Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Final
Looking back on this past semester and the first eight digital images that I presented, I would like to think that my photographic “eye” has improved for the better. Bonnie Briant said it best in her article 100 Words: Bonnie Briant on a Deviated Reality, “the images are a record of what has past, the way the light felt, an afternoon, a room, or a face I might not see for a while, because in the end it does not matter what actually happened, only what I remembered.” The digital images that I chose to present then and what I am presenting to the class today hasn’t strayed very far from that sheer idea - a record of what has past, something how I remembered it. One thing that I challenged myself to do this semester was to break the barriers of just taking a photo of “memory” but rather how I see something at that given time or how I “see the world.” I thought a lot this semester about the things I saw and how I “saw” them, how I was a part of a bigger picture... the picture in this case would be life; how I fit into “life” and how I could portray it through my photos.
Monday, May 7, 2012
Week 12: Reading Quiz - Lux and Gutschow
-Reading Quiz-
How are Loretta Lux and Beate Gutschow using digital techniques to construct reality in their work? Answer for each artist.
Loretta Lux:
Loretta Lux uses digital techniques to construct reality to her work by using programs, like Photoshop, to construct images of "children who seem trapped between the 19th and 21st centuries, who don't exist except in the magical realm of art" (Woodward). She carefully scans her images and uses different backgrounds (her own and sometimes other artists' paintings), edits out "irrelevant details" such as "fireplaces, cats, toys -- until the children are settled in a neutral, dreamlike space" (Woodward).
Beate Gutschow:
Beate Gutschow uses digital techniques to construct reality to her work by "constructing" ideal landscape photos. She does this by scanning the pictures she takes with her 35-mm camera of different types of scenery and layers them together, piece by piece, tree by tree. Gutschow believes by doing this she is "referencing this tradition to highlight an idealized version of nature" (Gefter). Even though she is layering different objects together, Gutschow wants her landscape photos that she creates to be as real and natural looking as possible so it could look like a "ideal" landscape and not something that was constructed using her computer.
Beate Gutschow uses digital techniques to construct reality to her work by "constructing" ideal landscape photos. She does this by scanning the pictures she takes with her 35-mm camera of different types of scenery and layers them together, piece by piece, tree by tree. Gutschow believes by doing this she is "referencing this tradition to highlight an idealized version of nature" (Gefter). Even though she is layering different objects together, Gutschow wants her landscape photos that she creates to be as real and natural looking as possible so it could look like a "ideal" landscape and not something that was constructed using her computer.
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