my best single objects in my opinion are these:
These are the best two single object edits i liked more because i like the colours in the baground and how the shade of the objects blend in so well.
my best single objects in my opinion are these:
These are the best two single object edits i liked more because i like the colours in the baground and how the shade of the objects blend in so well.
Emotional
The effect of this image makes me feel quite intimidated and devious 😈 . Its very rough and serious as there’s no natural objects in the scene, except for the subject. Also seen as gloomy, dark, uncomfortable, cold and more. He’s almost blocking the viewer away from the picture.
Visual
Cold blue colours, lots of industrial objects in background (a train factory). The subject sits in the bottom centre of the image sitting almost like he has authority over the factory. He’s giving an intimidating look, especially with the harsh shadows on his wrinkly face.
Technical
symmetry and balance. The 2 pillars add to this symmetry, and leads the eyes towards the subject. harsh lighting – not very conventional giving similar lighting to churches or cathedrals (very intimidating). perspective goes to end of factory, with the focus on the subject.
Conceptual
The idea behind the image was to show his views on people who helped the Nazis win the war. He presented this image in a dark and sinister way, perfectly portraying the man in the image.
Contextual
Alfred Krupp was a German industrialist who ran the Krupp empire, a major arms manufacturer during World War II. Convicted as a war criminal for his company’s use of slave labor, he was later pardoned. Despite his pardon, Krupp remained a controversial figure, and his reputation as a ruthless businessman and war profiteer followed him.
Newman, a renowned portrait photographer, initially refused to photograph Krupp due to his own Jewish heritage and Krupp’s dark past. However, he later changed his mind, deciding to use the portrait as a way to express his personal feelings toward Krupp. he later said after taking the photo that ‘shivers when down my spine’
An environmental portrait is a portrait taken in the subject’s usual environment, for example, in their home or place of work. These types of photographs can reveal things about the person photographed, such as where they feel the happiest or most content. Environmental portraits capture people in their natural environment rather than in a studio where photographed can be forced. This way the photos can almost tell a story of the subject since they’re being captured in their own, personal element.
Typology is a single photograph or more commonly a quantity of photographs that share a high level of consistency. The term was first used to describe a style of photography when Bern and Hilla began documenting dilapidated German industrial architecture in 1959. They described their subjects as ‘buildings where anonymity is accepted to be the style’. Every photograph was taken from the same angle, at approximately the same distance from the buildings.
Typographs links to environmental portraits as the photographs are all taken in a similar way, using the same techniques.