After looking at both Gursky and Muheisen, one thing is apparently obvious: they both have a great sense of color and how to capture it in the way that best fits what they are trying to portray. But another question came to my mind as I was perusing their works that kept bugging me for an answer: Is color really all there is to these works? Is that all that is needed? It is interesting to see that even though both photographers show an apparent aptitude for seeing the color around them, their art differs greatly.
Andreas Gursky.... The first thing I thought of when I viewed nearly all the examples I could find of his work was "too busy." Indeed he has a great eye for color, more than most photographers I have seen, and he does know how to use it to create different feelings, but unless most of his work is trying to impart the impression of claustrophobia and busyness, the content of the photographs, the actual substance, the people and animals and buildings, make me feel, well, overly claustrophobic and unsure what to look at. There is too much going on in most of his pieces. I never a good focal point that I could latch on to and keep myself there. I just want to move on and get out of the oppression. I am not saying all his work is this way, just most of it. "James Bond Islands" is the last example I have of his work, and it is the work like this that shows his great talent. He can still capture color, or in this case more of a monochromatic color scheme, and still make a successful photo just by backing up a bit and giving some room to breathe. So although Andreas Gursky knows how to use color in his photos, I feel like the rest of his design and the subjects distract from that aspect.
The photographs of Muhammed Muheisen are very complex. Of course the first thing to look at again is his use of color. It is outstanding the way that he is able to balance colors around the image, weigh them to keep things even, and use them to accent the subject or the mood he is attempting to get across. The images I chose to show here are definitely not the most complex color wise, because they are either monochromatic or very muted, but it is the subject of these photos that got my attention the most. Yes he can use color, excellently in fact, but I suppose in the end it is composition and content that got me the most. He has a great ability to vary the outlook of his works. One could be dark, foreboding, and depressing such as the soldiers and the tank or the boy harming himself, but then he can quickly switch to childlike happiness and playfulness. I applaud his ability to show the complex nature of people and our world: that there is sadness and happiness, death and life, fear and childlike optimism. Unlike Gersky, Muheisen does not just stop with color and then ruin and potential his photos had by messing up on subject, he is able to master color and use it to further accent what he is attempting to relay to the viewer, and in my opinion that is what every photographer needs. So color is not enough on its own, but is merely an accent to the whole.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Assignment 1 Bracketing Critique
I was very pleased with myself for this project, because I not only completed it very early (shocking!!) but I also took more photos here than for any other project before. When I was printing the photos, I felt that they were very good and was quite impressed with them, until I hung the pictures up for critique. I do not know why, but when I put my photos up, compared to most the others in the class, my photos suddenly looked amateurish to me.... After looking at the others, I got the feeling suddenly that I had not improved much since last semester.
As for the reception of my photos, I did not get a much better feeling about them. Overall, a lot of my photos seemed to get the same comments. One major one was to move the frame upward and to get the subjects out of the middle of the frame. Also I was apparently too tight on the funeral home and cut off part of it.
As for specific photos, there were a few things that did not apply to all of them.The photo for yesterday's yellow got a comment that there was a lack of good design, and the photo did not come across as being that color. The traffic cone I photographed for renegade orange was picked as the best of all my works, and the only real complaint is that part of the background was slightly overexposed. The class also seemed to like my photo for red warning, but I got a complaint that I should have left the van out of the frame. I never got the chance to point it out but I purposefully left the van in the photo because I felt it kept it from being too simple and also gave a greater sense of warning because the van had to stop for the train. The last important point about one of my pictures is praise for my idea of echo green, that echo reminded me of services that are held to remember people who have passed.
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