Thursday, 25 October 2012

Paul Harrison + John Wood

John Wood and Paul Harrison are a duo which do film based work.  They do small films in their studio which are done with whatever they can find or make which the human figure can fit in and interact with.  They have work in the tate modern called 'Twenty-six drawing and falling things', it’s a series of 26 videos based on the human figure interacting with everyday objects or architectural spaces.

 

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Triptych experiments

This a triptych i made of my dad doing movements while watching football.  I had the shutter speed to about 2.5 seconds to take these photos as the lighting wasn't that great.  I also put each photo into Photoshop and edited them with adding more contrast to them and also cropping them.

This is just me editing one of the photographs in Photoshop.

In this triptych of my father watching football I thought about how someone that loves football as much as my dad is so passive whilst watching the game so I looked up, John Goto who exagerates his images with the things he gets his actors to do, whilst the context being political and important.  I specifically looked at his crowd scene photographs, which are about the iraq war and politics, they have have also been very set up and made into a montage which makes them more jokey.

   Crowd scene 2
Crowd scene 1                                                      











These images in crowd scene 2 are gestures that John Goto found in newspapers that George W Bush did.


Here is an example of two.

In the Crowd scene 1 image John Goto got the actors to recreate the expressions of people tortured and suffering in iraq.

Here are some football crowds which show the exaggeration that people have at matches.

   


My idea to relate John Goto's work in my experiments I am thinking of looking up football celebrations by profesional football players and get a friend to recreate each celebration and put them in photoshop to create a montage.

 

Here I have my take on celbrations from profesional football players.  I have editted photos in Photoshop and created this montage over these photos.

 

Francis Bacon Triptych Research

The Irish-born artist Francis Bacon (1909–1992) painted 28 known triptychs between 1944 and 1986. He began to work in the format in the mid-1940s with a number of smaller scale formats before graduating in 1962 to large examples. He followed the larger style for 30 years, although he painted a number of smaller scale triptychs of friend's heads, and after the death of his former lover George Dyer in 1971, the three acclaimed "Black Triptychs".

File:Three Studies for a Crucifixion Francis Bacon 1962.jpg

Bacon was a highly mannered artist often preoccupied with forms, themes, images and modes of expression that he would rework for sustained periods, often across decades. When asked about his tendency for sequential paintings, he explained how, in his mind, images revealed themselves "in series. And I suppose I could go long beyond the triptych and do five or six together, but I find the triptych is a more balanced unit." His career began with the 1944 triptych Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, an instant critical and popular success. The format appealed to him; he said, "I see images in series", according to Bacon images suggested other images and series became his dominant motif. He moved past the triptych format, and from the late 40s to the late 50s produced works in series of up to 10 works, many of which rank amongst his finest, including his series of Popes, heads and men in suits.

Thursday, 18 October 2012

triptych experiments

With this image I used Ben as a model and by adjusting the shutter speed to 5 seconds.  I got him to move his head and try keep his body still in the first two images to get the effect of a distorted head but with a crisp clear body.  In the last Image I got him to move his arm up and down to get a sprt of effect that he has a wing.  I then put them in photoshop and changed the contrast and brightness to give them a more of a strong effect.

Thursday, 11 October 2012

Book Experiment

These experiments are all to do with books as books are what mainly the things that contain stories and information.  We use books to learn and that is how we have learned all of the things we know today.
 In this photograph the book is shown very crisp and clear and looks very pleasing to the eye.  The composition is very nice and different, also in this photo the women looks like she is actually there.


With this photo I experimented with the shutter speed and moving the pages to see what it would look like and how it would manipulate the image. Also the light in the women's face changed which gave it another quirky look.
With this image I also experimented with the shutter speed and the movement of the pages and also with placing my hand on the book to create like a layer effect.
This photo is yet again to do with shutter speed but with the flicking pages in the book to have another motion effect.
This image I had more edited as I flipped it and added some blur to it,  also this image I find very interesting because it is a tiny bit open and you can see like little snip-its of different stories which like makes you curious about the whole thing. 
This photo has a great composition as the book has not been perfectly placed yet is still pleasing to the eye.  It also has this very strange quirky image which has a story behind which is mistifying.