Sunday, December 8, 2013

Abbey Reddington- The Wade Brothers




David Lyndsey Wade and his brother Lyndon Wad, have received worldwide reclaim for their work ranging from McDonalds to Maxim Magazine. I stumbled upon the work by accident and wasn't as much fascinated by the quality of the work, but more the ambiguity of it. I flipped form images that promoted athleticism (Gatorade,) to fashion models clothed in my favorite designers (Alice and Olivia,) to even documenting a battlefield explosion titled "Baghdad in the U.K." Although a lot of the brothers work is kind of commercial, it's not complete visual garbage, in fact they manage to take an artistic stance on commercial photography. That alone, gives reason to be recognized.

The images are crisp and all share a bluish tone. The one thing I would critique with the brothers work, is that some of the images could have been shifted to get a more satisfying composition. Something that baffles me is how two people could work together to get one complete image. That is the main reason I chose to look further into the work. I am fascinated how artists can incorporate their ideas into one product, successfully.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Tim Walker- Shannon Roulet





Tim Walker is a british fashion photographer. He is also involved in film and dabbles in that and isn't afraid to use motion in his photographs. He takes a lot of portraits of famous people and always puts them in weird wardrobes/props, etc.
I think his work is very consistant and I like what he chooses to do with background and scenery. I feel like a lot of his peices are fantasy and almost horror inspired and I think this adds a really nice layer to them. His work is dark while also being whimsical and each photo conveys a very strong emotion.

I thought this posted of sunday but i guess my computer fudged up?

http://timwalkerphotography.com/portraits.php

Alex Kreher: Sofie Knijff - Translations

Belgian-born photographer Sofie Knijff has spent the last three years traveling the world making portraits of children and asking them one question: what do you want to be when you grow up?
She returned with beautiful portraits of rural children around the world.
With no limits, these children started to dream big and dress up as their dream profession. Knijff photographed each child in front of a similar, monotone backdrop which allows the children to separate themselves from their current world and leave the possibility open that this might actually become true.
Paired with photos of empty places that these children grow up in, on gets the inside / outside view and it is hard not to wonder what will become of childhood dreams and expectations.

http://www.sofieknijff.nl/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=57&Itemid=54







Ellen Von Unwerth -Virginia

Ellen Von Unwerth started her career as a model, before she moved behind the camera. Ellen’s work centralizes itself around fashion culture and aesthetic; heavily effecting her technique. All of her shots are glamorous: lit with harsh light and high contrast. Unwerth’s work is a delightful blend of editorial and theater. Her images set themselves apart in the fashion world with a story, emotion, and idea behind each striking image.



A theme that stretches across the board of Ellen’s work is the hyper-sexualization of females. Ellen seems to alternate back and forth between the conforming “sexy” photos that are commonly found in the fashion world, and pictures that use blatant sexuality to call the objectification of women in fashion into question.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Taylor Stevenson: Rob Greer


Greer uses fine art nude photography celebrates the human form and uses the contrasting nature of light and darkness to accentuate the positive in every subject–regardless of height, weight, gender, or body shape. With this approach, he strives to reveal the beauty he sees in everyone. As you view this body of images, it’s important to note that his fine art style is typically more forgiving than the images styled from the duplicated poses. The reboot of the original session was done as a form of documentation; those poses aren't intended to beautify features as is sometimes my seem in nude photography. 






Gene Kim: Myoung Ho Lee



Receiving his BFA, MFA, and Ph.D from the famed Joong-Ang University in the department of photography, South Korean artist Myoung Ho Lee puts another twist to our concept of what "art" is.  A tree is simply a tree, but when a canvas is laid behind it, one simply forgets that it's a part of nature and admires the tree as if in a gallery.  The isolated figure stands out against the backdrop, further bringing out the shape and contrasting it against the background.

The distance and the framing of each photo is just about identical, as Lee chose to place the horizon just a little below the midpoint, while the branches of the trees come up and even out the balance within the frame.  For example, in the first photo, while the sky is mildly blue and gray, the green in the leaves of the tree reflects the green of the grass, setting a subtle weight shift while maintaining a balance.

http://www.yossimilo.com/artists/myou_ho_lee/

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Cig Harvey - Liesa Collins




Cig Harvey is an England-born photographer now based out of Maine. She was an assistant professor at the Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University for ten years but then took a gap to do more things for herself. Her photography has been exhibited all over the world. She has been known to bring optimism to all that she does and her visual storytelling has caught the eyes of a wide audience. She teaches workshops and performs speeches all over the world.  She primarily shoots medium format with a Hasselblad 503 and sticks with emotional scenarios with portraits of youth and herself paired with stylized composition. Her colors are always very vibrant and complimentary. 
Cig Harvey shoots the way she does because she likes to make pictures and create environments that bring her a sense of happiness. She used to participate in a lot of self-portraiture, but over the last seven years she has gone from that onto other subjects. One could conclude that she has found what she needed in herself to not have to photograph it anymore. Storytelling has always been an inspirational to her within her photography and the subject matter and color concern are devices in that storytelling. 

Haruhiko Kawaguchi - Natalie Kohlhepp

Haruhiko Kawaguchi's series "Fresh Love" is so fascinating to me. She takes some of the most unique photographs of couples that she meets in nightclubs in Tokyo. On a white kitchen floor she places the couples into  clear plastic bags meant to hold cushions, blankets, ect., and vacuums out the air. She has maybe 20 seconds to take the image before her subjects need to breath again.The end result are these amazing photographs of couples made to look like pieces of meat that you can buy at the grocery store. 
I think these are completely scary and fascinating. I don't believe that I could do something like this, or even be a subject for Haruhiko Kawaguchi; I would be far too scared of messing up and accidentally hurting/killing someone or being suffocated myself. I feel that her images bring that very visceral fear to her viewers and that is part of what makes her work so strong. 





Sarah Retchin: James Mollison


Mollison is a photographer who studied documentary photography, and is really passionate about the books he produces, but he also does commissioned and commercial work.
He currently lives in Italy. One of his first projects he started was a collection called “James and Other Apes,” in which he photographed dozens of gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans while using the aesthetic of the passport photograph. Something I found interesting about this project was that he decided not to use a long lens, and instead wanted to be more intimate with each primate, as he was struck by their facial similarity to our own and wanted to treat them with such respect. I seem to think of portraiture as more of an anthropological genre, but it’s clear that animals have just as much of an ability to express unique facial gestures as we do.
Another project he recently worked on is called “Where Children Sleep,” and it portrays various stories of children around the world, told through portraits and pictures of their bedrooms. Despite the collection including some photos of “needy children in the developing world,” he wanted it to be more about children from all types of situations and how each of their bedrooms reflect who they are.
“My projects are always series of images, and I think that individual pictures in a way don’t matter that much. It’s when you see a group of images that a passion emerges.”

I watched a portion of this interview of him, and it’s pretty interesting, so I’d recommend checking it out: http://www.vice.com/picture-perfect/james-mollison





Friday, November 29, 2013

Lexi Wilson- Holly Andres

Holly Andres uses photography to capture the complex aspects of childhood, the fleeting characteristics of memory, and female introspection. She doesn't shoot moments as they occur in real life, but carefully orchestrates a scene and shoots at the height of a dramatic instant, particularly before or after major event. For most of her pictures she uses an 8x10 large format camera to photograph these moments.

Andres uses her childhood memories and female experiences to create certain photographic narratives. Growing up in rural Montana being the youngest of ten siblings, these scenes usually take place in a domestic and suburban setting with children and young women as their main protagonists. Each photo is constructed to enact a specific moment and depict a psychological portrait. Many of her photographs resemble scenes from a Nancy Drew book.



Kevin Carter- Charlotte Laurance

Using a few different Google searches I came across Kevin Carter. Carter was a South African photojournalist and a part of The Bang Bang Club. The Bang Bang Club was a label primarily associated with four photographers active within the townships of South Africa between 1990 and 1994, during the transition from the apartheid system to government based on universal suffrage. In 1993, Carter received the Pulitzer Prize for his photograph that depicts the 1993 famine in Sudan. Unfortunately, Carter committed suicide in 1994 at the age of 33. The Bang Bang Club movie follows his journey (played by Taylor Kitsch). When Carter started in photography, he was photographing weekend sporting events, later he moved to Johannesburg to work for the Johannesburg Star in order to depict the horrors of the apartheid. "I was appalled at what they were doing. I was appalled at what I was doing. But then people started talking about those pictures... then I felt that maybe my actions hadn't been at all bad. Being a witness to something this horrible wasn't necessarily such a bad thing to do." The photo that won Carter then Pulitzer prize depicts a starving young girl trying to reach the feeding center when a vulture landed nearby behind her. Carter was told not to touch any of the children because of diseases that could be transmitted in the area. It was reported that after he made the photo, he waited 20 minutes for the vulture to leave, when it didn't, he chased it away. 



Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Gordon Parks- Cody Huff




  This week I’ve decided to write about photojournalist and film director Gordon Parks. Parks began practicing photography at the age of 25, and was soon making a living doing freelance photography. He worked for many different companies and magazines, but is most famous for his work in Life. Gordon Parks also directed several Hollywood films including the 1971 film Shaft.
            Parks’ work focused a lot of attention on the struggles of poverty in America and abroad. Parks was amazing at exploring a space with his camera. His work is incredibly narrative and typically elicits strong emotions in the viewer.  










          

Monday, November 25, 2013

Alex Kreher: Sebastian Bieniek - Doublefaced

These photos draw my attention and at the same time disconcert me. The German photographer Sebastian Bieniek created interesting and extraordinary portraits by disorienting the viewer by only showing one eye and drawing the rest to the side of the face. Through the perspective one gets the impression that they see a face but immediately realize something is off.




More photos: http://www.sebastianbieniek.com/

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Kristen Wrzesniewski- Shannon Roulet

  



  Kristen Wrzesniewski is a portraiture photographer who experiments heavily with double exposures, film, and heavy saturated colors. Wrzesniewski focuses mostly on people, and creates interesting portraits that tell stories and uses different techniques to develop moods within each photo.
    Wrzesniewski spends a lot of her work investigating relationships between people and their surroundings. She does this both through including two or more people in the photo, or overlaying an image of a flower(her flora/fauna set) etc, and creates a collaboration of the two images. I think that Kristen Wrzesniewski has a distinct style of portraits that resonates throughout all of her work, and makes original imagery.