Wednesday, 13 October 2010

Art Photography

Applications
The word art simply means to be 'beauty, texture, colour, print and design'
Examples:

I was unable to find any examples on the Unversity of Brighton Website, of the work I liked.
Also in the Bright Museum & Art Gallery which were a shame, because I really liked some of the work in both Galleries. I also do not remember any of there names - its disappointing because I would of loved to show you have amazing it was.
Conceptual Photography
is basically genre in which the artists makes a photograph of a concept or idea. Conceptual photography usually involves computer editing and the desired effect.
Today 2 galleries I really liked, I really liked the unversity one - I liked the detail to some of the photo's partically the black and white ones I thought they were far better then the colour photos. Reason for this is just I think black and white photo's look more tradional then those in colour. Some photo's today didn't mean that much, where others did. For example one of the landscape pictures in 'Fabrica' It was of a family of 3 looking happy ish. I thought it meant alot as it was a family and came across as well done. ' It was also in black and white'

No, none of them appear in different styles of photography.



Context

Art photograpghy basically contains many different things; such as texture, quaility, style, colour so many things. The surroundings can very aswell, some people look beyond the pictures meaning like if i was to take a photo of a lamp with some many different things in the background people would look beyond the lamp because they'd wanna see other things in this photo.



Techniques

The techniques are something that every photographer/artist use to get the style and look achivered within that photograph/painting. The artist sets out to portray an image he or she likes and uses in modern, abstract, contempoiary, vintage themes to achieve what is beauty to the eye. The tones of the picture very in many ways - for example: Distance, Sephia, Brush/Strokes, lightness and darkness - featured beyond the object in front of the audience.

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