Thursday 4 October 2012

Man Ray...


Fine Art Photography.

For my fine Art photography I wanted to do a photograph that had a message. For this project i wanted to do something around Women (and men), are more than just pieces of meat.  

First of all I searched the internet for a theme and came across this. I needed the image to be shocking enough to make you look twice, The image didn't need to be tasteful  beautiful or  pleasant on the eye. In fact, I was looking for just the opposite. In order to get this message across, I wanted to show women as meat, to get the viewer to come to this opinion themselves.


In the photograph i cut a hole in the base of the chicken. I then put the Barbie doll inside ensuring that the arms were inside the chicken. I then unbound the chicken and positioned the arms so they were in the right position,

The object was taken on a white table cloth on F4 at an ISO 160. I then blew the background out in CS5 trying to maintain the shadow to give depth to the image. I changed the colour balance slightly and altered the selective colour to make a little more red.


Berenice Abbott






Berenice Abbott..


Berenice Abbott originally Bernice Abbott. Was Born in Ohio in 1898. She was Heavily influenced By Man Ray in her portraiture and Eugene Atget in her architecture.


Her photography is clear, honest,objective and realistic.


Abbott went to Europe in 1921 where she studied sculpture in Paris and Berlin. In 1923 She was hired by Man Ray as his dark room assistant at his portrait studio in Montparnasse. Man Ray was impressed with her dark room skills and allowed her to use his dark room for her own work. Abbott had her first solo exhibition in 1926.


In 1929 Abbott returned to New York where she immediately saw the cities photographic potential. Four years earlier she had been introduced to Eugene Atget and became a great admirer, i think it shows in her work. Using a Large Format Camera Abbott began to photograph New York. Her New York work has provided a historical chronicle of many destroyed buildings around Manhattan.


Photos by Eugene atget...









Photos by Berenice Abbott with Similar perspectives.






Abbott was part of the straight photography Movement. She didn't like the work of pictorialists.  Pictorialism started to die out after the first world war.