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Best over all portraits using different lighting

Now that I have experimented with using lots of different types of lighting and lighting effects, I will present my best outcomes from my photo shoots.  During these photo shoots I learnt how all the technical camera settings should be set in order to  make the images look good.

Spot light

Chiaroscuro 

soft lighting

Natural lighting

Flash

portraits- Using flash

Flash

You can use flash in portraiture in a range of dark and light places. It is stereo typically used in places where it is dark, but you can also create interesting effects in light ares using it. There are many types of flashes and techniques that can be used:

  • Bounce flash

This is when you point the flash in a different direction, rather than directly at your subject, in order for the light to soften before it hits your subject.  It’s typically bounced at an angle, at something like a wall or a ceiling.

Below is a diagram that explains how the ‘bounce flash’ technique is used compared to direct flash:

  • fill-in flash

This is a technique that’s used to brighten up shadowed areas. This is usually used when the background is a lot brighter that the actual subject, and using this will make your subject appear well lit and not underexposed compared to the background.

To use fill flash, the aperture and the shutter speed should be correctly adjusted to expose the background, and the flash is then fired to lighten the foreground (usually the subject)

Below is an example of how using fill flash can make your images look good. The image on the left has the background perfectly exposed, and the image on the right is how the image looked when you took it with flash. As you can see, the image on the right is very successful as you can see the sky in the background, and the subject is also perfectly exposed due to the use of the flash.

Not my images.

Below is also a video that shows a range of techniques and tips on how to use fill flash:

  • Speedlight flash 

This is also known as a hot shoe flash. This is a flash that is inserted onto the top part of the camera and is triggered then the cameras shutter takes an image

Contact sheets

For this photo shoot I pictured my model while she was wearing makeup on her face. This demonstrated how, by using a flash, many details can be noticed in the dark.

Best outcome

Tom Hunter – Case Study

Tom Hunter – Case Study

Tom Hunter is a renowned British Photographer who is currently based in East London. Hunter was born in Dorset in 1965. In 1980 when he was 15 years old, he left school and began to work on a farm for a year and later moved onto work for the  Forestry Commission in Dorset. In 1986 Tom Hunter moved to Hackney and began work as a Tree Surgeon. 4 years later in 1990, he attended A-Level Photography evening classes at Kingsway College in London.

Hunter is best known for his re-staging of historical tableaux portraits and making them more contemporary and fitting his narratives. Below is an example of this. Tom Hunter draws inspiration from Victorian paintings and  Dutch Renaissance and Pre-Raphaelite master painters. His re-creation of the Ophelia painting shows a young girl on her walk home coming back from a rave and falling into a slippery canal area in an desolate industrialized area.The Walk Home – Tom Hunter

Ophelia 1851-2 Sir John Everett Millais

                        Unheralded Stories

Unheralded Stories by Tom Hunter is a series of photographs which depict the folklore and myths that were built up around his community and surroundings in Hackney over the past twenty-five years. The photographs reference historical tableaux paintings to create striking mythical images which celebrate life by transforming the ordinary into the extraordinary. There are 10 photos in this series, these are the ones I am drawn to the most.

In Anchor and Hope, 2009. It is clear to see the reference from Andrew Wyeth’s Christina’s World, 1948 it depicts a memory of pitched battles with the council as squatters organized a self-supporting community in a Clapton estate bordering Springfield Park.

Christina’s World , Andrew Wyeth, 1938

Tom Hunter – Anchor and Hope Tom Hunter – Hackney CutTom Hunter – Death of Coltelli

Tom Hunter Videos

Tableaux Vivant

A tableau vivant (often shortened to tableau, plural: tableaux vivants), French for ‘living picture’, is a static scene containing one or more actors or models. They are stationary and silent, usually in costume, carefully posed, with props and/or scenery, and may be theatrically lit. It thus combines aspects of theatre and the visual arts.Staged reality is a main aspect of tableaux vivant in which the photographer captures an artificially constructed scene.

Tom Hunter

Tom Hunter (born 1965) is a London-based British artist working in photography and film. His photographs often reference and re imagine classical paintings. He studied at the London College of Printing, and was the first photographer to have a one-man show at the National Gallery of London.

He worked alongside friends, neighbours and family to recreate others work but in a much more modern way. For instance the picture on the left is not this own work it is in fact Johannes Vermeer artwork which entails a young girl standing by a window reading a love letter from her man who is far away, possibly at war. Hunter has recreated Vermeer’s work but with a modern update, the women isn’t holding a love letter she is holding an eviction notice. Tom has spent time with the people he takes pictures, for instance he lived on the same tower block as his women, he knew the problem she was going through as he was also being evicted. Even though the to photos are very similar, there are underlying differences, for instance the open window on the left and the light flooding through has connotations of hope and freedom as she is happy her lover is still alive, whereas on the right the window is closed this has connotations of being trapped with no hope for the future, now she is homeless with a baby. As well as that on the left there is a bowl of fruits yet on the right there is a baby, this is symbolic of the fact that the women on the right has a lot more to lose then the women on the left, fruits can be eaten but a baby can’t just be thrown away, it needs love and care and a roof over its head. There is a clear rule of thirds in this photo, this is symbolic of how the women on the left has a structured path in life, its all going in one direction, she can see her path clearly because soon the war will be over and she can marry the man she is in love with. Whereas the women on the right, her rule of thirds represents a sense of being trapped, she can’t escape this harsh cycle of council housing, she is stuck in this rule of thirds layout.

Recreation

The Raft of the Medusa Painting by Théodore Géricault

This painting was fairly hard to recreate considering it is located on a raft at sea and there are lots of people involved in the photo. We tried to modernize the photo as much as possible for instance we made sure ‘the north face jacket’ which was acting as a flag was clear too see, as the brands represent how society nowadays is materialist and how we need the best of the best not just unbranded, our whole world revolves around money and out doing each other. We were all at different levels in order to create a pyramid shape, a pyramid having connotations of strength, power and sturdiness. As well that it represents society and how those at the top thrive and survive but those ones at the bottom struggle and fail.

Tom Walker

I recreated this photo in school near the window by art. I had to select the window on Photoshop and decrease the exposure as the light coming through was over-exposed and too bright. I also increased the contrast to add depth and emphasis the light outside against the darkness inside. This symbolizes how the girl in the Tom Walker photo was exposed to the light and sunny world but under the surface the world was creating more troubles for her then happiness and the weather can’t change the fact that she is a single mum without a home. It’s as if the world is trying to sugarcoat all her worries with clear skies, but she can’t see its true beauty, the only thing she can see is the eviction letter she is holding.

Tom Walker

Tom Hunter- The Guardian Article

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/nov/04/photography-tom-hunter-best-shot

Case Study – Tom Hunter

Mood Board of favourite images :

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Who is Tom Hunter?

“Tom Hunter is Professor of Photography Research at the London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, graduated from the London College of Printing in 1994 with his work ‘The Ghetto’, which is now on permanent display at the Museum of London.
He studied for his MA at the Royal College of Art, where, in 1996, he was awarded the Photography Prize by Fuji Film for his series ‘Travelers’.
In 1998 ‘Woman Reading a Possession Order’ from his series ‘Persons Unknown’, won the John Kobal Photographic Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery.
In 1999 Tom’s series of the ‘Holly Street’ estate was exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery, London, while in 2000 his ‘Life and Death in Hackney’ series, went on show at the White Cube Gallery and the Manchester City Art Gallery.
In 2006 Tom became the only artist to have a solo photography show at the National Gallery for his series ‘Living in Hell and Other Stories’, which talked about Hackney and its relationship to its local paper.
His works are in many collections around the world including; MOMA in New York, Tate Britain, The V&A and the National Gallery in London, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, the Smithsonian in Washington and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In 2010 he was awarded Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society.”

– Words taken from Tom Hunter’s Website.

I have also come to learn that Tom Hunter lived abroad for a period of life. He was part of a group of people with the generic name “New Age Travelers”. In a series of photographs he captured images of the essence of the life he lived whilst travelling round Europe in motor homes with other people like himself, some families, some old married couples. He also captured images of the people he traveled with in a tableaux vivant stylist way which he has now published on his website, in books of his and in galleries across the UK.

Famous Projects:

  • Traveller Series
  • Le Crowbar
  • Figures in a Landscape
  • Solo show figures

Video and Website Links:

Homepage of his website:

Home

Tableaux

Tableau Vivant, French for living picture, is used to describe a painting or photograph in which characters are arranged for picturesque or dramatic effect and appear completely unaware of the existence of the viewer. It  is a static scene containing one or more actors or models. They are stationary and silent, usually in costumes, carefully posed, with props and scenery, and may be theatrically lit.

Examples Of Tableau Vivant Photographs

The Dining Room (Francis Place), 1997, Sarah Jone
The Sitting Room (Francis Place), 1997, Sarah Jones

The sitting room and the related photograph, the dining room, are the result of a project Jones began in 1996 with three teenage girls. She has photographed them in two of their parental homes. The images are carefully set up, the furniture was often rearranged and studio lights were used to enhance the staged atmosphere. The girls belong to wealthy upper-middle class families and their homes are ornamented with symbols of wealth and status. However, in Jones photographs they appear uncomfortable and bored despite their comfortable background.

Travellers Caught in a Sudden breeze at Ejiri, 1832, Katsushika Hokusai
A Sudden Gust of Wind, 1993, Jeff Wall

A sudden gust of wind  is a large colour photograph displayed in a light box. It shows a flat landscape in which four foreground figures are frozen as they are reacting to a sudden gust of wind. It is based on a woodcut called ‘Travellers caught in a sudden breeze at Ejiri’ (1832) from a famous portfolio called ‘The thirty-six views of fuji’, by the Japanese painter and printmaker Katsushika Hokusai. The result of the photograph taken by Jeff wall is a tableau which appears staged in the manner of a classical painting.

The last supper in the Bible
By David Lachapelle

David Lachapelle’s series of ‘Jesus is my homeboy’ is one of the most popular reinterpretations of the last supper in modern art. The image shows Jesus with 13 modern day people in a living room setting sitting around a table. the people in this photograph are not holding the same positions as the ones from the original painting but it is still obvious that this is the famous painting the last supper since they are sitting around the table reacting to Jesus.

Tableau portraits – Mind map

moodboard

Tableau photography is a static scene containing one or more models or actors. They are usually in costume and are planned out carefully to create a certain scene.

The term was first used in the eighteenth century by French philosopher Denis Diderot to describe paintings with this type of composition. Tableau paintings were natural and true to life, and had the effect of walling off the observer from the drama taking place, transfixing the viewer like never before.

In the 1860s, the concept of the tableau reached a crisis with Édouard Manet, who, in his desire to make paintings that were realistic rather than idealised, decisively rejected the concept of the tableau as suggested by Diderot, and painted his characters facing the viewer with a new vehemence that challenged the beholder.

In the 1970s, a group of ambitious young artists like Jeff Wall and Andreas Gursky began to make large format photographs that, like paintings, were designed to hang on a wall. As a result these photographers were compelled to engage with the very same issues revealing the continued relevance of the tableau in contemporary art.

Chiaroscuro & Rembrandt Lighting

Chiaroscuro Lighting:

Chiaroscuro is an Italian term which means light and dark and basically refers to the high contrast light/dark style used in Renaissance painting and later in photography and cinema. In modern terms Chiaroscuro means strong or bold contrasts between light and dark areas in the photograph. It is often used in studio portraits using single-point lighting to cast a shadow across one side of the subject. This means that Chiaroscuro Lighting creates a very low key image as there are a lot of dark areas on the picture.

Image result for chiaroscuro lighting photography

As you can see, half of the face in the image is completely enveloped in shadow, creating a very dark and mysterious atmosphere, similar to that of renaissance paintings of which the style is based.

Rembrandt Lighting:

Rembrandt lighting is a lighting technique that is used in studio portrait photography. It can be achieved using one light and a reflector, or two lights, and is popular because it is capable of producing images which appear both natural and compelling without needing too much equipment. The iconic sign for Rembrandt lighting is the triangular light/reflection next to the nose, under the eye, on the cheekbone usually on the side of the face that is darker or further away.

Image result for Rembrandt Lighting:

 

Studio Lighting

Using artificial lighting can offer many creative possibilities, I will explore…

  • size and shape of light – the larger area of light produced, the softer the shadows will be.
  • distance from subject to create hard / soft light – the further away the lights are from the subject, the softer the light will be, and vice versa.
  • angles and direction…high, low, side lighting – changes the direction of the shadows that are cast.
  • filtered light –
  • camera settings : WB / ISO / shutter speed etc – makes light cooler/warmer, changes the amount light hitting the sensor, amount of motion blur in the image.
  • reflectors and diffusers – diffusers make the light and shadows softer, reflectors are used to manipulate the direction of the light
  • key lighting, fill lighting, back lighting, 3 point lighting – key light- main lighting, fill – used to reduce contrast, back – used to make the subject a silhouette – 3 point – all of the above at once.
  • soft-boxes, umbrella lights, spot lights and floodlights – all help the photographer manipulate the light
  • chiaroscuro and Rembrandt lighting – used to create a high contrast with shadows on the subject.
  • high key and low key lighting techniques – high key – low contrast, overexposed, bright. low key – dark, high contrast, shadows.
  • backdrops and infinity curves – creates a clean backdrop for the photographer to use.
  • head shot – portrait that realistically demonstrates a person’s appearance.
  • half body shot – similar to a head shot, but focuses on the torso as well as the head and shoulders.
  • full body shot – picture of the whole body leaving equal space around the subject for balance