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Wednesday, February 25, 2015

17th Photo Assignment, Photo from Lens

Picture 5

This picture is the best and my favorite as well. I consider it to be my favorite because the eagle is my favorite bird and I love its representation of freedom, football is my favorite sport, and because I've experienced similar circumstances because I was on my 8th grade football team and the mascot stood through.

I feel like it is the best too. This is because of the symmetry in the photo (as the bird represents a border between the football players conversing), the lights perfectly representing the picture as it makes the eagle stand out even more and allows the field to be displayed with bright colors while the top is so dark (a kind of symmetry as well), and the perspective as it is taken from the mascot from the behind looking at the field, the players and the audience. The perspective, lights, and symmetry substantiates my argument for it being the best photo as well. 

Friday, February 20, 2015

15th Photo Assignment, Multimedia Fest Poster Part 2


Why is this poster good?

This poster is good because of the blend of concepts of music creation, graphic design, photography,video and animation. These are blended really nicely as they are coming out of a computer, accentuating the usefulness of ROP. The font is really nicely created and the background is really nicely done.

Why is it better than the last one?
The last one was really simple, it just showed four photos in rectangles. This was far more creative as the pictures came out from the animated laptop. The arrows showing them pop out show the many concepts of ROP far better than the older one. The font is more pretty and more spread out throughout the poster, keeping simplicity and improving design.

What did I do to create it?
I took a picture of a computer, animated it, resized everything and posted it on the psd file. I layered many things such as the 4 different pictures popping out and fixed the gradient for the background. I also used the distort feature on photoshop to put the image on the computer and used arrows and lines to connect the four pictures. Text was edited and font size and style was improved. 

Thursday, February 12, 2015

14th Photo Assignment, The Photo League Movie Monday Questions

1.            What was The Photo League's credo?
The credo of the Photo League was the belief of expressive power in documentary photography and a progressive alliance in the 1930s of socialist ideas and art.

2.            What organization did The Photo League separate from?
The Photo League separated from the Film and Photo League.

3.            What was the workshop?
The workshops were focused on learning to take good pictures and focus in photography.

4.            Who taught "the workshop?"
Sid Grossman

5.            If you were to devote one year of your life to one project, what project is worth your time and energy?
I would devote one year of my life towards programming an application to educate people how to code!

6.            What was The Harlem Document?
The Harlem Document was a set of photographs that portrayed Black America in cities and the cultural setting and types of people of Harlem during the 1930s.

7.            Who started The Harlem Document?
The Harlem Document was started by Aaron Siskind.

8.            A photographer discusses a photograph where "the children looked like they came out of a _______ painting. Who was the painter?
 Caravaggio

9.            Why did the photograph mentioned in #8 look like it was by the painter? 
The lighting of the photos looked similar to the paintings.

10.          Who was Lewis Hine? (name two significant contributions)
Lewis Wickes Hine was an American sociologist and photographer. His photographs were essential in creating the child labor laws in the United States. Hine also made "work portraits" that demonstrated the people's impact on industrialization and industry.

11.          Who was Weegee?
Weegee was Arthur Fellig, a photographer and photojournalist, who created black and white street photography.

12.          How did The League change when The Nazis took power?
The League changed when the Nazis took power because the influx of refugees came to the United States from Eastern Europe and created a diversity and wealth of pictures to accentuate the league's standing. However, as individuals, they suffered as they fought for rights in a prejudiced America.

13.          How did The League change during WWII?
The League changed because men went to war so more women got in the league and started leading the organization. 

14.          How did Siskind change after WWII?
Siskind changed from someone who focused on social issues and social documentation in his photography to someone who focused on abstraction.

15.          What was the Saturday Evening post?
The Saturday Evening Post is a bimonthly American magazine. It was published weekly under this title from 1897 until 1963.

 16.          Who was Barbara Morgan? What did she photograph?
Barbara Morgan was an American photographer best known for her depictions of modern dancers. She mainly photographed dancers and their styles. 

17.          What eventually undermined the Photo League?
The idea that the League was a front organization for the Communist Party undermined the Photo League.

 18.          What was the "Growing Menace" mentioned in the film?
The “growing menace” was facsim.

19.          Who agreed to serve as President when The League was under investigation?
Harry S. Truman

20.          What happened to the league?
The League disbanded in 1951.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Period 3 - Semester Final


1. My favorite photo from the Syria slideshow has to be Picture #4, a picture of a recently destroyed Palestinian Apartment Building. This photo is my favorite because it accurately shows the destruction of a living environment through smoke and rubble, accurately portrays despair and shock on residents and neighbors, and it resonates with me as I sympathize with both the plight of the Palestinians and Israelis.

2. The best photo from the same slideshow is #7, the one with numerous colored lights in the Nightfest show in Canberra. This photo is the best because of the stark difference between the dark background and light focus. It also has a element of balance with a cluster of lights in the middle and a few spread out at the end of the image. It stands out from the other pictures with its many elements of composition. With the symmetry of the lights in the middle, viewpoint from the acrobat looking up as he flicks the light in to the air, depth in the background of lights, and obvious use of color and patterns, it is my choice for the best picture in the slideshow.

3. My best work this semester is from my first photo assignment that indicated my first rule of composition. This picture was the best of the semester because it had many elements that made it unique. Firstly, it clearly demonstrated the rule of perspectives as it showed a remarkable viewpoint by varying the perspective of the photo by showing the basketball player from the underneath, instead of on the same angle. Secondly, it displayed action in the middle of a game very well. Lastly, it had a nice contrast of darkness at the top and light in the bottom. This was done to show that the players in the bottom were all part of the game, but the player at the top who was shooting the shot, would be the individual making an impact on the basket and was harder to look at than the people in the lower field of view.

4. My three rules of composition were the rule of perspectives, simplicity and filling the frame. 


A student concentrates on his laptop, hard at work while a student in the background works on the poster due in class the next day.


5. This photo clearly illustrates my rules of simplicity and perspective.

6. My photography teacher, Mr. Farley, has his own rules of composition. His first rule is to get close to the subject. He wants to interact with them, ease their minds and empathize with their views to take a picture that represents them in the way that they should be presented. 

7. There are many reasons working in groups for photography are beneficial. They allow members to check each others work to make sure everyone is working correctly, provide numerous new perspectives that can be added to the picture, understand aspects of photography that one individual may not know in order to teach them, help everyone take pictures and have represented subjects, and allow people to have fun and interact with people while taking pictures,

8. There are also many difficulties involved in working with photography groups. Groups can slow progress of an individual if one person is too slow or does not understand what works needs to be done, hurt feelings if pictures are criticized, cause arguments that make photos hard to get taken and processed, distract photographers from the final goal of a completed photo, and can be boring and tiring if group members do not find each other mentally stimulating or interesting.

9. My favorite work from another person in this class is unequivocally Hugh Smith's first daguerreotype image showing a student named Matt Saleem.

10. The master photographer that I studied was a man named Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre. He was one of the first photographers and had a significant contribution to photography with his innovative method of daguerreotype, the prevailing method to taking images of subjects throughout the 1800's.

11. Dorothea Lange's most popular photo is called the Migrant Mother taken in 1936 in Nipomo, California. At the time, she worked for the federal Resettlement Administration. 

12. Henry Luce was the creator and founder of Life Magazine and it began publishing on November 23, 1936. 

13. Robert Capa was the founding member of Magnum Photos in 1947.

14. Robert Capa took the picture of the Falling Soldier on September 5, 1936 in Spain during the Spanish Civil War.