#True
It is often a photographer’s goal to portray, imply or represent something within a photograph that can be difficult to show in a still image. This is sometimes telling a story or capturing emotion or atmosphere. I am interested in the idea of capturing movement within a still image.
In this photographs I wanted to capture frozen motions and ast shutter speed in the same way as in my other experiment.
I haven’t show my contact sheets because I edit my photographs dawn to this. I have used three soft box lights. I was the photographe. This photograph is the one I mostly like because everything is in the right place the way she flipped her hair and where it’s been placed.
Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, Time-motion studies photographs
1 image, Time-motion studies - Frank and Lillian Gilbreth (1913)
Yesterday afternoon me and my friends set up a still life studio, for photographing commercial style and the ideas was to capturing slow motions, freezing motions by using the objects we brought, also my tutor left some objects for us too use. For example: #eggs, #wine glass, #food colours, #balloons, #bubblegum. ..ect.
Étienne Jules Marey, Chronophotograph of a Man Clearing a Hurdle, c.1892.
Étienne Jules Marey, Chronophotograph of a Man Clearing a Hurdle, c.1892.
My experiments.
For our purposes an image like this there are lot’s of visible moving elements, the students walking by and lot of additional detail. I experimented with using different exposure and timimg.
His works is beautiful.
This week’s Modern Art Notes Podcast features Ori Gersht, an Israeli-born artist who has spent the last fifteen years exploring the territory in which violence and beauty overlap, often with a special focus on how a landscape can bear witness. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston has just opened a mid-career survey of his work titled, “Ori Gersht: History Repeating.” On view through Jan. 6, the show was curated by Al Miner.
In the second segment, I’ll inaugurate what will be become a regular feature on the program over the next year or so: Jackson Pollock’s landmark 1943 Mural is in the collection of the University of Iowa Museum of Art, but for the rest of this year and next it will be at the Getty for conservation treatment. “Mural” is one of the most important paintings of the 20th century. As long as Mural is at the Getty, I’ll be checking in with the conservators working on it to hear about what they’re doing with it and what they’re learning about it. My first guest in that series will be Yvonne Szafran, the conservator of paintings at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Download the show directly to your PC/mobile device. Subscribe to The MAN Podcast via iTunes, RSS. See images discussed on the show.
Image: Ori Gersht, Big Bang (video still), 2006.
For this photographs I used the same mattered to take it, except this time i also used fire cracker.