SETS 2 PART 1

Olga Karlovac’s work is all about blurred, dreamy visuals that make you feel like you’re caught between reality and a memory. Her use of motion blur draws people into the scene without revealing everything clearly. It makes you look closer at what’s hidden beneath the surface

https://www.thephoblographer.com/2023/07/21/olga-karlovac-makes-beautiful-blurry-street-photography/#google_vignette
Olga Karlovac Focus on Photography
https://woofermagazine.com/2023/11/27/focus-on-olga-karlovac/
Inside City Walls Dubrovnik 2017
Inside City Walls, Dubrovnik, 2017

Déambulations dans l’étrange
ELSEWHERE
ELSEWHERE

https://www.thephoblographer.com/2023/07/21/olga-karlovac-makes-beautiful-blurry-street-photography

Added: Key Characteristics:

 

  • Blurred Motion: Her styles is the use of blur and motion, which often creates abstract, almost ghostly images. This intentional blurring of the image captures the emotional nature of the moment. It makes the viewer focus on
  • Black and white: She takes shoots in black and white which enhances the emotional depth of her photos. The loss of color allows her to focus on the contrasts, light, shadow which gives the images a timeless feel
  • Instead of documenting clear scenes, she transforms everyday moments into a dreamlike feeling
  • Emotional ambiguity: Her images are ambiguous, which leaves the viewers to interpret the emotion and stories behind them.
  • Minimalism: Her compositions are minimalist which emphasizes negative spaces. It gives this feeling of isolation or solitude
Connection to my Vision:
While Keith Dotson’s focus is on the textures and decay in industrial spaces, Karlovac’s abstract and moody photos inspire me to to explore the emotional side of those spaces but in our school. Her blurred, dreamy techniques to evoke a sense of history or forgotten stories.

Evaluation:
Karlovac’s work blurs the lines between reality and abstraction, it allows viewers to focus on the atmosphere and emotional depth of the scene. The blurred figure and the play of light in the image to interpret the mood and story rather than presenting a clear portrait.Why I choose this image?
It offers a dreamlife, emotional quality through its use of blur, light, and composition. It aligns with Olga Karlovac’s signature style. This photograph captures more than just a moment.What do you find surprising or unusual about this photograph?
The blur is not a technical flaw but a creative decision that adds emotions to the photo. It transforms the subject from a clear figure into something more abstract, it allows the viewer to feel rather than just observe. The backlight with the line through the image adds contrast and creates a sense of sepration. The unusual angle is surprising because it distorts the viewer’s perception. It makes the subject feel more hidden.

Formal elements: Shape and form
The blurred figure’s shape becomes less about the body but more about creating an abstract, ghostly form. The lack of sharp edges turns the women in the photo into a sihouette. The angled shot adds an additional layer to the form. By taking the photograph from a non-traditional angle, the shape of the figure appears more distorted and abstract.

SETS 1 PARTS 2 & 3

Contact Sheet
Yellow Shots

 

 

 

I selected these images for their focus on details like rusting metal, warn surfaces, and industrial structures. I choose these photos because the close up details of peeling paint, rusted metal, and weathered surfaces invites the viewer to look closer and look at the beauty in decay. But with the zoomed out more far out pictures of the industrial structures I aim to show the overall composure of the structure compared to the close ups.

Green Photos

 

 

Red Photos

 

 

 

 

SETS 1 PART 1

Keith Dotson’s industrial photography set is particularly interesting for its abstract interpretations of industrial areas


Paint Curls on an Antique Machine
Paint Curls on an Antique Machine, Keith Dotson
Rusty Pipe Connection with Rivets, Historic Sloss Furnaces
Two Rusty Pipes
Two Rusty Pipes, Keith Dotson

Row of Rusty Rings
Row of Rusty Rings, Keith Dotson

Window of an Old Southern Textile Mill Built 1902
Window of an Old Southern Textile Mill Built 1902, Keith Dotson

Round Door, Sloss Furnaces, Birmingham
Round Door, Sloss Furnaces, Birmingham, Keith Dotson

Rusty Red Star - Wheel from an Antique Firetruck
Rusty Red Star – Wheel from an Antique Firetruck, Keith Dotson

Pipe Networks at Sloss Furnaces, Birmingham
Pipe Networks at Sloss Furnaces, Birmingham, Keith Dotson
Key Characteristics:
1. Textural Detail: Dotson’s work emphasizes the rough, worn surfaces of industrial elements, the rust, peeling paint, and aged metal. surfaces.
2. Black and white palette: His photographs are rended in black and white. Without vibrant color, it focuses attention on form, light, and shadow, which enhances the abstract feel of the pieces.
3. Geometric shapes: His photos features the angles of industrial architecture, with pipes, windows, and mechanical parts.
4. Minimalism and Simplicity: Dotson isolates a single subject, like a pipe or window allowing the viewer to focus on the form.
5. Lighting and Contrast: The use of stark lighting and natural sunlight enhances the feeling of abandonment and decay.
Connection to my vision:
I’ve chosen Keith Dotson as a photographer for my project because of his ability to transform industrial decay into abstract photographs which aligned with my vision. His focus on textures, shapes, explores the art behind industrial spaces. His elements like rusted pipes, peeling paint, or machinery parts is the aesthetic I want to take in the 798 Art District. His work inspired my approach to teture. His close-ups of rust and decay motivates me to focus on the surfaces found in old factory buildings. I will also focus on the shapes and lines of the architecture in 798.
Evaluation:
I choose this image because it transforms industrial objects into abstract forms. The focus on the connective with visible rivets draws attention to the materials and craftsmanship used in its construction. Its a example of how Dotson makes something like an old pipe into an object of artistic reflection. The rust and wear on the surface conveys a sense of age and abandonment. The weathered surface with dust contrasts with the smooth edges of the rivets.
Rusty Pipe Connection with Rivets, Historic Sloss Furnaces, Keith Dotson

Why I choose this image?

I chose this image because it highlights the beauty that is found in the forgotten elements of industrial spaces.

What do you find surprising or unusual about this photograph?

The details of the rivets and the contrasting textures of dust and metal challenges the viewer to see the aesthetic value of industrial materials.

Formal Elements: Texture

I think the most important element in the photograph is texture. The rough, aged surface of the rusted surface can be seen even under the dust layered on top of it. The visible layers of rust and wear shows time, showing the countless interactions it has endured. It makes the viewer look more closely, with details that is likely overlooked. The texture of the pipe shows how it endured neglect, weathered elements, etc. This makes the viewer think that it’s not just the physical state of the object.

Abstraction – Research + Statement of Intent

Padlet:

https://isbeijing.padlet.org/zoeyguan/798-mindmap-wuku441xt3qqd3fl

Statement of Intent:

The message of my triptych will be to highlight the forgotten beauty of industrial sites, particularly in places like Beijing’s 798 Art District, which used to be a factory complex that is not a center for creativity. Through abstract photography, I will capture the shapes and buildings, specifically the textures and patterns that are found in old industrial structures. I want my audience to feel this sense of reflection on where we come from, showing how industrial remnants can transform into abstract works of art. In my view, industrial sites are not just remnants of the past but room for creative reinterpretations.

Photo Safari B. 6

01: The element best represented is line, shape, and depth.

What worked: Finding symmetry in a space with a clear divide. Contrast between the sides in terms of structure and color. The light acting as a division line.

02: The element best represented is shape, color, and size

What worked: The light source is the square, the square light makes it noticeable around the background.

03:  The element best represented is texture, form, and depth

What didn’t work: The grain didn’t not work as it made the shot noisy and distracting. The lighting also make the image uneven.

04: The element best represented is lines (repetition of the lines too).

What worked: The lines are distinct, sharp, and well-defined by the lines. It draws attention to the structure and geometry of the lines on top of the cafeteria.

05: The element best represented is lines, color, and shape.

What worked: the two black vertical lines are clear and distinct. The contrast between the bold red background and the black lines works well, making both the color and the lines stand out.

06: The elements best represented is shape, size and depth.

What worked: the globe is the clear emphasizes the circle in the example. The background lighting and windows emphasizes the shape.

07: The elements best represented is shape, line (repetition of the lines too).

What worked: The rectangular shapes of the tray return were clear and consistent. The outline defines the separation and structure.

08: The elements best represented is shape, repetition, and texture

What worked: The multiple can tops creates a pattern. The metallic surface adds a reflective quality that enhances the image.

09: The elements best represented is shape, repetition, and depth. The multiple images that are pieced in a square format creates a patter. The top photos appear as if receding into the distance.

I took the photo as I noticed the organized arrangement and uniformity of the squares. I took the photo then related it to example 9.

10: The elements best represented is line and depth.

What didn’t work: The background (of the lights as the main focus) were distracting and took the attention away form the path of lights.

11: The elements best represented is depth, line, and composition.

What worked: The stairs getting darker as it moves away creates a sense of depth, that the stairs are leading up (even if it’s dark). It gives me a feel of three dimensions. The darkness gives it a eerie feeling.

12: The elements best represented is lines (repetition of the lines too).

What worked: The repetition of the football player creates a pattern. The lighting makes the table seem more smooth. The photo captures the rods to control the player.

I choose this photo as there involves a lot of lines including on the table itself as well as the rods, when I saw it, it immediately reminded me of image 12 .

Abstraction – Formal Elements & Analysis B.4&5

Formal elements of Photography

  1. Explain what the phrase Formal Elements means in photography.
  2. Describe each of the 6 elements discussed so far (line, shape, pattern, texture, tone, focus)
  3. Give an example that emphasizes each element (you can use your own image or an image from somebody else – but it must be cited!)
  4. Can an image show just one element at a time? Justify your answer.

Formal Elements in photography is what makes up an image, it is the visual tools that photographers use to compose their shots and convey their emotion, intent, or emotion. This includes line, shape and form, pattern, tone, color, texture, and space

  1. Line – Lines are what guides your eyes through a photo. It can be straight, diagonal, zigzag, it can place emphasis on the subject or convey a sense of movement
  2. Shape – It can be simple and geometric, like circles and squares or it can be more organic like a shape of a leaf or cloud.
  3. Pattern – Repeating elements in a photo, like repeating shapes, lines or colors, it makes the photo feel more organized
  4. Texture – How things look like they would feel if you touched it. Texture can make surfaces look rough, smooth, soft, or hard.
  5. Tone – Range of light and dark in a photo. It affects the mood of the image.
  6. Focus – What is sharp and clear in the photo vs what’s blurry. It directs attention to the most important part of the image.

Example of Formal Elements:

Line –

Shape –

Pattern –

Texture –

Tone –

Focus –

 

  1. PICK ONE PHOTOGRAPH FROM ONE OF THE NAMED PHOTOGRAPHERS “Abstract photography can be defined as capturing images in which the subject isn’t the most interesting element. Albert Renger-Patzsch, Edward Weston and Aaron Siskind photographed the ordinary to reveal their beauty. Uta Barth reversed the typical use of the camera, shooting out of focus and Andreas Gursky photographs the repetition of elements. During this unit you will investigate appropriate examples of abstract photography and respond in your own way..”
Edward Weston. Cabbage Leaf. 1931

List 3 things the photographer might have been interested in capturing in this picture?

  • Edward Weston likely sought to capture the beauty and elegance of the cabbage leaf. He transforms a simple vegetable into a work of art, emphasizing that such intricate things are found in natural forms
  • He might have also been interested in emphasizing the texture of the cabbage leaf. The fine details, like the veins and wrinkles allows the viewer to image the feel of the leaf, making the image more engaging
  • The play of the light and shadow across the leaf’s surface is something Weston might have explored. The varying tones created by the light helps to highlight the leaf’s depth, it almost appears as if it was sculpted.

If you were the photographer, what title would you give it? Explain why.

  • I would title the image “Nature’s Veins.” This title reflects the veins visible in the leaf. It also emphasizes the way nature’s ways can mirror those of the human body.

Describe the use of line, shape, Pattern, texture, tone and focus – USE THE NOTES ABOVE AS A GUIDE. SOME EXAMPLES of WORK BELOW.

  • Lines: The lines are fluid and organic, it leads the eye through the curves and folds.
  • Shape: The shape in the photograph are organic and irregular, which is characteristic of natural forms. The leaf’s shape fills the frame and is faced down, creating a sense of movement and flow.
  • Pattern: The veins and folds of the cabbage leaf is a very intricate pattern, which adds complexity to the image. The repetition of the natural lines and shape draws the viewer to look more closely at the detailed surface
  • Texture: Texture is very significant in the photograph. The detailed capture of the leaf’s surface is smooth yet veined texture.

Abstraction – STARTING POINT B.1&2

“Abstract photography can be defined as capturing images in which the subject isn’t the most interesting element. Albert Renger-Patzsch and Aaron Siskind photographed the ordinary to reveal their beauty. Uta Barth reversed the typical use of the camera, shooting out of focus and Andreas Gursky photographs the repetition of elements. During this unit, you will investigate appropriate examples of abstract photography and respond in your own way.”

My thoughts on this quote:

The idea that “the subject isn’t the most interesting element” challenges conventional exceptions, the subject is typically the driver of the narrative of an image. In abstract photography, the viewer’s attention is drawn to color, shape, or texture.

The quote suggests that abstract photography is about seeing and presenting the world differently, its not what you’re photographung but how you’re capturing and interpreting it.

Photographers like Renger-Patzsch and SIiskid found beauty in ordinary things, but it’s not by focusing solely on the subject but by highlighting details that are often unnoticed.

What do you think is meant by “Abstract photography can be defined as capturing images in which the subject isn’t the most interesting element”?

In abstract photography, the focus is not on the subject (or something that is not worthy of your attention) but the other aspects of the image. Its how the image is composed of what emotions or ideas, rather than a clear depiction of a subject. It wants the viewer to engage with the image on a more deeper level rather than simply identify the image and say “wow that’s a cool photo.” Abstract art is really interesting as it’s looking into the minds of an artists to see how they see the world to portray and show the world.

My definition of abstract photography:

Abstract Photography is a style of photography that highlights shapes, colors, and textures rather than recognizable and traditional objects. It focuses on creating visually interesting images that is on the borderline between reality and fantasy like look.

Stephen Calcutt's 'Bus Stop'
The scratches on the glass shows a jagged and rough texture, acting as a barrier between the viewer and the person behind it. It captures a sense of degradation or intrusion that comes with a surface that is meant to be clear and transparent. There’s something beautiful with the scratches and the textures it creates, and the way it alters the person behind the glass. This is hands down one of my favorite abstract photographs.

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Photography – Context

Referencing the picture above entitled “Wrong!” Can a ‘bad’ picture ever be ‘great’? – How important is the context in photography? (context= why a picture was taken, when or where it was taken, and what message you were trying to make)

John Baldessari’s “Wrong” series is about how context, both from the photographer’s and the viewer’s interpretation can give the meaning of an image.

When I first saw the photo, I saw it as a poorly composed photograph that could have looked better, a photo that breaks the traditional rules of photography. But when we know the context- that Baldessari intentionally broke these rules, the image no longer is a “bad” photograph. The context revealed Baldessari’s (the photographer’s) intent. In this case, Baldessari wasn’t just taking a random picture, but making a point (that the photo, was in fact, wrong). Stepping back, context can transform any photograph and art alike. A blurry, out-of-focus picture might be seen as a failure in one context, but after we learned that it was taken. In modern conceptual art, I think context becomes very important in what makes a picture great and, more broadly, what makes something a piece of art. The journey behind a photo also includes why they chose to make it, with that subtle themes and messages in the piece.

Can a ‘bad’ picture ever be ‘great’?

Yes, it definitely can. A lot of good art is defines by its context, rather than appearance. Does an Reinhardt painting show more skill than The School of Athens? Definitely not, it’s the message behind the photograph. Reinhardt’s paintings black-on -black was meant to challenging the viewer and how we perceive art, much like John Baldessari’s Wrong. The context, was literally that he new his photograph was “Wrong.” With the context offered, we know that Baldessari knew his photograph was “Wrong.” Baldessari knew the rules, he is breaking the rules and is breaking the rules with careful consideration of the composition, camera settings, etc, (We had a taste in how hard that was when going around the school taking “Wrong photos.”) but he chose to reject them.

 

 

Reinhardt’s black-on-black

CONTACT SHEET

10 of my best “bad” shots

 

Citations:

“Context – its about the title – Blog Post 1” ISB, https://dx.isb.cn/dash/#/classroom/648607/sections/lesson/344114/page/344116. Accessed 23 August 2024.
Baldessari, John “Wrong” Photograph. Dragon’s Exchange, ISB. Accessed 23nd August 2024, https://dx.isb.cn/dash/#/classroom/648607/sections/lesson/344114/page/344116/edit, 23 August 2024.

Capstone Video (A Normal Life) 8-6: Zoey, Miranda, Fay

Here is my capstone video for SDG 10 and 5

The Inequality Pandemic: Why We Need to Treat it Like a Public Health Concern

Hi! This is my research essay for the Capstone Project. I did the project on what I really cared about (and honestly just wanted to try to do a new SDG as I did SDG 6 before)

I hope you like it Mr. Mcneice! (It’s a bit long, but I’m afraid if i cut off words it wouldn’t express all my ideas clearly.)

I believe that all SDG are equally important with all 17 making good impacts on the world. (I went a bit overboard for the LGBTQ+ part as i think is a HUGE issue) (the ending is like a joke if you don’t get it I can explain for you)

SDG Research Essay ZG

 

Here are some pics that inspired why I did this SDG 10 and 5 in the first place!