Sunday, 28 November 2010

Follw Me




Andreas Gursky

He was born in Leipzig in 1955, but he grew up in Dusseldorf, the son of a commercial photographer , and influence from his teachers Hilla And Bernd Becher a photographic team known for their distinctive, dispassionate method of systematically cataloging industrial machinery and architecture. similar approach may be found in Gursky's methodical approach to his own, larger-scale photography. Other notable influences are the British landscape photographer John Davies .

Before the 1990s, Gursky did not digitally manipulate his images. In the years since, Gursky has been frank about his reliance on computers to edit and enhance his pictures, creating an art of spaces larger than the subjects photographed. Writing in the new yourk magazine magazine, the critic Peter Schjeldahl these pictures "vast," "splashy," "entertaining," and "literally unbelievable." In the same publication, critic Calvin Tomkins described Gursky as one of the "two masters" of the "Düsseldorf" school. In 2001, Tomkins described the experience of confronting one of Gursky's large works.

Gursky's huge, panoramic color prints—some of them up to six feet high by ten feet long—had the presence, the formal power, and in several cases the majestic aura of nineteenth-century landscape paintings, without losing any of their meticulously detailed immediacy as photographs. Their subject matter was the contemporary world, seen dispassionately and from a distance.









Gursky holds the record for highest price paid at auction for a single photographic image. His print 99 Cent II, Diptych, sold for GBP 1.7 million (USD $3.3 million) at Sotheby's London



full range of Gursky's photographic educations has figured in his mature work, enabling him to outgrow all three of them. His photographs—big, bold, rich in color and detail—constitute one of the most original achievements of the past decade and, for all the panache of his signature style, one of the most complex.

Gursky expanded his scope of operations from Düsseldorf and its environs to an international itinerary that has taken him to Hong Kong, Cairo, New York, Brasília, Tokyo, Stockholm, Chicago, Athens, Singapore, Paris, and Los Angeles, among other places.

Since 1987, Gursky has tended to shoot with a 4-by-5-inch or 5-by-7-inch view camera in the interests of clarity of focus and sharpness of detail. While he is known for his large images, one of the earliest works in the exhibition, the 1984 alpine landscape Klausenpass, is a relatively modest 36 by 32 inches or so, framed.(2) As Galassi relates the story of its making, Gursky, while traveling, had set aside his view camera for a more portable medium-format camera (producing a negative of 2 1/2 by 2 3/4 inches) that would still accommodate his interest in detail.
Since 2002 Gursky has occupied a studio and living space realized by the architectural firm Herzog & de Meuron within a former power station in Dusseldorf.

Quick Facts

  • Gursky received a strong influence from his teachers, Hilla and Bernd Becher.
  • Before the mid 1990s, Gursky did not digitally manipulate his images. Today, however Gursky uses computers to edit his pictures and creates art in a larger space than the subject photographed.
  • Is a German photographer known for the highly textured feel of his enormous photographs often using a high point of view.







Perfect match: How the crossover between fashion and art inspires creations on canvas and the catwalk
Storey, Sharif Waked, Alexander McQueen, Yohji Yamamoto, Andreas Gursky, On a more individual level too, practitioners from the world of art and fashion appear to be exploring one another's territory more than ever before.




Reference Articles



Videos:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TWtlhApag0&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWaIFOSKKgE

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andreas_Gursky

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/bc/99_cent_II%2C_diptychon_-_Photo_courtesy_of_Sotheby%27s.jpg

Blog:

http://anaba.blogspot.com/2005/12/abmb-legend-of-gursky-as-told-by-man.html

http://niporlaveredaniporlautopista.blogspot.com/2010_04_01_archive.html

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/perfect-match-how-the-crossover-between-fashion-and-art-inspires-creations-on-canvas-and-the-catwalk-2142988.html

http://www.postmedia.net/999/gursky.htm

http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2001/gursky/

http://www.americansuburbx.com/2009/01/theory-andreas-gursky-making-things.html

http://metroartwork.com/andreas-gursky-biography-artwork-m-87.html

Practices of looking


Walking through the doors



Video and moving image was taken in the first weeks on the project My crappy City,it was taking at the University of UEL
Photos and the the video editing is by me LK and the sound recording is by Piero Malvestio, using the recorder from Rob Rinbow.

LK " We are Watching you" Trailer

This still image video , a series images is been taken for my first year photography Cinema project, i was inspired by Slinkachu photography and my plot story is "A girl is suffering from asthma, smoking heavily every day cant realize how smoking is effecting her health. Its been told from the doctors that she have to quit smoking.
A little toys " Miniature" plastic toy figures in her living room they come bake to life when she go's to sleep. The miniatures steeling her cigarettes from her cigarettes from her packet and throw them from the balcony so when she wake up she founds nothing in the destroyed packet.
They are trying to help here without she knows" .

Monday, 17 May 2010

Saturday, 15 May 2010

Semiotic


Semioticians classify signs or sign systems in relation to the way they are transmitted. This process of carrying meaning depends on the use of codes that may be the individual sounds or letters that humans use to form words, the body movements they make to show attitude or emotion, or even something as general as the clothes they wear.

Some say that images work via a second communicative system, one fully as expressive as natural language, but separate and structured independently of it. Others find visual and verbal meanings more dissimilar than similar, with the visual lacking a kind of determinacy for which verbal language seems better suited.
A recent example of this would be when Coca Cola changed their original recipe of their cola. The public did not embrace the new taste. Even though the new taste had proven to be successful in blind taste tests it caused change and it called attention to itself. Therefore, the general public strongly objected to this change because they could not associate this new "Coke" with the one they were used to.


Other example is using in advertising perfumes to signify the women and using her as an object that allows a women to control how she is perceived through how she smells. It has also increase the symbolism of women as elegant, boatful, and glamour’s.

Calvin Klein's Euphoria

Bvlgari Omnia

Reference:

Friday, 14 May 2010

Lomography

Lomography - History
In the early 1990s a couple of students discovered a small, enigmatic Russian camera, the Lomo Kompakt Automat, and created a new style of artistic experimental photography with their first unorthodox snapshot cavortings. The approach: taking as many photographs (Lomographs) as possible in the most impossible of situations possible and from the most unusual positions possible, and then having them developed as cheaply as possible. The result is a flood of authentic, colourful, crazy, off-the-wall, unfamiliar and often brilliant snapshots. These are mounted on panels to form a sea of thousands of Lomographs which regularly astonish viewers with their sheer colourfulness, diversity and power of expression. Ensuing major exhibitions in Moscow, New York, Vienna, Berlin, St. Petersburg, Havana, Zurich, Cologne, Madrid, Cairo, Tokyo and many other cities, where up to 100,000 Lomographs were shown at a time, established an international reputation for Lomography.

Lomography as a brand is definitely about film and analog photography, in particular, photos taken with lomo brand cameras.

I do lomography because it's refreshing to go back to the basics of photography. Just to capture a moment or subject and not have to worry about whether the focus, camera settings or the lighting is perfect. I just want to have fun and make a creative image.
Photography for many people is now just about camera specifications and camera features. They are too focused on having the best camera with the best lens and have forgotten what photography is really about. To save a memory and have fun while you do it!

preserving Lomo's concept:
10 lomo's golden rules
1.Take your camera everywhere you go.
2. Use it anytime, day and night.
3. Lomography does not interfere with your life, but is a part of it.
4. Try the shot from the hip.
5. Approach the objects of your "Lomographic desire" as close as possible.
6. Don't think.
7. Be fast.
8. You don't have to know beforehand what you captured (forget LCD).
9. Afterwards, either (forget LCD review).
10 Don't worry about any rules.




long exposure


Emotions Joy



the more, the better: multiexposure


Reference: