lenscraft
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Tuesday, April 3, 2018
Photo Essay: Emulation
Face to Face
The music group Disclosure's music videos are characterized by the flickering sketch of a face superimposed on the actors' real faces. For my emulation project, I was inspired by the mystery of the Disclosure face and the different moods that music can show.
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Wednesday, February 7, 2018
Annie Leibovitz: Life Through A Lens
Annie Leibovitz is a famous American photographer who took portrait photographs for magazines such as Rolling Stone, Vogue, and Vanity Fair. She discovered photography when she was stationed with her family in the Philippines (her dad worked in the US Air Force), and took photography classes in college. When she lived in San Francisco, she began working as a photographer for the Rolling Stone magazine. Later, she followed the band The Rolling Stones on tour. Now, she works as a photographer for Vanity Fair and Vogue. She took famous photographs of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, as well as famous portraits of many other celebrities such as pregnant Demi Moore, Whoopi Goldberg in a bathtub of milk, and Patti Smith "catching fire".
I thought the film was really interesting. I liked seeing how Leibovitz's style changed from grungy, casual photos of daily life to high-production, dramatic, and formal posed photographs. I also thought it was interesting to see Leibovitz's take on the role of a photographer--what they are meant to capture. She said that you can't capture the whole person's identity, but you can capture who they are at that very moment.
The Annie Leibovitz photos I have seen before were the ones of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, the photo for Les Miserables, the Bruce Springsteen album cover Born in the U.S.A., and the photo of Leonardo DiCaprio with a swan.
Reportage era:
This image is captioned: Christmas 1971, Soledad Prison, California. I like how the image shows so many couples together. It combines something so unglamorous with something so special and beautiful.
This image is especially poignant knowing it was taken the day Lennon was killed. The facial expressions and the positions are so loving and intimate.
I have been to the Opera de Paris, and I feel like this photo accurately portrays its glamour and beauty. This new style of Annie Leibovitz really works with the setting of this photograph.
I thought the film was really interesting. I liked seeing how Leibovitz's style changed from grungy, casual photos of daily life to high-production, dramatic, and formal posed photographs. I also thought it was interesting to see Leibovitz's take on the role of a photographer--what they are meant to capture. She said that you can't capture the whole person's identity, but you can capture who they are at that very moment.
The Annie Leibovitz photos I have seen before were the ones of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, the photo for Les Miserables, the Bruce Springsteen album cover Born in the U.S.A., and the photo of Leonardo DiCaprio with a swan.
Reportage era:
This image is captioned: Christmas 1971, Soledad Prison, California. I like how the image shows so many couples together. It combines something so unglamorous with something so special and beautiful.
This image is especially poignant knowing it was taken the day Lennon was killed. The facial expressions and the positions are so loving and intimate.
I have been to the Opera de Paris, and I feel like this photo accurately portrays its glamour and beauty. This new style of Annie Leibovitz really works with the setting of this photograph.
Thursday, December 14, 2017
Two Portraits: Fine Art v.s. Editorial
Alfred Stieglitz:
I like the simplicity of this portrait. It is in black and white, and there is a simple black background. There is a lot of emotion and it is an expressive photograph with the model's facial expression and hand gestures. There is high contrast between the model and the background, which emphasizes the model. The model was Georgia O'Keeffe, his wife.
Annie Leibovitz:
I like how this portrait incorporates Adele's profession, music, into the photograph. Adele is framed in the center of the photo. The colors are muted and dark, and Adele's facial expression is sad, which gives the portrait a pensive mood.
I like the cool tones of this photo. The portrait is for a makeup editorial. Through the contrast of light and dark tones, her eyes and fingernails are emphasized. The photo also leaves room in the corner for text. Her eyes add a pop of color.
Nylon Magazine Mexico, Fall/Winter 2015:
I like how there is no text on the magazine cover other than the name of the magazine and the name of the cover model. There is also a limited color palette of white, slate grey, dark brown and black, which gives the portrait a more edgy, less bright and cheerful tone. The magazine cover was for Lana Del Rey's Honeymoon album, which fits the edgy portrait.
The fine art portraits are made to showcase emotions and the model as a work of art. The editorial portraits are made to showcase a product or a celebrity that will make someone buy the magazine and/or the product. The editorial portraits often are more simple, as there needs to be text added in later.
Depth of Field and Abstraction
A. Abstraction is a lack of representational qualities (aka subjects from life). Abstraction in photography is when there is no clear identifiable object, or an image that "does not have an immediate association with the object world" (Wikipedia).

Bruce Barnbaum
Depth of field is used mostly in the photo by Kasten, as she focuses on the mirror in front, leaving its reflections blurred. It enhances the photo by making it more mysterious and breaking up some of the harsh lines. Barnbaum does not use much depth of field because there is no real background for his photo. It works in his case because he fills the frame with his subject, and his subject has dimension through different light values, and appears to be 3D because of this. In Tillman's photo, the upper left side is blurred, which softens the image and adds contrast to the darker lines, as well as abstracting the photo, leading us to be unsure of what the subject really is.
B. Shallow Depth of Field:
Still Life: Sascha Grosser
Portrait: Pal-Nils Nilsson
Natural Landscape: Christopher O'Donnell
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Framing
Leading Lines - Michael Reyes
Rule of Thirds - Arjun Purkayastha
Strong diagonals - Pierre Metivier
Friday, December 1, 2017
Motion
Part One:
1. Panning
Rajaraman Sanjeevi
2. Slow motion
See-ming Lee
3. Freeze action
Tom Smith
4. Total motion
Hipsto Toresk
5. Effective use of camera shake
Rick Gustafson
Part Two:
Aleszja Popova
Used the total motion technique.
Rodrigo Buas
Used the freeze-action technique.
I think the total-motion technique is more expressive of the emotions of the ballet dancer, but it also hides the dancer's elegance of posture and movements, as it is all muddled. I think the freeze-action technique is a better way to capture the beauty of ballet.
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Old Process / New Artist
Process: Photogravure
About:
Photogravure is a photomechanical process; that is, one in which the finished prints are made in ink on a printing press. The method, one of the finest ever developed, transferred the photographic image to a copper printing plate, which was then etched to retain ink in areas corresponding to the blacks of the picture. Photogravure was invented by Karl Klic in Austria in 1879. (The American Museum of Photography)
Early Photographer: Thomas Annan
"Nelson Street, City" by Thomas Annan, 1868.
Contemporary Photographer: Lyle Ashton Harris
About:
Photogravure is a photomechanical process; that is, one in which the finished prints are made in ink on a printing press. The method, one of the finest ever developed, transferred the photographic image to a copper printing plate, which was then etched to retain ink in areas corresponding to the blacks of the picture. Photogravure was invented by Karl Klic in Austria in 1879. (The American Museum of Photography)
Early Photographer: Thomas Annan
"Nelson Street, City" by Thomas Annan, 1868.
Contemporary Photographer: Lyle Ashton Harris
"Five Photogravures" by Lyle Ashton Harris, 2004.
Citations:
“A Primer on Processes.” The American Museum of Photography: Resources, www.photographymuseum.com/primer.html. Accessed 19 Sept. 2017.
Annan, Thomas. “Nelson Street, City.” The Art of the Photogravure, 1868, www.photogravure.com/collection/searchResults.php?page=1&portfolio=11&view=small&file=AnnanT_01_01.
Harris, Lyle Ashton. “Five Photogravures.” Printed Editions, 2004, www.printed-editions.com/art-print/lyle-ashton-harris-five-photogravures-38245.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
-
Part One: 1. Panning Rajaraman Sanjeevi 2. Slow motion See-ming Lee 3. Freeze action Tom Smith 4. Total motion ...
-
A. Abstraction is a lack of representational qualities (aka subjects from life). Abstraction in photography is when there is no clear ide...