Photographer: Bob Doran




5 Characteristics of Bob Doran’s photography:
- Doran utilizes movement and the afterimage of light.
- He either uses an abundance of vibrant colors in his works or very dull colors/black and white.
- Many of his works contain an abundance of lines and guiding lines, usually from the afterimage of movement.
- For most of his works, the setting is unclear. Looks like studio photography.
- His use of colors conveys strong emotions. For example in his three vibrant light movement images, two of them have a black background and the other has the background also lit up. The lit-up image conveys significantly more positive emotions. Doran uses colors to convey emotions well.
I feel like these two images match my vision especially well:

I chose this image because the light in this image is rapid and intertwined. Similar to how data is transferred through the internet and into our phones. It gives off a fleeting and futuristic feeling, which is what I would like to achieve in my images.
The connotation of light is also very suitable for my vision. First, screens use light to convey information. Also, light is often associated with fast speed. Light years and light speed are all units associated with speed. I want to emphasize how time seems to be accelerating and the attention span of people decreasing due to short-form content and the internet.
I found the shapes of the light very surprising in this photograph. I tried many times to try to create something similar but my camera movement is just not fast enough to achieve the effect in this photo. Doran manages to capture the shape and movement of the light very clearly.
Vibrant colors are the most important element in this image. Here is the image in black and white:

Without the colors, the mood of this photo completely changes. While previously it gave off a fleeting and futuristic feeling, the removal of the vibrant colors makes this image feel more grim. This suggests that color is a crucial element in this photograph and has control over the overall mood of this photograph.
This image is abstract because of the intertwining strings of light, the blurred foreground, and the unclear setting.
The intertwining strings of light create organic shapes that don’t really resemble a clear subject. The blurred foreground and gradient background create ambiguity about the setting of this image. The ambiguity, lack of context, and organic shapes together create a vibrant piece of abstract photography.
I really like Bob Doran’s use of colors in his works.
In this image, I especially like Doran’s choice to sprinkle in some cool-colored lights to go along with the overall warm-colored atmosphere. These colors add depth to the image as they are very distinguishable from most of the warm lights, and they make the colors in this image even more vibrant and varied.

These blue lights here and there remind me of the little light spots of different colors that you see when looking at something under bright sunlight. I might not be able to use these light spots in my own photography because I plan on taking my photos in the evenings when there is no sun. However, I will try to adapt the style of using varied colors in my works.

I also chose this image for analysis because I think it makes the analysis more thorough to analyze pictures that look very different from the same photographer, and the color scheme here is very different from the previous image.
I find this photograph surprising because the mood of this photo varies drastically from the others Doran has taken. The rapid movement, dark background, the fleeting, repeating lines all combine to create an intense bleak, hurried, and melancholy mood. This reminds me of the lifestyle of workers in big cities in the 1950s I’ve read in a book. Everyone rushes to their next destination in a monotone concrete jungle.
This lifestyle is really similar to what many people live now, but instead of rushing physically within the cities, they traverse the vibrant and mesmerizing internet. Repeatedly swiping to the next piece of captivating content.
These two photos inspire two different takes on my vision. One could be displaying the vibrant and rapid side of social media, only hinting at the fast-paced lifestyles many indulge in, so the audience could make a judgment themselves. Another could allude to the black-and-white image. Displaying the monotone and repetitive lifestyles brought by short-form content on the internet. Which portrays social-media-orientated entertainment as more negative.
Green Selection


I chose to first focus on the vibrant lights in the evenings outdoors. I used intentional camera movement to create different shapes with the lights. I did not choose which approach (vibrant or monotone) I wanted to go for when taking these photos. I wanted to test which approach would work best with my images.
Yellow Selection

It was a tough choice choosing three photos from these 9. I really like the last two photos of a wave and a building. They have a similar color scheme and give off a strong futuristic, rapid, and grim mood, I feel like they would work very well in black and white. Alluding to the black-and-white works of Bob Doran. But I am missing a third image and there is a strong competitor. The first column of this selection I also like very much. They are, in comparison to the alternatives, much more vibrant and neon.
Chosen Photos
I ultimately chose to combine the two approaches a little. I thought the vibrant column of photos were not interconnected enough. So I chose the last two photos and edited another photo to fit their color scheme. The colors are monotone and pretty dull, but I did not make them black and white. I feel like light blue gives these images a futuristic feeling, while the monotone color scheme makes the mood grim and melancholy. I feel like the combination was overall successful because this color scheme combined the most important aspects of the vibrant and monotone approaches: The futuristic feeling and the grim, repetitive feeling.
1.84 Pbit/s

(Bug: I cannot insert the photos individually in the right orientation
sorry for the bad resolution)
These photos are arranged in the order of increasing movement speed. In the first image, the camera is only slightly moving, creating a little bit of afterimage but the building is still clear. In the second image, the ICM intensifies and the colors within the building seep out (the bottom of the image), creating an almost painting-like feeling. In the third image, no subject is visible. The movement has intensified to the point where there are only fleeting, gradient lines of color left. I also flipped the last photo so the lines guide the viewer’s attention from left to right.
I wanted to create a sense of progression and interconnectedness in the placement of these photos. For instance, the first image is of a dark building, so I intentionally adjusted the color of the second image to make it feel almost like the same building. The connection between the second and last image is mostly of the color. Both include shades of white, pale blue, and black.
The most prominent aspects of these images are the use of color and light. The similar pale-blue color scheme unifies these images into a set, and the black surrounding the light sources in these images direct the audience’s attention to the focus point: light. Light in this photo set appears in three different positions. In the first image, the light is positioned at the top right corner of the image. In the second image, light is positioned in the center, and in the last image, light is positioned at the bottom left corner. The descending position of light is a subtle guide that leads the audience’s attention from top to bottom progressively. Connecting the images.
These photos represent my vision by progressively becoming faster and faster, symbolizing how “days feel shorter and shorter” as stated in the vision. The last image is also literally a blur, which alludes to “[days] almost become a blur” in the vision.
To continue the sense of connectedness in these photos, I altered the color scheme of the second photo, here is the original:

The editing process:
I had a very hard time deciding whether to use the original color or make it more monotone to fit the set better. The original color included a hint of pink at the right side of the image, which alludes to the image I analyzed of Bob Doran. I really like the effect but the original color disrupts the mood of the other two images so I decided to adjust the color of this photo.
The message of this photo set is actually pretty subtle. As there are no universal symbols of the internet or technology present in these photos. This is because I want to continue the ambiguous theme that was present in my previous photo set, inspired by Uta Barth. Especially with the topic of social media and technological advancements. There is so much to argue for and against these broad topics. So much so that I feel like if I drive the audience to feel a certain way in these photographs, they may be repelled by my view and choose to think another way. Moreover, I cannot guarantee that my vision or personal beliefs are objectively correct. So I chose to leave room for varied interpretations of this triptych. The only clue I left the audience about my intended message is the name of the photo set: 1.84 pbit/s, the fastest speed of information transfer currently.
After creating this photo set, I found another valid interpretation of the photo set. This photo set could also be showing the effects of rising sea levels and global warming. The third image looks very like waves in the ocean, and the first two images are photos of buildings where humans live. So another possible interpretation of this photo set (ignoring the title) would be that it shows how rising sea levels will eventually drown our civilization in waves.
I feel that there is much to improve in terms of my understanding and use of color. I set a goal to adapt to Bob Doran’s skilled use of colors, but I just could not get the second image’s coloring perfectly right:
I tested extensively with the tone and values of the blue color, even resorting to changing the center image as a whole.
But in the end, I chose a satisfactory variation of the blue color and settled with it. I could definitely improve the coloring of the second image to make it suit the other two images better.
(These ones have better resolution but the orientation is wrong)


