Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 3 2017

what is up everybody it is Monday which

can only mean photo assignments and in

this video I want to give you photo

assignment number six which is going to

deal with photo sequences now I want to

talk about photo sequences and what they

are it should be fairly obvious but a

photo sequence is a group of photographs

that work together so they're not

designed to stand alone individually

they are designed as a sequence to be

displayed together and this is the

important part about all this and I want

to explain that in this video they end

up equaling a whole that is greater than

the sum of its parts and so when this is

done really well it ends up giving you a

concept or an illustration or a picture

that maybe doesn't exist it's suggesting

that and so I know that sounds a little

far out in a little conceptual so let's

break this down and talk about some very

well-known photo sequences one of the

first photo sequence photographers that

I can think of in most of you're

probably familiar with is Eadweard

Muybridge who was an English

photographer who spent a great deal of

his career in the United States during

his career he was very famous for these

landscapes that he shot at Yosemite but

now today we know him for these motion

studies that he did now more bridges

work you have to understand predates

motion picture motion picture didn't

come along until the 1890s ish and

muybridge was doing these in the 1870s

and he had these very complex systems of

stringing up multiple cameras that the

shutters would be tripped in sequence

and he ended up with a series of images

that were essentially motion studies of

adamant objects so he would study motion

of humans of dogs of birds of horses the

list goes on and on he did a ton of these

and yes they were designed to be played

back similar to a motion picture but

they work as sequences and this is

really important and the other important

thing to consider is to look at these

not through our own eyes in the modern

day but to consider how people

interpreted these images in the 1870s

and this is before motion pictures so

this is something people were not used

to seeing photographs were these things

that generally long exposure shot on

collodion wet plate and they took a long

time to do and people weren't used to

seeing them lined up like this and more

importantly they weren't used to seeing

motion interpreted this way and so what

he's showing us are ideas that you know

people would talk about like when a

horse runs do all four legs come off the

ground things like that he's showing his

motion and

now this is something that existed in

the 1800's but if we bump up to the

modern day sort of at least the mid 20th

century in the 1960s New York was kind

of the center for most things in the art

world including photography and I think

arguably two of the big kings at that

point in New York were Richard Avedon and

Irving Penn who worked for the fashion

magazines they had feet in both the

commercial world and the art world but a

new generation by the 1960s came along

of conceptual artists one of the

photographers in this group who I think

is very underrated as a gentleman by the

name of Duane Michals and Duane is a

fantastic photographer he's still alive

today he's in his 80s and he has done

some extremely interesting always very

conceptual work and his work even though

technically he's a brilliant

photographer it's more about the

thinking in the concept behind you'll

see techniques that he uses like double

exposure for instance or even slow

shutter speeds allowing certain things

to abstract in the image but Duane is

always very conceptual with his work and

often times he incorporates his own

handwriting into things there are themes

that come up quite a bit like mortality

spirits afterlife there a lot of

psychological undertones to his work one

of the things that he was really well

known for which culminated in a book in

1970 and he still produces these as far

as I know our image sequences now unlike

Muybridge you have image sequences with

Duane Michals that are more

storyboarding they tell you a story it's

a sequence of images that unfold an

event usually it's very simple but in

the case of something like this image

which is or this image sequence which is

very well known this is called

Heisenberg's Mirror of Uncertainty what

we see here series of images that

portray a woman looking into a mirror

undertones of surrealism perhaps duality

and maybe even a psychological undertone

but this is one of his well-known image

sequence is another one that tells a

story more in a timeline type setting is

this one that's basically a

self-portrait of Duane who's sitting on

the right having lunch with a friend and

you see this progress between laughter

and boredom finally the one guy falls

asleep on the table at the end and then

they leave but it's a very simple

concept that has a beginning middle end

and is very traditional in terms of

storytelling now when you create image

sequences that are going to be more

storyboard type like this there's two

things that you want to consider and I

think the first one is going to be the

relationships of the images to one

another for example do they have to be

in a particular order or could they be

taken in a different order and so I

think in the case of the woman with the

mirror they're not necessarily dependent

on the order because it's not a

time-based story like that there's

another one that's a really great

example which is a portrait that he did

of Andy Warhol now this is a series of

four images of different angles of Andy

Warhol's head and this worked one

because most of us know who Andy Warhol

is we know what he looks like and two

you're seeing the parts here equal

something greater than the sum so they

are basically essentially giving you an

image that doesn't exist if you took any

one of these on their own you may or may

not realize it's andy warhol but put

together they work and I think that's

the important takeaway so one you have

the relationships of images to one

another the second thing that's really

important is how time is considered in

the image sequence so there's two ways

you can go with this either time exists

or time doesn't exist and I know that's

fairly obvious but they're treated very

differently so for instance this is one

of his well-known image sequences

entitled chance meeting it's very simple

and if you read this right to left in

rows from top to bottom basically you

see these two gentlemen walking down an

alley and there's a point in the middle

where they are together one is looking

at the other and something is obviously

there they walk away and in the last

frame the first guy looks back we didn't

know that's what creates that circle of

the encounter and so what's being

communicated in this set is what was the

point of that encounter definitely again

psychological undertone that's going on

here but that's left up to the viewer to

decide and I think that's what makes

this work it's a very simple setting

where you see two guys walking down an

alley towards one another they look at

each other one looks at the other and

they cross but there's something greater

than the sum of that that exists and I

think that's the point of that image

sequence and why it works now that is

one more time exists or it ends up being

a storyboard type format i'm going to

give you another one here this is

another well-known set of his called

Things Are Queer and in this one it is

not about a time-based medium it's more

surrealistic and you're going to see

kind of a relationship circle around in

here so in the first image on the

left for instance we see a scene of a

bathroom I do want to note there's a

picture above the sink in the bathroom

second sequence we realize they're these

legs that are in that are out of scale

out of proportion we realize in the

third image that is a miniature bathroom

by the fourth image we realize this is a

picture and it's in a book by the fifth

image we see it's somebody reading the

book and then we move down the hall and

then we realize that that is indeed a

picture hanging on a wall oh it's the

picture hanging on the wall above the

sink and then finally the last image

gives us the scene again reestablished

so you're going to notice that the first

image and the last image are the same

image but that's what ties it together

now this one is not suggesting time

there's no time passing there's no

traditional beginning middle end in that

in the traditional sense but what we are

seeing is the surrealistic

interpretation of what is the scene and

it's all inside of itself so this is

obviously a more complex image sequence

but it is not time-based it is scene

based and so you'll notice that in the

time-based sequences that Dwayne

Michals puts together you're going to

see pretty much the set if you're

talking in movie terms the set that's

not change it deals with how the actors

within that set move through the scene

and that's how you're given that

perception of time but in this last

example that doesn't exist the set

changes because it's two sets that live

with inside of one another and that's

what creates that surrealistic quality

and that loop and so there's a lot of

different ways you could go with this

and I want to talk a little bit about

how we're going to do this photo assignment

first of all I'm going to allow more

time than usual because this is a lot of

work it's going to require that you

think about this a great deal before you

begin before you even pick up the camera

and how are you going to plan this out

and how is it going to work typically

image sequences I think the Muybridge is

definitely different example but even in

Michal's case they're usually between

four and nine images that work together

so it's usually no less than four no

more than nine and they generally

because the way the layout works they

work well with non prime numbers so four

six eight and nine so you could do

whatever you want if you choose to do

more to as fuse you need but as many as

you need to get it done does that make

sense to is kind of hard to deal with so

probably three or four is going to be

the minimum on that so I will give you

more time than required what I'm

probably thinking here now is two weeks

maybe three let's see how the

submissions are coming along let's see

where people

on this and if we need a full month

maybe we could do that so I don't want

people to freak out over the time and I

want to encourage people to participate

in this I think this is a really

important one because essentially this

is an instance where photography is

storytelling and I think is really

important to understand and do another

thing I would consider doing on this is

we talked in the very first assignment

about the whole notion of theme and

variations this is something that might

be important to do more than one on

because this is a very specific skill

and technique that's involved here and

it may require a couple tries to get

something that's really of great quality

and so I want you to push yourselves on

that some too so those are just a couple

of suggestions on the timeline now

here's how I want you to turn these in

when you submit them on social media I

want you to assemble them like what

we've been looking at as a set and put

those in in one big image and put those

in I do not want you to give them to me

image by image because I won't deal with

it it's way too much work for me to

piece that together and try and figure

out what you're going to do and the idea

is not for me to do your work for you to

do your work so just give me one image

with the entire set in the end and if

you're new to photo assignments and you

have no idea what we're talking about it

all these are these things that we're

doing there by weekly photo challenges

and they're designed to increase our

capacity of creative thinking and get

better as photographers so that's what

we're doing if you're new to Photo

Assignments I will link up to the whole

playlist start with the first video it

tells you everything you need to know

i'll put that in the show description or

up here or wherever you're watching this

and so that's where we are and so we're

going to do if you have any questions

about this or any suggestions please

leave me a comment and let me know and

if you've enjoyed this video because we

were to like it share it and as always

subscribe to the Art of Photography for

more videos and I will give more

information on this as we unfold because

we're going to take a little while

longer to do this one so I'll do some

more stuff on this in the coming weeks

and so we do photos some it's every

Monday so get out there think about what

you're going to do pick up your camera

and do some good until the next video

see you guys then later

For more infomation >> PHOTO ASSIGNEMENTS #6 :: PHOTO SEQUENCES - Duration: 10:42.

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Cómo Hacer una Máquina de Tatuajes en Casa - Duration: 5:52.

For more infomation >> Cómo Hacer una Máquina de Tatuajes en Casa - Duration: 5:52.

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7th Hr Biology video - Duration: 3:34.

This is a bear

This John

If John encounters this bear he will die.

John is dead now....

John starts to decompose.

The fungus has decomposed john so much he is never coming back from an injury like this.

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