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Posts Tagged ‘Artist’

Artist Rolf Sachs’ photo series inspired by train travel, embraces blur

21 Aug

sachs_3.jpg

Anyone who’s traveled by train has seen the landscape outside of their car moving by in a blur. While most of us turn our attention back to our reading material and mobile devices, artist Rolf Sachs’ finds inspiration. His photo series, called ‘Camera in Motion,’ aims to capture the effect of the blurred landscapes outside of his train traveling between Switzerland and Italy. The resulting images walk a line between landscape photography and surrealist art. Click through to see some of his work.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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3 Tips for Creating Outstanding Portraits, Inspired by the work of Dutch Artist Van Gogh

17 Jul

A Guest Post by Oded Wagenstein

Few months ago I visited the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC. Upon arriving there, I immediately ran to see the work of the artist who influenced me the most: Vincent Van Gogh; the artist who changed the way we look at color as a tool for telling stories; an artist who had nothing in his pockets but had a never-ending passion for creativity and innovation.

In this post I decided to share some work methods and tips that I have learned from the portraits of this great artist. Methods I TRY, just try, to apply in my work as well.

3 Things I learned about Portrait Photography from Vincent Van Gogh’s Work

Tip 1: Use Light as a Tool for Telling Stories in Your Portraits:

You can treat “light” in one of the two ways below:

  • Something that just illuminate your subjects. An existing fact, which you cannot control
  • A creative tool. Something to be aware of, as being aware of the lens or the camera you are using

Source of Inspiration

Notice how the light affects the story in this drawing of a Peasant from Nuenen.

Vincent van Gogh Head of a Young Peasant in a Peaked Cap

The choice to create the peasant’s portrait at night (or a dark room) under the pale light of a single bulb, which forms many shadows on his face, strengthens the dark feeling coming from this image- a feeling of a hard working man. You can imagine that creating the portrait of the same guy, in daylight, in an open space, would create a completely different story.

My Interpretation:

F11A3438
In this image of Apollo-mo, a 61 years old farmer and village shaman from the Akha community in Laos, I tried to create the same “hard working” feel as in the “Peasant from Nuenen”. I chose to capture Apollo indoor (keeping him also very compressed inside the frame) with this dark background and dramatic, single source light coming from his right side, creating very deep shadows on his face. Of course I could photograph Apollo at any other time: Laughing with his family and grandchildren, working under the soft light of the sunset and so on. Yet,I chose to show him as I perceived him – as a hard working man with a difficult life story.That’s exactly what I wanted the viewer to feel.

Tip 2: Harnessing the Power of Complementary Colors

Van Gogh’s use of color was groundbreaking and many books and theses already examined the issue in depth. What I would like to present here is a small fraction of his approach on color: Understanding the power of complementary colors.

You can think of the complementary colors (and this is going to be a very shallow way of putting it) as two colors, sitting side by side, and by doing so, creating a great impact on the viewers.

Color star en svg

Van Gogh often used complementary colors in his works. Green and red, orange and blue, purple and yellow – he’s done it all.

In my work, I try to keep this principle of complementary colors in mind.

Source of inspiration:

Van gogh

My interpretation:
Red and green or orange and blue are working together to create a stronger portrait.

Monk

Tip 3: The Power of the “Off Camera” Gaze

In Most portraits, either photographs or paintings, the person looks straight at the viewer. Van Gogh’s work taught me that sometimes, when a person is looking “off camera”, it can give my image some sort of natural feeling, sometimes melancholic, yet always powerful.

Source of inspiration:

409px Van Gogh 2

The artist made this painting during the last months of his life. And although the situation appears seemingly nice (woman standing in a field) the sadness and hardship is certainly present, mainly due to the off camera gaze.

My interpretation:
So when I want to convey a feeling of hardship or sadness I will try to capture my subject in an unguarded moment, looking off camera.

Woman in field A

This off course can be done only if you get a good relationship with your subject, enabling you to work in a close distance and still be “transparent”.

I will not tell the subject what to do (“now, look off-camera and act sexy”). I will just wait for the right time to click the shutter.

Conclusions

Using light as a creative tool: Try to match the story you want to tell to the light being used. One possibility is to control the light: flash, reflectors, etc. the more simple option is to just choose the right time to shoot. Dramatic story? Choose a time when there is a harsh or dramatic lighting situation. A story about the happy moments in life? Let your light to convey this feeling by working in a soft, full of color light, like in the golden time (before sunset or right after sunrise)

Watch for complementary colors: in order to create powerful portraits.

Think about the subject’s looking direction as a creative tool: Sometimes an off camera gaze can give your story outstanding emotional impact.

The story of Vincent van Gogh Is sour – sweet. On one hand, an artist whose paintings are known by everyone and sold today for millions of dollars. On the other hand, an artist who had a great financial and emotional struggle over his life-time.

Oded Wagenstein is a Travel photographer and writer. He is a regular contributor to the National Geographic Traveler magazine (Israeli Edition) and he is known for his intimate culture portraits. You can join his Portrait & Travel Photography blog and continue to discuss on travel and people photography and get more amazing tips!

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

3 Tips for Creating Outstanding Portraits, Inspired by the work of Dutch Artist Van Gogh


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Tag Clouds: Geek Street Artist Remakes Messy Graffiti

07 Jun

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

graffiti tag cloud project

To the uninitiated, used to seeing it but not to reading it, graffiti scrawl can seem illegible. In a play on both tagging and technology, this artist turns traditional tags into computer-style tag clouds, among other geeky street art projects.

graffiti geek tag clouds

Mathieu Tremblin could be criticized for stripping the soul out of the works he modifies, but that is too narrow a reading of his art. He is really not suggesting a better way to graffiti, just commenting on what is there, and making what is right before our eyes already a bit more visible.

graffiti getty images spoof

In another work, he spoofs the ubiquity of digital watermarks by photographing a physical equivalent straight-on. We are so used to seeing these as after-print overlays on pictures, it takes conscious effort to realize it is part of the actual landscape.

geek graffiti removal project

Then, a complete reversal but in much the same mindset: a series of images where he has digitally stripped out graffiti by overlaying patches of Photoshopped color. In this case, it takes some time to recognize this is not just another case of painted-over graffiti removal.

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Liu Bolin is Back: ‘Invisible Man’ Artist (Dis)Appears Again

08 Apr

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Photography & Video. ]

invisible liu bolin

The master of urban camouflage has returned, this time exhibiting his latest photographic wonders at the Galerie Paris-Beijing – as always, without the aid of Photoshop or any other post-editing processes.

invisible map and family

This time, Liu Bolin slips into in a range of familiarly public contexts, in front of iconic buildings and street graffiti … but now also sometimes with companions, or in strangely commercial settings, blending in with store shelves of stuffed animals, fresh vegetables and cell phones. His art is evolving its message.

invisible costume public spaces

It is worth noting that his intention is not to fully vanish into his surroundings, but, instead, to let them encompass him – the  trompe l’oeil is intentionally incomplete.

invisible camouflage commercial context

He is making visual statements about change, commercialization, and the sublimation of the individual to the role of context and process.

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Nikon D7000 – High-Wire Artist Philippe Petit – Above All

05 Feb

“There are no rules. There are no recipes.” – Philippe Petit World-renowned high-wire artist Philippe Petit rehearses his signature moves at SLAM in Brooklyn. Directed by Sandro Shot on Nikon D7000 in 1080p/24 Used Nikkor lenses: AF-S 14-24/2.8G, AF-S VR 18-105/3.5-5.6G, AF 20/2.8, AF-S 24/1.4G, AF 28/1.4, AF-S 50/1.4G, AF-S VR 70-200/2.8G II, AF-S 85/1.4G, AF-S VR 300/2.8G II, AF-S VR 400/2.8G Microphone: Rode ROSVM Stereo Videomic Photos of Philippe from the same shoot: nikonusa.com/?d7000 Music by J. Ralph Edited by The WhiteHouse Philippe Petit, universal poet laureate of the high wire was born in France and took his first steps on the wire at age 16. He learned everything by himself while being expelled from five different schools. Performing on five continents, he taught himself Spanish, German, Russian and English and developed a keen appreciation for architecture and engineering. Using his wire to extend the boundaries of theater, music, writing, poetry and drawing, he has become and inimitable High-Wire Artist.

 
 

Don’t Trip: 4 Dizzying Rooms by 1 Surrealist Spatial Artist

22 Dec

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Like some kind of strange spatial magician, Kyung Woo Han turns conventional furniture, fixtures, doors and windows into otherworldly scenes that call into question just how familiar we really are with such everyday objects.

Consider White Window, a deformed frame that pulls in from the edges, but when viewed through a fish-eye surveillance camera (also part of the installation) is corrected to look like the only straight-lined design in the space.

In Green House, a room is half-filled with faux water while suspended shapes of partial furniture float at eye level, appearing to be reflected at the point where surface meets air.

Other projects like Found House and Checkered Floor take normal objects, textures and materials out of context and distort them, making simple black-and-white patterns and portals between inside and outside seem strange aand surreal.


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Architecture Gone Wild: Surrealist Designs by Victor Enrich

Buildings split down the middle, sprout slides, bend over in strange ways and send stairs into the sky in these fantasy architectural designs by Victor Enrich.
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101 Dizzying Spiral Staircases & Twisted Architectural Art Photos

These 101 dizzy spirals may make you smile or they may induce vertigo, but here are the most impressive, most dizzying, spiraling staircases in the world.

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Public Camouflage: Make-Up Artist Makes Models Invisible

22 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Guerilla Ads & Marketing. ]

Illusion relies on expectation – we glance but only glimpse what is familiar and the rest blends neatly into the background, particularly as we go about our busy lives in a bustling urban center.

As nifty as these body-painted costumes by Carolyn Roper (via DailyMail) are, the reactions of passers by are the best part – a shocked bus rider or fruit-stand shopper caught in their moment of surprise by waiting photographers.

To complete the spectacle, every element is critical, from the lines of reflection on a vehicle to the details of fresh vegetables drawn on to carefully mimic tomatoes, beets, pumpkins and lettuce.

The stunts were a marketing move by Really TV for a CIA drama titled Covert Affairs – it is hard to say how well such guerrilla marketing campaigns translate to new viewers for television shows, but thanks to publishers picking up the story, well, surely a few of those spooked by these urban camouflaging antics will check out this show about spooks.


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Urban Camouflage: Liu Bolin, The Invisible Man

Chinese artist Liu Bolin painstakingly paints his subjects so that they seem to disappear into their surroundings in amazing urban camouflage photography.
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Urbex Camouflage: Hiding, Sneaking and Disguising During Urban Explorations

The ability to hide plain site can be a real advantage when exploring urban abandonments.
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Vixels — This Artist Will Turn You into a Pixel Person!

18 Oct

Normally, you don’t want your pixels to be seen.

You like the pristine, fine-grain look. But what if you went to the other extreme and really let your pixels show?

Vic Nguyen is taking commissions for turning your photos into awesome pixel portraits! His vixels, as they are called, are a little reminiscent of 8-bit Twitter avatars, but turned up a few degrees with way more detail.

Mustaches, beards, dimples, even your haircut are turned into exact pixel replicas.

So the next time someone tells you your pixels are showing, it’ll be a compliment!

Have Your Pixel Portrait Made from Photos [via Uppercase Magazine]

p.s. Hey, Hot Shot! has a photo competition with $ 15,000 in prizes and some pretty amazing exposure up for grabs. Deadline is 11/14, so get those hot shots in!

Related posts:

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  2. Embrace Your Inner Artist — How to Doodle on Your Photos and Bring Them To Life! Extra photos for bloggers: 1 2 3 Since the dawn…


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Artist Talk with Photographer Jessica Todd Harper

06 Oct

Google Tech Talks December, 12 2008 ABSTRACT Jessica Todd Harper makes otherworldly photographic portraits of families and individuals that bring to mind both the religious intensity of Northern Renaissance artists and the quiet eroticism and tenderness of Andrew Wyeth’s Helga pictures. She shoots film but works with the images in Photoshop, sometimes piecing together imagery much like a painter integrates drawings into a final painting. Her talk will address the technical side of her work as well the influence of iconic portraits from the history of Western Art. Harper’s images have been widely exhibited, and discussed in publications ranging from the The New Yorker to the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. A 2008 NY Photo Festival award winner, a 2008 Lucie Award winner, and a 2005 selection from Photo District News’ annual list of rising young stars to watch, Harper published her first book of photographs, Interior Exposure this year. Selected by O, The Oprah Magazine as a top book recommendation, Harper’s appeal extends beyond the New York art scene. Speaker: Jessica Todd Harper Harper teaches at Swarthmore College and The International Center of Photography. She is represented by Cohen Amador Gallery in New York.

crazy, this is being posted for educational purposes to inform you what’s going on all credit goes to CBS
Video Rating: 4 / 5