photograph with lots of shapes and edges within it. My photographs do not have as much contrast and definition in them as Adams’ does but there is clear inspiration from him in my photographs.

Nature Photoshoot – Fog

Moodboard

In its simplest form, fog is a cloud that sits on the ground. In more scientific terms, it is condensing atmospheric water vapor created by a temperature drop when relative humidity is fairly high.

Artist Research – Fogaholics

Landscape and cityscape photographers have a love/hate relationship with the fog in the San Francisco Bay area. It can make for some spectacular and moody photos, but it can also leave the area un-shootable – that is unless you seek higher ground. Nick Steinberg and other photographers in the Bay Area have formed a group that they call the “Fogaholics”.

The group consists of around 20 photographers that watch forecasts religiously and seek out the best foggy shooting conditions possible. When the fog rolls in, they make their way to Mt. Tamalpais, which sits at 2,572ft above sea level. This unique vantage point gives them the opportunity to photograph some amazingly beautiful conditions. With the help of an ND filter and exposure times sometimes exceeding two minutes, Nick is able to capture the fog waves as they make their way inland.

Contact Sheets

Edited Photograph

 

 

Weeks 5 – 8 | Preparing for your Mock Exam Landscape Photography

Over the coming weeks you must now produce your final mini-unit that clearly demonstrates your knowledge, understanding and practical application of landscape photography…

You must provide blog posts that illustrate :

  1. Mood-board of images relevant to your plan
  2. Mindmaps / brainstorms of ideas
  3. Artist case study + image analysis
  4. Action plan for final photo shoot
  5. Original images ( contact sheet)
  6. Your selection process
  7. Your editing process
  8. Presentation ideas / printing solutions
  9. Compare and contrast to your chosen photographer
  10. Evaluation, critique and analysis of your final response(s)

YOUR FINAL BLOG POST SHOULD CLEARLY SHOW 3-5 POSSIBLE FINAL OUTCOMES, INCLUDING YOUR PRESENTATION METHOD

FROM THIS YOU CAN CHOOSE YOUR IMAGES FOR PRINTING

Contemporary approaches to presentation :

Research and explore alternative approaches to presenting your final images. This should be an integral part of your concept…not a gimmick…ultimately, the quality of your photography will be the primary focus and your mark will reflect this…

Dafnor Talmor

Letha Wilson
Noemie Goudal
Alternative shapes…

 

Darren Harvey Regan

 

Print Deadline : Tuesday 20th February

Find the folder : M:\Departments\Photography\Students\Image Transfer\PRINTING

Essentials

  • Remember to label each JPEG  in the print folder with your name
  • 1 x file per A3. A4, A5
  • Ensure that your final images are a direct response to your chosen photographer (s) and show a clear visual link

Marking Criteria

The four assessment objectives clearly outline expectations, so you must provide high quality evidence for each AO…

AO1 : Develop ideas through sustained and focused investigations, informed by contextual sources, demonstrating analytical and critical understanding

AO2 : Explore and select appropriate resources, media, techniques and processes, reviewing and refining ideas as work develops

AO3 : Recording ideas (taking photos) that are relevant to intentions, reflecting critically on work as it progresses

AO4 : Present a personal and meaningful response(s) that realises intentions, and makes connections with other artists

 

Further Reading CLICK HERE

 

Abstraction and Formalism Landscape Homework

Planning

Task: Take 150-250 photographs that explore Abstraction and Formalism

Camera Settings: I will be used an ISO of 200 along with a shutter speed of 1/40 to allow the image to be as high quality as possible.

Lighting: I will be using natural daylight for my photographs.

Location: La Collette

Context: I will be taking photographs with the work of photographers such as Albert Renger-Patzch in mind.

My Response

My Top 5/Edits

My Favourite Photograph

In this photograph I used natural daylight in order to create a good amount of contrast between the structure and the sky. I used a deep depth of field in order to ensure that all of the photograph was in focus and sharp. I used a shutter speed of 1/40 to allow the image to be sharp, with an ISO of 200 it allowed the image to be slightly dark which increases the contrast and drama in the photograph.

There is no colour in the photograph as I used black and white. I took inspiration for this from Renger-Patzch who did his work in black and white. This creates more drama and shadows within the photograph. There is a wide tonal range in the photograph and the wires and metal structure is very dark whereas the podium they sit on is highlighted with white. There is a 3D effect in this photograph due to the shadows and edges with the photograph.

This photograph is of a crane-type structure used for moving large items, down at la collette. The industrial part of the island that I took photographs of is a great example of altered landscapes because there is almost no nature left there due to the amount of business that goes on there.

 

 

ANSEL ADAMS

Ansel Adams

Ansel Adams was an American photographer and environmentalist who was born in 1902. His black and white photographs of the United States’ Incredible landscapes are some of the most iconic romanticised photographs all over the world, especially those of  National Parks and incredible Mountains-scapes, which are widely seen all over the globe on calendars, poster prints, t-shirts, desktop backgrounds and of course all over the internet.

He was notorious for using the aperture setting f/64 in most of his work as it gave him the aesthetic exposure that he desired. This is evident in fact that he, alongside fellow photographers Edward Weston and Williard Van Dyke were the founders of the photography group named ‘ Group f/64 ‘ . The name of course represented their love for the f/64 aperture.

Here are some of my favourite photographs produced by Adams…

And here is a video which goes into depth about Ansel Adam’s life as a landscape photographer…

Romanticism

WHAT IS ROMANTICISM?

Romanticism as an art form, is originated from when a new generation of painters came together in order to create landscape artistic paintings for the sake of visual beauty, causing the form of art in the 1800s to become more and more realistic. This first movement was known as Romanticism, it emphasized emotions such as grief or love, leading to a deeper discovery of human emotion caused and effected by our natural surroundings. Romanticism usually creates the perfect visual landscape which the viewer could associate their emotions with or the artist/photographer can create through their emotions.

Here are some examples of Romanticism in photography…

Here is a video that helps to further understanding of Romanticism in Photography and Art…

Week 4 | Altered Landscapes | Cut-N-Paste | Composite Images

This week we will be looking more closely at the concept of altered landscapes.

You may choose to employ a range of creative techniques (digital and traditional) to create your environments…

  • Photographing changed, changing or altered landscapes
  • Creating altered landscapes by combining a range of images in Adobe Photoshop
  • Using cut-n-paste techniques and printed matter (from photos, magazines, print-outs, newspapers etc)

You may already have a range of suitable images to start your designs…but will need to conduct a range of photo-shoots to ensure that you have enough high quality images to work from:

Here are some examples to help inspire your ideas…

Tanja Deman

Beomsik Won

Jesse Treece
Sammy Slabink

Krista Svalbonas

 

CLICK HERE to research Vassilis Konstantinou’s “unintentional sculptures”

CLICK HERE to research “new landscape” photography

CLICK HERE to find more examples of cut-n-paste ideas…

Essential Blog Posts This Week…

  • Research Altered realities,
  • Hannah Hoch and the early pioneers of photo collage  / montage
  • A Case Study on your chosen photographer (plus analysis of a key image)…show how this has inspired your ideas and process
  • Your images, process, editing, selection, final outcomes and evaluation

HANNAH HOCH INTRO CLICK HERE

EXTENSION TASK

Research the work of Joan Fontcuberta…

One of Spain’s most prominent artists, Joan Fontcuberta is best-known for his exploration of the intersection between art, science, and illusion. In Landscapes without Memory, an exhibition of forty large-scale works made between 2002 and 2005, Fontcuberta harnesses a piece of landscape-rendering computer software designed for the military, which creates photo-realistic three-dimensional models based on two-dimensional sources. For his Landscapes of Landscapes series, the focus of the Aperture exhibition, Fontcuberta feeds the software images of famous paintings and photographs by Turner, Cézanne, Rothko, and Carleton E. Watkins, among others, forcing the program to interpret the landscape masterworks as “real.” The contours and tones of the pictures are transformed into three-dimensional mountains, rivers, valleys, and clouds—baroque, fantastical landscapes void of human existence that tap into our desire for unattainable paradise. Thumbnails of the original images are shown next to Fontcuberta’s work.

Through his artistic process, Fontcuberta creates new landscapes that, despite their “postcard perfect” resonance, are purely fictional­ and can never be experienced in nature. The result is “landscapes without memory.”

  • Why do you think Fontcuberta creates “photography” in this way…?
  • How does Fontcuberta’s work compare to the work of James Casabere ??? (below)
  • “The photographs that put artist James Casebere on the map are chilling. Like an architect, he builds a highly detailed model. But instead of turning the model into a life-size construction, Casebere zeroes in on the nano-details of the space and then photographs it to create his “constructed photography.” In the past, he has built and then photographed empty spaces, from miniature prison cells to flooded rooms to suburban homes that recall the housing crisis. To call these sparse, meditative images haunting, with their careful placement of light and shadow, is an understatement.”

    James Casabere (after Friedrich)

 

 

 

Exploring Exposure Techniques

Exposure Bracketing

Bracketing in general is a term used to describe a sequence of images taken by a camera with slight differences in the settings.

following on that, Exposure Bracketing involves taking a sequence of pictures of the same scene at a range of exposure settings. The reason you do this is because the camera might have been ‘deceived’ by the light  available(too much or too little) and your main subject may be over or under exposed. By taking multiple shots you are making sure that whatever is the case, then you would have properly compensated for it.

Source And Further Reading 

HDR Imagery

HDR is short for High Dynamic Range. It is a post-processing task of taking either one image or a series of images, combining them, and adjusting the contrast ratios to do things that are virtually impossible with a single aperture and shutter speed.

Cameras are limited to the amount of image detail they can record when the sensor is exposed to light. Whether you’re using the auto settings or are taking pics using skillfully tuned manual settings, your goal is trying to take advantage of the available light to maximize the detail in the result image. The problem is, when you’re shooting heavy shadows and bright lights, you are forced into losing detail in one range or the other.

As you can see in the image above, the camera has taken several images at the same time with different exposure levels, the final image is created by layering and combining them in order to get this look.

The basic idea of creating a combination image with multiple exposures is not new to photography. As long as cameras have had the limitation of standard ranges, clever photographers have been hacking ways to create the best possible image. Brilliant photographer Ansel Adams used dodging and burning techniques to selectively expose his prints and create amazing rich detail in images.

Source And Further Reading