Thursday 30 April 2015

Shadi Ghadirian

                                   Shadi Ghadirian
      

       
Ghadirian is best known her series of portraits called Like Every Day made between 2000 and 2001, in which she used tablecloths and strips of material draped over women, placing a household object: an iron, a grater, a broom- where the face should be, which raised issues about domestic drudgery and the cruel anonymity of many Iranian women. Some were mildly amusing, parodying universal stereotypes of females, from the shrewish mother in law to the doormat wife, using the utensils to represent well known characteristics.


Personally, i think that Shadi and her work are an inspiration to Iranian women as she states herself "being a women in Iran is hard". Her photographs cant for example, show a woman's hair, let alone physical contact with any man. Hotels don't give rooms to single women on work trips, and she does not drive alone. But Ghadirian still finds a balance that enables her to express herself while respecting the society in which she lives.


Aperture

                                                               Aperture
The aperture affects not only the amount of time required to take a photo, but also the depth of field within it. With a wide aperture (so a low number, like f/1.8) gives a shallow depth of field - sometimes less than a millimeter with a macro lens. Because a lot of light is reaching the sensor (be it film or digital), this allows for fast shutter speeds. With a narrow aperture (so a high number like f/22), the depth of field is much greater, which is useful for things like landscape photography - it will limit the amount of light reaching your sensor, so you will get slower shutter speeds, which makes a tripod handy.

Arnold Newman

Arnold Newman (1918-2006) 



Career information

Arnold Newman was an American photographer, noted for his environmental portraits of artists and politicians. He was also known for his carefully composed abstract still life images. Arnold Newman found his vision in the empathy he felt for artists and their work. Although he photographed many personalities, Marlene Dietrich, John F Kennedy, Harry S Truman, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Arthur Miller, Marilyn Monroe, Ronald Reagan, Mickey Mantle, and Audrey Hepburn he maintained that even if the subject is not known, or is already forgotten, the photograph itself must still excite and interest the viewer.
                                
Newman places the subject in a carefully controlled setting to capture the essence of an individual’s life and work. He normally captured his subjects in their most familiar surroundings with representative visual elements showing their professions and personalities. The composition of this image is showing Kennedy near enough centre of the photograph in front of the white house. The line of contrast is in the middle of his face and the rest of the image is shown to have a natural lighting.    


Thursday 19 March 2015

Jesper Molin 'Somebody or Nobody'





Jesper Molin is an internationally known Swedish photographer and was born in 1979, Halmstad.
He has a developed passion for photography into art in various projects. It all started back in 1989 when Jesper got a camera as a gift. Molin enjoyed playing with the idea of making a perfectly symmetrical face. He stated 'which side is worth a double?' in result to that he ended up creating two pictures of the two sides swapped to see which was more 'beautiful'.


I specifically like the way Molin interprets things with how only one side has to be beautiful and the other 'ugly'. I feel that his work is capable of being an inspiration on me and hes changed the way i perceive things completely. His work is interesting because he can make two different people out of one singular person.

Thursday 12 February 2015

Jesper Molin my own


 This image was influenced by the work of Jesper Molins 'Somebody or  nobody'
I created these images by using Photoshop to flip one side of her face horizontally over the other to make her face look perfectly symmetrical.