Waterfall

Waterfall
Gold Coast 2011

Saturday, 16 July 2011

Artist Statement

Artist statement

Everyday life, the shapes, lines and textures are the foundation of my portfolio. The simple things that are not so simple after all. In this portfolio of images I am exposing the simple things people would simply walk straight past, they are more complex then you may first think.
I decided to call my portfolio “Life’s simplest beauties” and it consists of a
mix of black and white and colour images.
All of my photos have been taken outdoors and they are all part of the themes of lines, shapes, objects and textures.

My original idea for the portfolio was to base it on black and white abstracted landscapes, but as I started taking photos it was hard to get the landscapes to come across as ‘abstracted’.  So then I moved towards the idea of shapes and lines, objects and textures both man-made and natural. This idea worked a lot better and photos started turning out more abstract. When I was taking the images I thought of the viewer and basically put myself in their shoes viewing my images and the aim was to have the viewers think ‘What is that’? I have done my job as an artist if this is what the viewers ask themselves.

I did very little editing to the images; I sharpened most of the photos and brightened or darkened them, cropped Number 4 8 and 10. I used the Vignette tool on some of my photos as well, Number 2 and 4.

My Abstract Portfolio - Life's simplest beauties


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Assignment Research - Ciro Totku


Ciro Totku
Totku was born in 1967 in Moscow. He is a Cambodia-based Russian photographer. There is really not very information on the Internet about Totku unfortunately.

Jihad
Phnom Penh, 2007
Latest Photos


This photo annoys me, because I cannot work out what it is. It looks like sand or mud and a sand dune, but the bottom part of the photo also looks like a blanket with a scary looking fish underneath it! I am not sure. I congratulate Ciro on this.

Since I don’t know what it is, it is hard to comment on what he might have used to create/manipulate this photo. It has no explanation of how he took any of his photos or what equipment he used to achieve the images he has.

Assignment Research - Mark Raymond Mason

Mark Raymond Mason
Mark Raymond’s pictures are quite abstracted. Pretty much all of his work is landscape. It’s all very vibrant and colourful, although I do love a nice black and white, I love colour in photographs, it makes me feel happy and I can more fully appreciate the scene they are capturing, it just feels more real to me. There is a lot of texture in his images, such as old peeling paint, burnt plaster and cracked soil. He has won two awards and had nine exhibitions, three of which have been solo exhibitions. Raymond’s work is very earthy, natural, it doesn’t look like there has been too much editing done to his images, except for maybe colour changes and the usual brightness/contrast, blur and sharpen.
 
Burnt Plaster, Paper
Calgary, AB
Urban Portfolio
This is a lot going on in this photo! Different colours and textures keeping you busy. This photo has quite a high level of abstraction. Raymond does not specify the brand or model of camera he uses but in the Q&A part of his website, he states that he has only recently started using digital cameras and up until 2010 most of his portfolios had been shot on film. I thought that was interesting. The lighting in the image is very natural and there are a lot of shapes and lines in the photo making it complex to view.

Assignment Research - Brett Weston


Brett Weston
Brett Weston’s photographs are also all black and white. Brett has 14 different portfolios and has had four exhibitions. Weston was born in 1911 in Los Angeles. His father was also a photographer, so it obviously runs in the family! At the age of thirteen his dad pulled him out of school and took him to Mexico and made him his apprentice. He died in 1993 in Hawaii. It does not say on the website, but I am quite sure that Weston used film camera’s to shoot his work.




Reeds
Japan, 1970
Japan Portfolio

This photo is awesome; it doesn’t look like real scenery at all! When I first saw this photo I thought, ‘what is that’?! And I believe if you ask that question when viewing a photo, it is most definitely abstract. The black lines look like shapes that have just been painted on. The light in the photo looks natural, but I think it may have been altered slightly to make it a bit brighter because the water is not transparent, so the sun is obviously reflecting off it. The picture looks quite soft. I do really like this photo, it’s very cool. As I said before, it looks like a painting or a drawing.

Assignment Research - Michael Kenna


Michael Kenna
One thing I noticed about Michael Kenna’s work is that all of his photographs are in black and white. He has also been to a lot of places in the world! Michael Kenna was born in England in 1953 and has won several awards throughout his photography life and held numerous exhibitions, both one- person and group exhibitions. I really like his style, it’s edgy and stunning. I am guessing he uses long shutter exposures to achieve his specific look. Since the photos are black and white, it makes the photo more dramatic and because of this, at first glance it is hard to determine what it in the picture.
 


Ferro de Gondola
Venice, Italy, 2006
Italy portfolio

When I first looked at this on the website, I was like ‘what the heck’! But it wasn’t until I opened it and saw that it was a gondola that I actually knew what it was. This is one of the few slightly abstracted photos on Michael Kenna’s website. All of Michael Kenna’s photos have incredible lighting, this one is no exception; it looks like he has used the vignette tool in Photoshop to create the darkened effect on the edges of the photo. This photo makes me want to just drop out of school, move to Italy and live a simple life. It is nor happy, nor sad photo.  It doesn’t state what brand or model of camera or any equipment he uses on the website.

Thursday, 31 March 2011

Pictures/websites/Canberra photographers I admire

Allura Maison of Amorosa Dezignz

http://www.amorosadezignz.net/


This is a picture of me taken by Allura Maison of Amorosa Dezignz. Allura is a very creative person and she is awesome to work with. I like her style of photography and editing. There is a lot of colour used in her photos and they are always beautiful and happy! She has a lot of cool concepts!


Matt Maguire of Matt Maguire Photography


http://www.mattmaguirephotography.com/index.htm


Of course i was going to put my dad in there, after all, he was the one that got me into photography in the first place! Matt Maguire is a landscape photographer who has been almost everywhere, taking his camera with him! What i admire about his photos are that they are hardly photoshopped, only to brighten, darken or sharpen.



Emily of ESH Photography


http://www.eshphotography.com.au/ 




I really like her portrait style, they are simple, but so effective. I didn't want to copy her photos because i don't really know her personally and cant ask her permission, but check out her website and see for yourself. They are just naturally nice photos!

My Self-Portrait & Artist Statement




Artist statement

I am a relatively creative person but I find it difficult expressing myself in words and also defining my artwork. But this is sometimes a good thing, as I have a chance to really think about why I created the pieces I did.

I would like to think that the pieces I am creating are a little bit random. This is because I am little bit random and out there! Photography is my way of expressing myself and finding out more about current issues and the world around me, and with a better understanding it helps me to work with different people and people I would not normally work with. I never set out to take photos, it’s always unplanned or spur of the moment, it’s just the way I roll.

I am going to create a self-portrait, taking just a few things out of my life and putting them into a picture. I have such a passion for dance and have made life long friends from it. Friends will be in my self-portrait because they are part of me. I also adore fashion (Such a surprise I know), in particular, dresses. I just love the detail and fabrics. I know I am probably boring you with the things I like but its necessary!

I take a lot of photos and sometimes they don’t turn out the way I wanted them to, that’s why I love Photoshop. I can brighten a photo that was before, too dark and I can sharpen photos that would have previously been blurry. Although, I try not to use it too much, as I prefer natural, just as they were taken kind of photos.

I read quite a few fashion magazines and I feel that I get inspirations from their pages. Joon Brandt is also one, I love high-end fashion shoots! Allura Maison, She is a local Canberra based photographer with a lot of style and she has a lot of awesome concepts. The last, being my dad, Matt Maguire, he is a photographer and he was the one that told me to pick up a camera and start snapping in the first place. He is one cool guy and knows how to take a good photo.





Marco Palmero Analysis

'Superhero Portrait'





Marco Palmero is the name of the artist who created this digital self-portrait. Marco is a Sydney photographer who specialises in executive portraiture.

I don’t really know much about this artist but I saw the photo and I though ‘wouldn’t we all like to be superman’! I just though it was just a really cool photo. I know it has been done before, but in a business suit? I think not!

In this photo the man (late 20’s early 30’s) seems to be looking up into the sky as if he were superman. He is wearing glasses (maybe to look more like a business man) and he is wearing a black suit with a white shirt and striped tie. He looks like just your average guy in a suit by day, and just your average superhero by night! He is also wearing a superman outfit under his clothes (Photoshopped in) and he is ripping the suit open to expose his superhero-ness! He may be showing a message here…are we all superheroes? Is everyone a superhero?

Marco is in the centre of the photo, which has a black background (in a studio) as to not take away any attention from the subject.



Andy Warhol Analysis


'Shocked Hair'






This picture creeps me out a little bit, but at the same time it is pretty cool because it is so simple, yet so effective.
This self-portrait was created in 1986, part of the ‘Pop art’ collection by Warhol, a year before his death. I am not sure what inspired him to have his hair the way he did. He was obviously very out there. I guess it was just part of his abstract nature. He used the ‘Silk-screen process’ to mass-produce his artworks.

There is not too much detail to this self-portrait, what I mean to say is that they are just basic images that have been edited. In the first photo in the top left corner, Warhol has a blank expression on his face and is looking straight into the camera (as he does in all four). He is placed right smack-bang in the centre (As he does in all four) and his hair is not as visible.
In the second, he looks almost scary, but I think it is the hair that gives that impression. In this on, his mouth is slightly open and his hair is more visible.
The third is similar to the first, very little expression. Although, his mouth is open slightly, his right eyebrow is raised ever so slightly and his hair is less visible.
In the forth one, Warhol looks sad or a little bit disappointed, his eyes are not as defined and the hair is more visible.

I think the first image and the third image are slightly the same and the second image and the forth image are the same, which is weird because the top two photos are connected and it is the same with the bottom two…

In this image Warhol has used only two colours, pink and yellow. He has created a multi-image portrait.

About Me

My photo
Nature photographer, trying also to get into portraits and people shoots. BAM!