Sunday, March 27, 2011

Blog 23

1.       In what ways do you “construct” your identity? In what ways do you “perform” in your daily life?
The ways in which I construct my identity is to not be public with my emotional state outside my close circle of family and friends.  I try to maintain a positive and helpful attitude when I’m around others, often times ‘performing’ because I am dealing with personal issues that don’t always allow me to feel the way I used to.
2. Describe some ways in which your personal culture and social environments are “constructed”.
Some of the ways in which I construct my personal culture at this time is through photography, by attempting to look at common everyday items and try to find visual interest in them to share in my pictures.  Additionally I try to listen to music that is different from my usual genre.  Observing art and different types of movies, trying to broaden myself culturally.  My social environments consist of peaceful surroundings, staying away from those who cause friction or have angry temperaments.  I don’t attend events that are violent such as wrestling or boxing and when I go to the movies they are generally lighthearted and provide a positive message.
3. Describe some ways in which your physical environment/space is “constructed”.
I have created an environment that is calm, comfortable and safe.  I have purchased furniture that is soft and welcoming.  I wear clothes that are comfortable as opposed to fashionable and dress up only when necessary, unlike the 25 years I worked in an office.  My world has become one of peace and tranquility as often as possible.
4. In your daily life, what would you consider to be “real” and what would you consider to be “constructed/fabricated”?
The part of my life that is real is the fact that I lost my job after 23 years, recently divorced and purchased my own home.  What feels constructed is my financial stability and appearing to be okay to the outside world when I am working through the fallout of the previous year and all that entails.
5. Describe a narrative tableaux that you might create to be captured by a photograph. A narrative tableaux can be defined as “Several human actors play out scenes from everyday life, history, myth or the fantasy of the direction artist” ( Constructed Realities: The Art of Staged Photography Edited by Michael Kohler , 34).
I would create a photograph using models in an art class.  They would all be painting at easels and there would be a nude model posing at the front of the class.  Some artists would be covered in paint, on their faces and smocks while others would look baffled and overwhelmed with the project.  Other painters would have smug looks on their face as if their work was superior to those around them.  It would be a scene of contradictions with the calmness of the model who is posing and very relaxed.
6. Describe an idea for a photograph that includes a miniature stage or still life. A description of such an image is “The tableaux reconstructs events as in the narrative tableaux, but in miniaturized format, using dolls and other toy objects” (Kohler, 34).
Since I am leaving for Florida in 3 days I would create a photo using a shoe box, sand, small palm trees, a chaise lounge and a doll representing me, lounging and living the good life.  I would paint a picture of the ocean on the back of the box with windsurfers and choppy waves and sun reflecting off the water.  It would feel fresh and reviving and would put the observer in a happy state of mind.

Blog 22: The making of The Unfortunate Moment of Misunderstanding.

This short film showed what can be achieved by combining photography and technology, using Computer Generated Imagery.  Jim Fiscus had an idea in his mind about an old man who had known love and still wanted it but felt too old so built his ideal woman.  Jim wanted to create a story through photography utilizing 3D to make the story more realistic.
He contacted a CGI company to work with him on the project and together they created a one of a kind photo.  Real models/actors would be used in the photo shoot then changed using 3D technology for the finished product.
The first step was for the technology team to build a full size set that would be used for the photos. They then created 3D measurements so when the models posed for the shots they could be placed precisely where the CGI had positioned them.  Once Jim received the specifics, he took the photographs and then returned the pictures to the technology team where they changed the actor/models arms and legs to puppet like hinges and other body parts. 
This project took a large team to complete and many back and forth efforts between the photographer and 3D specialists.   When completed it appeared as a unique story compiled within a photograph.  The owner of the company stated that this “Photography Print” will become much more popular in the future as photographers begin utilizing technology in their creations.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Monday, March 21, 2011

Written assignment 4a Popular Media/Culture

This assignment caused me a great deal of stress because I couldn't quite grasp an image or images that I wanted to convey.  My first thought was of media pertaining to all of the businesses we see daily.  I made a collage of different places to eat, shop and items we use daily.  It didn't turn out like I had seen it in my mind's eye but I feel it conveys my idea.  I then was drawn to the idea of a photobooth strip so asked my daughter and her boyfriend to pose for me so I could create a group of pictures.  My models did a great job and after speaking to Sarah, I learned how to actually make the picture in Photoshop instead of cut/paste and Microsoft Picture It!  After seeing the pictures of the kids and their bright smiles I then decided to make a billboard promoting good dental hygiene.  It was a fun creation but tested my Photoshop skills again in trying to clear the original billboard to add the photos.
In my second set of pictures I got some creativity and shot pictures of the capitol building in downtown Lansing, the main street, Washington Square as well as some great shots of the architecture that I have walked by for 30 years but not really paid attention to.  Including the walk sign, we see it but don't really notice it.
I inadvertently came upon a couple taking photos of the Capitol and as you can see in the first shot, a girl in pink was just walking along.  As she got closer to the photographer she stopped and struck a pose.  In the second picture you can see the wife/girlfriend looking at her partner as if she wonders what he's up to.  The third shot is of the girl in pink posing for these two unknown people and the girlfriend laughing out loud.  It was a spontaneous action taken by three random people and I caught it in the shots without realizing it until I downloaded the pictures.  While I saw the girl pose, I didn't realize its implications until revisiting the shots. 
Lastly, I have been very fortunate to have had numerous visits inside the Capitol, my most important memory was when I was able to take my children to the very top of the building where the thin vertical windows are.  The view from there is incredible and it was an extraordinary experience.  Additionally I am on a committee that organizes an annual Candlelight Vigil for crime victims in the rotunda of the Capitol, I have been on the committee for 10 years and attended the vigil for 20.  It has many poignant and heartbreaking memories for me so I felt that it portrays a part of who I am.  I created the billboard ad for Lansing using the Capitol building because it plays such a large part of the history and heritage of the city and it encompasses my dedication and compassion to victims that I worked with for 20 years.

Written assignment 4b Popular Media/Culture - Review and critique of photos

My critique was limited because I wasn't prepared with the first half of photos so they only reviewed the 2nd half of my shots.  The picture of the window at the bank was well received because of the architecture used many years ago when it was built. They liked the angle of the shot as well as placement of the camera. 
The collage picture of the woman posing for strangers at the Capitol was entertaining, hard for most to imagine just stopping and getting into someone's picture. 
I feel that I improved the billboard photo by using a white board instead of one with 2 colors.  I think it was a good photograph but didn't create much interest or enthusiasm.
Again I don't feel that I was as creative as I could have been with this assignment.

Assignment 4b - Popular Media/Culture

Surprise visitor in the photo!

Everyday life we don't notice.

Billboard ad for Lansing

Architecture downtown

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Recreation 4

My recreation is of a local billboard/sign.  The original is offering housing at an apartment complex and I created a billboard for dental health using my daughter and her boyfriend, it could also be an endorsement for braces! 

Assignment 4a - Popular Media/Culture

Photobooth
America Today - Diversity
Family and travel

Monday, March 7, 2011

Written assignment 3b - Place

Interpretation and evaluation – Since I wasn’t feeling very creative for the critique I put out 3 photos of the sunset.  I am disappointed in myself for not printing a greater variety of the shots I took.  The critique was helpful to enhance the idea of the pictures.  Regarding the large sunset picture it was suggested that I add text to give it a different feel or provide more interest.  The bus photo was well received but it was agreed that it would have been more effective if I  made it larger, showing the reflection of the tree and lights.  I had lightened the blue but when it was printed came out dark like the photo originally was shot.  After printing it was dark once again.  Comments were made to leave the blue as it provided a nice perspective to the picture. 
Regarding the picture of Eastwood I decided to add in place of the other sunset because I am apparently not feeling so mellow today, and thought it would be more interesting to the viewer~ 

Written Assignment 3a - Place


This assignment was an interesting project because we were to photograph ‘place’.  That can be interpreted in numerous ways.  For this project I shot a number of pictures of the sunset in the countryside.  This time of day has always been my favorite and the softness of the light and beauty of the landscape is one of my favorite pictures to shoot.  It brings me an inner peace and as I explained to class a sense of freedom since I lived with someone who didn’t care for my sunset photos!  By changing one of the photos to black and white it gives a different perspective of what we normally see at that time of day and it appears surreal without the color.  Place to me in the sunset photo is tranquility.  Another set of shots I took was at Eastwood Shopping Center after it had closed and on a night where most people were home in front of a roaring fire instead of driving around taking pictures.  Without people in the shot it gives the picture a lonely feel while at the same time illustrating beauty of the quietness.  It was a perspective that isn’t usually seen in that area.  I appreciated the carnival feeling with the string of lights that flowed with the lamp posts going in an opposite direction.  The picture of the bus shows an everyday item with a different view.  The reflection of the lights and tree bouncing off the bus makes it look as if it is a whole picture rather than a reflection.  The blue lighting softens the idea of the hard metal vehicle. 

Historical Photographer - Lee Miller

http://www.leemiller.co.uk/images/self.jpg

http://www.leemiller.co.uk/images/photos/large/114.jpg 1937 - Eileen Agar’s shadow on the Royal Pavilion Brighton, England (Portrait series)
http://www.leemiller.co.uk/images/photos/large/1058.jpg 1937 - Pablo Picasso, Hotel vaste Horizon, Mougins, France (Portrait series)
http://www.leemiller.co.uk/images/photos/large/76.jpg 1933 –  Scent Bottles, New York, NY (New York series)
http://www.leemiller.co.uk/images/photos/large/48.jpg 1930 – Charlie Chaplin, Paris, France (Paris series)

Lee Miller was born in 1907 in Poughkeepsie, New York USA and began her career as a model for famous photographers of the day such as Edward Steichen, Hoyningen-Huene and Arnold Genthe.

In March, 1929 she was the first ‘real’ person to pose for Kotex pads.  The same year she also went to Paris and opened her own studio working with well-known photographer Man Ray.  Her work became known as a portraitist and fashion photographer but the work she is best known for is the surreal photos in the Liberation of Paris, Hitler’s house burning the night the Germans surrender, Pablo Picasso and those taken during World War II. Her photos were intense, descriptive and often times disturbing. 

She returned to New York in 1932 and opened another studio and ran that for 2 years before marrying Aziz Eloui Bey, an Egyptian businessman.  At that time she went to Cairo Egypt and became interested in the deserts and villages of the area so began taking pictures of those areas.  She traveled to Paris in 1937 and met her second husband, Roland Penrose, a Surrealist artist.  They traveled to Romania and Greece and then went to London in 1939 as a freelance photographer for Vogue just prior to World War II breaking out. 

She was the only female photo-journalist to cover the war in Europe.  In 1944 she became a correspondent for the US Army and along with David E. Scherman, (a Time Life photographer), and together they ‘followed the US troops on D-Day + 20’.  During this time she witnessed many world events including; “the siege of St Malo, the Liberation of Paris, the fighting in Luxembourg and Alsace, the Russian/American link up at Torgau, the liberation of Buchenwald and Dachau”, as well as photos of peasants in post war Hungary, dying children in Vienna and the execution of a prime minister.

She worked for 2 years after the war for Vogue photographing fashion and models.  Her portraits of Picasso and other famous artists are believed to be some of the most powerful photos ever taken of the artists.  She is remembered mostly for her “witty Surrealist images which permeate all her work”.  Lee Miller died at Farley Farm House in 1977.

Recreation Assignment R04 - Popular Media Semi-Contemporary Photographer

David Levinthal – Semi-contemporary photographer

http://www.slate.com/id/3469/ 

David Levinthal was born in San Francisco, California in 1949.  I was drawn to his work because of the lighting he used as well as the creative way in which he used toys to create the photographs.  Additionally, I was inspired by Tori’s rendition of the ‘cows’ and from her pictures realized there is another way to look at photography other than just sunsets and portraits. 
He obtained a degree in Management Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1981, an MFA in Photography from Yale University in 1973 a Bachelor’s of Art from Stanford University in 1970.  He was also awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in 1995 and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in 1990-1991.[1]

His photographs were created utilizing mostly large-format Polaroid photography.  He created the pictures using aspects of American culture, Barbie, hockey, baseball, the Wild West and X-rated figurines.  He has an excellent talent for creating the environment for the toys to make them appear to be real people, making the photo surreal yet realistic. 

He uses shoeboxes, cardboard, and foam core to create the tiny offices, hotel rooms, war zones and old west to create an intimacy in small spaces, exploring different emotions and creating voyeuristic aspects to his work.  His biography indicates that his work is inspired by his experiences as a child and pop culture of that time.

Levinthal indicates that "Toys are intriguing, and I want to see what I can do with them. On a deeper level, they represent one way that society socializes its young." Furthermore, Levinthal is aware of the power of toys: “Ever since I began working with toys, I have been intrigued with the idea that these seemingly benign objects could take on such incredible power and personality simply by the way they were photographed. I began to realize that by carefully selecting the depth of field and making it narrow, I could create a sense of movement and reality that was in fact not there.”

His creation of  Blackface caused such a reaction and controversy at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia that the exhibition was canceled before it had an opportunity to open.



The Passion – 2005                       Blackface -1995-98
Mein Kampf 1993-94                     Barbie -  1998-99

Sunday, March 6, 2011

BW Photo MSU STA491: Popular Media Photographer Presentations (Semi-Con...

BW Photo MSU STA491: Popular Media Photographer Presentations (Semi-Con...: "Pick one photographer from the “Semi-Contemporary Photographers” list on the Recreation 04 handout. Add a comment to this blog entry with th..."