For the double exposure I placed one of my chosen images on top of the other and then lessened the opacity of the top image so that the background layer was showing through and this creates the double exposure effect and I feel works really well as an option for my final photographs.
Kaleidoscope
For the kaleidoscope editing I opened one image and then doubled the canvas width and then doubled the image and pulled the second layer across to the blank canvas space, I then doubled the height and pulled across the top images to the bottom to create the kaleidoscope.
Below are the my chosen images to manipulate slightly and display as final images, I have chosen the ones below to work with as I feel they have the most potential to produce good final images once displayed and maybe slightly manipulated and experimented with.
These are my initial choices and ideas for my final developments as I believe them to be my best photograph outcomes.
This is one of my initial choices for a final photograph to be produced. I feel it is one of my best images a because it has a strong sense of geometric abstract photography due to the arrangements and patterns of the horizontal lines across my the photograph and this also becomes contrasted with then vertical lines which travel down the right side of the image. The photograph has a lot of light giving it some shadows in the top right of the image contrasting the very light panels that travel through the middle.
This image again becomes abstract by the use of the symmetrical geometric patterns throughout. The lines range from going diagonally downwards to less of a slant towards the top of the photographs. Unfortunately the image is slightly off centered and the line towards the back of the image does not travel directly up the middle which I feel would’ve made it a better image for the abstract project due to the identical symmetry that it would create. Apart from this I still believe this photograph could be a potential final image as it has strong line and texture running across the bottom of the image which many abstract artists also looked at.
This image has an object off center to the right at the bottom of the frame this is what the eye will naturally draw to first and is darker compared to the rest of the light and blue tinted image and this I feel helps to bring it an abstract feel. This image also has a strong development of lines in different directions which can be seen clearer than some of the previous images due to the clear background behind. The image is very light and doesn’t hold a lot of contrast however I believe it is it’s geometric lines which develop it in an abstract way.
This is another image which works well due to it’s symmetry and it’s use of line. This photograph is unfortunately over exposed however this could be useful into further editing and could be used to my advantage while editing and developing further along. This image has a strong symmetrical line directly down the middle with the geometric lines fraying off, this is what I feel develops it as an abstract image.
This photograph is one that was taken in inspiration from Ralph Meatyard. It was developed by working and experimenting with using manual focus to purposely put the image out of focus to develop an abstract image. I feel it is one of my best photographs as I feel you can clearly still see the form of the plant even though out of focus and unlike some of the other photographs I have produced there is the white negative space in the back which helps to bring the form forward and there isn’t anything in the background that is overpowering and confusing or creating too much noise.
This is another image from the same shoot in inspiration by Ralph Meatyard, I feel if chosen these two images would work well as a pair if developed into a final piece. In this image compared to the previous image there is a slight out of focus colour making it’s way in on the left side which I personally would crop down if I moved forward with this image. As well as the previous image this has a lot of negative space in it’s background however it helps to bring out the forms of the branches on the tree. This image and the previous could relate to Meatyard’s work in ‘Zen Twigs’.
This is one of my photographs that came from inspiration of Aaron Siskind. I feel it was one of my most successful photograph in this experiment but also as a whole, I feel it has an abstract feel due to the rotting and rusting walls and the pipe down the left side draws the eye towards that as an object and contrasts the rotting wall which has soft wavy edges compared the straight vertical edges of the pipe. I feel this would make a good final image in A5 and as a singular image. This image focuses on the uses of texture and line.
This is another from my shoot with inspiration from Aaron Siskind, I felt this was one of my more successful photographs as it shows a lot of contrast and texture whereas a lot of my previous images focus on line contrast. It also shows elements of colour and colour contrasts of the dark colours of the blue and the black contrasted with the white and the creams. I feel these elements work well to create it into an abstract image that works well and could potentially be used for one of my final photographs.
Edgar Martins is a Portuguese photographer. The photograph below comes from a series of work he produced that was inspired by the writing and the sending of letters and the power and intimacy of letters. For this mini series he photographed paper, carefully lit and isolated from anything else. There is a stillness to them that belies the fact they may have been written as suicide notes, contact between prison inmates and loved ones and more. Martins spent time working with court, prison and parole officials and indeed, prisoners in Portugal exploring this theme, that often ended in death for many of his subjects.
Above is one of my own photographs from a paper shoot beside one of Edgar Martins work. They are both very different takes on photographing paper. Edgar Martins photograph and way of working is a lot darker the photograph is very dim compared to my way of photographing paper which uses very harsh artificial light on the paper, this may be due to the context that Martins work with, when he photographs the paper he is looking at the power of paper in some very dark areas such as suicide notes and prison letters, the photograph portrays this in a visual manner of the black dark space with the very slim paper which itself is dimly lit, this would be done on purpose by Martins maybe for effect of portraying the subjects he is looking into in his own visual manner. Both takes on the paper are focusing on isolating the paper so it’s on its’ own, Martins does this with the dark space and the thin isolated paper, the paper in my photograph is isolated on the white background and left to itself on the white blank paper which is a different take on the ideas of isolating the paper.
Bruguière was an American photographer who moved to London in 1928 where he began to experiment with non-representational photography, part of this was him starting to create his cut paper photographs. Bruguière exploits the endless subtle qualities of both paper and light, manipulating both in order to create complex patterns of texture and form. Throughout his life he experimented with multiple exposures which is something he explored throughout his work.
Above is one of my own photographs from the shoot of ‘Photographing paper’ alongside one of Francis Bruguière own work. In comparison to each other they have two different takes however they have some similarities with each other and they way they were photographed. Both my own and Bruguière photographs seem to be using artificial light in order to create effect of light, tone and shadows and this is a similarity they both have with each other. Bruguière looks and the texture of the paper by cutting it and folding them into each other this creates smooth textures of the paper whereas with my own image I experimented with folding and creasing the paper to create texture and to explore this, both takes are exploring texture but in two different ways with the paper. Bruguière’s work shows a toned down exposure to some of his other work and is a lot darker when compared to my own work which is a lot brighter due to the white artificial light used creating a brighter photograph.
Lewis K. Bush is a British photographer, writer, curator and educator.He aims “to draw attention to forms of invisible power that operate in the world”, believing that “power is always problematic” because it is inherently “arbitrary and untransparent”. London was once known as the Metropole, the mother city at the heart of a vast empire stretching across a quarter of the planet. Produced during numerous winter night walks through the city, Metropole records the effect of this capital influx on London by documenting these new corporate high rises and luxury residential blocks as they are constructed and occupied. Using double exposures to layer building over building, these structures becomes increasingly disorientating and threatening as the series progresses, obliterating scale, perspective and orientation, and emulating the sense of loss that many Londoners now feel.
Above is a comparison of my own photograph taken and edited and Lewis Bush’s own from the series ‘Metropole’. Both of the photographs include a double exposure creating a blurred and busy effect on the photograph, this may be done intentionally by Bush to emphasis the thoughts he is trying to put across of the city and the ‘Metropole’ being a busy place with this rushing past, by creating a double exposure, maybe using the same image to angle it Bush is creating the effect that the building itself is rushing and moving which is implied by the way he presents the photograph that sits with the context of the project and the photograph was taken in. Bush’s work has a lot of contrast in it’s photograph using the black and white whereas I am trying to use the blue tones to work together as the lights and the dark’s to create a contrast. Both the photographs have a strong sense of line throughput the image, Bush’s photograph has very geometric and symmetrical lines whereas mine tend to be a bit more abstract themselves due to the angles and directions they go in.
Aaron Siskind is an American photographer who is a part of the abstract movement. Siskind captures the abstract qualities of layers and texture. Aaron Siskinds work focuses on ideas of distraction in nature and architecture. Siskind intensified this approach to photography with the abstract movement with close-up framing and an emphasis on texture, line and visual rhythms, creating abstract images of the real world. Siskind was one of the first photographers to combine what was known as “straight” photography (recording the real world as the lens “sees” it) with abstraction. Siskind turned away from the social/political world post-World War II, and instead looked inward to seek meaning in the mostly inanimate forms he observed around him.
The Boyle Family
The Boyle Family is a group of collaborative artists based in London. Boyle Family aims to make art that does not exclude anything as a potential subject. Over the years, subjects have included: earth, air, fire and water; animals, vegetables, minerals; insects, reptiles, water creatures; human beings and societies; physical elements and fluids from the human body. Boyle Family is best known for the earth studies: three dimensional casts of the surface of the earth which record and document random sites with great accuracy. These works combine real material from the site (stones, dust, twigs etc) with paint and resins, preserving the form of the ground.
After experimenting with just using a solid black layer and the circles I will continue to experiment using different coloured layers, different circle arrangements, different opacity of the layers and using previously edited photographs for different effects.
Solid Colour Layers and Circle Arrangement
Final Outcomes
Solid Colour
Solid Colour and New Arrangement
Solid Colour and New Arrangement
Above are all my final outcomes for the experiments I have produced. I feel they have worked well and I have been able to find different ways to arrange my circle holes and also the effects of using different colours as the solid colour.
Different Opacity and Previously Edited Photographs
Final Outcomes
Using a Different Opacity
Using a Previously Edited Image, Different Opacity
These are more of my final outcomes for other experiments that I produced, I feel these I my most successful as I think they show a range of experiments by using my previously edited photographs and also the different opacity of the solid layers.
For this experiment I will be exploring using layers as layer masks to reveal and conceal areas of my photographs and exploring different ways to do this.