RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Visual’

Cool Visual Art images

10 Jun

A few nice visual art images I found:

DSC_5865
visual art
Image by asterix611
Public Art: Molly Dilworth’s "Cool Water, Hot Island" 2010 – Times Square, Manhattan NYC, – 07/28/10

DSC_6103
visual art
Image by asterix611
Public Art: Molly Dilworth’s "Cool Water, Hot Island" 2010 – Times Square, Manhattan NYC, – 07/28/10

 
Comments Off on Cool Visual Art images

Posted in Photographs

 

Nice Visual Art photos

20 May

Some cool visual art images:

Volume
visual art
Image by garryknight
The Volume art installation outside the Royal Festival Hall, London. "A luminous responsive installation using an array of light-emitting columns, Volume is a responsive installation that invites you to create a new performance and to consider your relationship with your fellow performers. Walk around inside the grid – your movements create patterns of light and sound that interact with those created by the people around you."

Still life with glass and peeled egg
visual art
Image by brtsergio
Egg-Art Fake on Roy Lichtenstein’s "Still life with glass and peeled lemon"

 
Comments Off on Nice Visual Art photos

Posted in Photographs

 

Cool Visual Art images

14 May

Check out these visual art images:

Vancouver Film School Summer Intensives 2010
visual art
Image by vancouverfilmschool
Experience VFS Summer Intensive

Find out more about VFS Summer Intensive programs at vfs.com/summerintensives

Vancouver Film School Summer Intensives 2010
visual art
Image by vancouverfilmschool
Experience VFS Summer Intensive

Find out more about VFS Summer Intensive programs at vfs.com/summerintensives

Vancouver Film School Summer Intensives 2010
visual art
Image by vancouverfilmschool
Experience VFS Summer Intensive

Find out more about VFS Summer Intensive programs at vfs.com/summerintensives

 
Comments Off on Cool Visual Art images

Posted in Photographs

 

Photography, Visual Magic

05 Apr

I’ve always been fascinated by the debate as to how truthful a photo or artist must be. This debate most often comes up when discussing post-processing with Photoshop (check out Is Digital Post-Production Killing Photography? Debunking the Purist Myth). Such debates are often centered around the core question, “Is photography the factual reproduction of a subject or the interpretation of that subject by the artist?” In a recent interview Teller, of Penn & Teller fame,  discusses the intellectual nature of magic in an interview at Smithsonianmag.com.  After reading the interview I couldn’t help but think how magic and photography, in the terms Teller speaks to (see below), share a common impact to the viewer. Photography like magic is a playground for the intellect where the viewer must both have suspension of disbelieve, but also comfort with an experience of dissonance. Take a look at the quote below before I dive deeper into the topic…

How does magic fit in with other forms of performance, such as music or drama?
…magic goes straight to the brain; its essence is intellectual.

What do you mean by intellectual?
The most important decision anyone makes in any situation is “Where do I put the dividing line between what’s in my head and what’s out there? Where does make-believe leave off and reality begin?” That’s the first job your intellect needs to do before you can act in the real world.

If you can’t distinguish reality from make-believe—if you’re at a stoplight and you’re not sure whether the bus that’s coming toward your car is real or only in your head—you’re in big trouble. There aren’t many circumstances where this intellectual distinction isn’t critical.

One of those rare circumstances is when you’re watching magic. Magic is a playground for the intellect. At a magic show, you can watch a performer doing everything in his power to make a lie look real. You can even be taken in by it, and there’s no harm done. Very different from, say, the time-share salesman who fools you into squandering your savings, or the “trance channeler” who bilks the living by ravaging the memories of the dead.

In magic the outcome is healthy. There’s an explosion of pain/pleasure when what you see collides with what you know. It’s intense, though not altogether comfortable. Some people can’t stand it. They hate knowing their senses have fed them incorrect information. To enjoy magic, you must like dissonance.

In typical theater, an actor holds up a stick, and you make believe it’s a sword. In magic, that sword has to seem absolutely 100 percent real, even when it’s 100 percent fake. It has to draw blood. Theater is “willing suspension of disbelief.” Magic is unwilling suspension of disbelief.
– Teller

via Teller Speaks on the Enduring Appeal of Magic

Photography is a fascinating medium because unlike magic the aspect of photography most often seen is one where it portends to be factual, for the sake of news. Yet photography is in most every other niche anything but fact and is most often interpretation of fact if not fiction. Darkroom, digital darkroom effects  and even non-darkroom effects on some level always overlay the interpretation of the subject by the artist (photographer, photo stylist, touch-up artist, etc.). In each instance where someone’s interpretation is being overlaid onto the image we cross over into the world shared with magic.

Photography is both what we see and what we want to see. Where edits are made most convincingly viewers enjoy the “illusion” and overall experience all while their suspension of disbelief is maintained.  The end result being this relationship (what we see versus what we want to see) never creeps into conscious thought, but the moment something looks off it might as well be the same as if we found out how a magic trick is done. The magic is ruined when our experience of believing is disrupted. Some may even argue now that photo manipulation is so pervasive that viewers require even more convincing to first “believe” as opposed to first looking to see how the “magic trick” is done. Artistic interpretation via cloning out or moving elements of a scene, pumping up saturation, blending image to enhance dynamic range or focus, warping subjects, etc. are all creative options for artists and can now easily be applied in such a way that many viewers who love nature subjects will want to believe that nature can be so extra special and beautiful. The difference with magic is that the illusion becomes realized with in a short timeframe of the performance where as the illusion created by photography can be delayed for extended periods of time if not forever.

As I visit more and more online photo forums that tout the best photography on the web I see more and more heavily manipulated photos. It makes for great art, but I do wonder how many people are finding the photos so convincing that they think such scenes can actually be found as opposed to made. Will those interested in the outdoors for example be let down when they visit a location first seen online in a heavily manipulated photo that turns out to be impossible to witness firsthand, or will they be excited that they have an opportunity to make their own heavily manipulated photo? It will be interesting to see when outdoor photography enthusiasts begin to see the magic trick first and whether that will sour their enthusiasm to experience nature.

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Photography, Visual Magic

flattr this!



JMG-Galleries – Jim M. Goldstein Photography

 
Comments Off on Photography, Visual Magic

Posted in Equipment

 

Cool Visual Art images

01 Apr

A few nice visual art images I found:

Sculpture by Aurel Vlad
visual art
Image by cod_gabriel
Exhibited inside "Cuhnia" art gallery as "Gesture and truth" ("Gest si adevar").

 
Comments Off on Cool Visual Art images

Posted in Photographs

 

Cool Visual Art images

30 Mar

A few nice visual art images I found:

Sculpture by Aurel Vlad
visual art
Image by cod_gabriel
Exhibited in the "Cuhnia" art gallery, part of the "Gesture and Truth" ("Gest si adevar") exhibition.

AGCC Visual Arts Director Marshall Astor Places the Last Block – Allan Kaprow’s Fluids at Angels Gate
visual art
Image by Angels Gate
From the re-invention of Allan Kaprow’s Fluids in Angels Gate Park. April 27, 2008.

Photo by I.D.E.A.S. Club President Michele Hubacek.

 
Comments Off on Cool Visual Art images

Posted in Photographs

 

Cool Visual Art images

25 Mar

Check out these visual art images:

Green Star
visual art
Image by cybertoad
Art Car Museum

Vices & Virtues
visual art
Image by kbaird
Bruce Nauman’s neon art at UCSD.

 
Comments Off on Cool Visual Art images

Posted in Photographs

 

Nice Visual Art photos

22 Mar

A few nice visual art images I found:

Shapes
visual art
Image by Gangplank HQ
Gangplank Academy – April 19, 2011

‘Visual Communication through Sketching’ with Jeremie Lederman of Big Red Ape.

Getting started
visual art
Image by Gangplank HQ
Gangplank Academy – April 19, 2011

‘Visual Communication through Sketching’ with Jeremie Lederman of Big Red Ape.

 
Comments Off on Nice Visual Art photos

Posted in Photographs

 

” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “

16 Mar

A few nice visual art images I found:

” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “
visual art
Image by UggBoy?UggGirl [ PHOTO // WORLD // TRAVEL ]
=

THE LAST OF THE RED WINE (THE PREQUEL/SEQUEL)

“Oh come on Simon, he’s made some good projects. Remember the hedge fund he did at the ICA managed by monkeys? He earned two million pounds! Didn’t even have to pay the monkeys!…”

Early in 2011 an unlikely group of artists, comedians and writers worked together on The Last of the Red Wine, a radio sitcom set in the artworld. Used to being the subject of their own work, the collaborators instead cast themselves in a collective farce, written and performed in the course of one week.

The next instalment of the sitcom at Project Arts Centre, The Last of the Red Wine (the prequel/sequel), dissects the mix of people and personalities involved in the original project and examines the processes of self-representation in their individual practices. Presented as a selection of videos and installations, it reveals the further absurdities of art and the artworld, as experienced by serious artists with ridiculous ideas.

Location: Project Arts Centre, Dublin, Ireland

Camera: Leica Camera AG X1

=

” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “
visual art
Image by UggBoy?UggGirl [ PHOTO // WORLD // TRAVEL ]
=

THE LAST OF THE RED WINE (THE PREQUEL/SEQUEL)

“Oh come on Simon, he’s made some good projects. Remember the hedge fund he did at the ICA managed by monkeys? He earned two million pounds! Didn’t even have to pay the monkeys!…”

Early in 2011 an unlikely group of artists, comedians and writers worked together on The Last of the Red Wine, a radio sitcom set in the artworld. Used to being the subject of their own work, the collaborators instead cast themselves in a collective farce, written and performed in the course of one week.

The next instalment of the sitcom at Project Arts Centre, The Last of the Red Wine (the prequel/sequel), dissects the mix of people and personalities involved in the original project and examines the processes of self-representation in their individual practices. Presented as a selection of videos and installations, it reveals the further absurdities of art and the artworld, as experienced by serious artists with ridiculous ideas.

Location: Project Arts Centre, Dublin, Ireland

Camera: Leica Camera AG X1

=

 
Comments Off on ” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “

Posted in Photographs

 

” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “

05 Mar

Check out these visual art images:

” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “
visual art
Image by UggBoy?UggGirl [ PHOTO // WORLD // TRAVEL ]
=

THE LAST OF THE RED WINE (THE PREQUEL/SEQUEL)

“Oh come on Simon, he’s made some good projects. Remember the hedge fund he did at the ICA managed by monkeys? He earned two million pounds! Didn’t even have to pay the monkeys!…”

Early in 2011 an unlikely group of artists, comedians and writers worked together on The Last of the Red Wine, a radio sitcom set in the artworld. Used to being the subject of their own work, the collaborators instead cast themselves in a collective farce, written and performed in the course of one week.

The next instalment of the sitcom at Project Arts Centre, The Last of the Red Wine (the prequel/sequel), dissects the mix of people and personalities involved in the original project and examines the processes of self-representation in their individual practices. Presented as a selection of videos and installations, it reveals the further absurdities of art and the artworld, as experienced by serious artists with ridiculous ideas.

Location: Project Arts Centre, Dublin, Ireland

Camera: Leica Camera AG X1

=

” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “
visual art
Image by UggBoy?UggGirl [ PHOTO // WORLD // TRAVEL ]
=

THE LAST OF THE RED WINE (THE PREQUEL/SEQUEL)

“Oh come on Simon, he’s made some good projects. Remember the hedge fund he did at the ICA managed by monkeys? He earned two million pounds! Didn’t even have to pay the monkeys!…”

Early in 2011 an unlikely group of artists, comedians and writers worked together on The Last of the Red Wine, a radio sitcom set in the artworld. Used to being the subject of their own work, the collaborators instead cast themselves in a collective farce, written and performed in the course of one week.

The next instalment of the sitcom at Project Arts Centre, The Last of the Red Wine (the prequel/sequel), dissects the mix of people and personalities involved in the original project and examines the processes of self-representation in their individual practices. Presented as a selection of videos and installations, it reveals the further absurdities of art and the artworld, as experienced by serious artists with ridiculous ideas.

Location: Project Arts Centre, Dublin, Ireland

Camera: Leica Camera AG X1

=

 
Comments Off on ” Food For Thoughts, Delivered Through The Visual Arts “

Posted in Photographs