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Photoshop Experimentation

EXPERIMENTING

This lesson I experimented with using Photoshop and a variety of different tools which altered the already abstract images to make them even more abstract. In each image I played around with changing the color balance and changing the hues of photos. I also explored using the magnetic lasso tool and what its capabilities it has in Photoshop. I used the crop tool in order to give interesting perspectives and cropping away unnecessary parts that did not add to the photo or disturbed it.

The end result of experimenting with Photoshop was a variety of very abstract and interesting photos which have become more unique and distinctive. They took the photos from being average to something that is more worth while looking at.

my first experimental photo, i only played around with the concept of changing the color hue and saturation, highlights and shadows, and exposure.
in this photo i changed the hue of the photo to a very warm pink and I also shifted the color balance to magenta.
This was my final photo I edited and changed. Here i experimented more with layers and adding extra abstract features to the photo.
Stage 1, cropping and adjusting tilt
Stage 2, shifting the color balance to pink on the photo and also increasing the exposure in order to brighten the colors.
Stage 3, using the magnetic lasso tool in order to trace around the painting and move it upwards. I added a bright orange into the backdrop which appears as I selected and moved the painting layer.

1st shoot contact sheet

For this photo shoot I focused on close up photography, using a contrast between a focused foreground and a blurred background and vice versa. Although there are exceptions, the majority of photos in this shoot are of man-made objects which are either very textured or stretch from the foreground to the background (e.g. pipes, mdf planks).

I will edit some of the photos by cropping, enhancing, gray scaling, etc. The contact sheet is just a guide for which photos I’m going to use and edit, and which ones I’m going to leave out.

I have annotated this contact sheet less than my previous one as this has a lot more photos, so going through every one would be tedious. So instead I have marked my favourite photos with a red line next to them, and marked photos which I need to crop with a purple box (indicating what area i need to crop).

Homework 1 – Paper photo shoot

A contact sheet can both be used for distinguishing between your good/bad photos and choosing which ones to use/ edit, or be used as a finished photo. This is because of the image selecting process being used.

Here I have used green to mark photos which I am going to use, red to mark photos which I am going to discard, purple for the area of a photo I will crop, and yellow for pictures which I am unsure about using.

For future projects I will crop and edit the images which I have chosen from the contact sheet, and potentially crop the contact sheet to show only a few photos, which I will annotate with a thick marker and use as a finished photo.

Abstract Paper Contact Sheet

 

I have selected a handful of images to see a comparison between the photographs I have taken. This lets me see which ones I think are good and which styles worked in the images. I have drawn something over some of the images to remind myself of what is happening, if I liked the image and if I would want to edit in the image in various ways such as cropping or by making some of the colours stand out more.

Claude Cahun and Clare Rae Exhibition Analysis

The exhibition showed the different ways that Australian photographer Clare Rae, the resident artist in Jersey, responded to the work of Claude Cahun, a French photographer who specialized in creating surreal self portraits, which often focused on topics such as gender and identity. The exhibition made it easy to compare the two artists work, and the influence that Rae took from Cahun was made obvious. Both Cahun and Rae have presented their photographs using black and white contrasting colour themes, which is the most obvious similarity between the two artists work.

The following example is of a photograph taken by Cahun. This photograph explores the theme of identity, as the hands reaching out from the stone allow the viewer to question who the hands belong to, and so the missing identity of the subject makes the photograph more thought provoking. The use of the gesture the hands are making displays an emotion, but that emotion cannot be immediately recognised due to the lack of any other body parts that would usually be used to judge the emotions of a person. An unusual camera angle (facing slightly upwards) has also been used to add to the abstract and surreal theme of the photograph as a whole. In this image, Cahun has removed the identity of her subject, and has placed it in a surreal, abstract location in order to make her

The following image was taken by Clare Rae, and was directly influenced by the photograph above taken by Cahun. For this image, Rae has been inspired by Cahoons theme of identity, and has responded by creating a photograph of a human arm in an abstract and surreal location (behind a stone). For this image, Rae has placed the subject (the arm) coming out from behind the rock. This makes the  viewer question the emotions and motives behind the positioning of the arm, in the same way that the open gesture of the arms in Cahun’s work makes the viewer question the emotions that the subject is showing. Because the viewer of Rae’s work has no way to know why the arm seems to be coming out from behind the rock, they are left to wonder the identity of the subject, and so Cahun’s abstract and surreal style of photography can be seen to influence Rae’s.

The way the exhibition was organised allowed for the viewer to clearly see the similarities and differences between the two artists, by placing their work in two separate but connected rooms. The exhibition provided a wide range of both Cahun and Rae’s work, so that the way that Rae had been influenced by Cahun could clearly be seen in multiple pieces of work. The exhibition was organised and presented well, and showed the work of both artists using a simple and effective layout.

Homework 2 – CCA gallery visit

This photo is one of my favourites as it uses a variety of gradients, bold shapes and colours, as well sharp edges of the shapes in the foreground.