Showing posts with label black and white. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black and white. Show all posts

Friday, November 19, 2010

Photography: Robert Frank



This week in Art History 206 we covered Postwar to Postmodern, 1945-1980. Each week we submit our personal response the work we have the strongest reaction to. I chose this photograph by Robert Franks. I feel this excerpt from our textbook lends the image much more depth:

"Frank used his work to reflect his concerns about alienation and lack of spirituality in twentieth-century America. Drug Store, Detroit is characteristic of his national portrait of emptiness, alienation, and despair. Under a barrage of bold advertising, some 15 men order, among other items, artificial orange whips, each patron seemingly unaware of the others. On the other side of the counter dutifully serving the white males are African-American women, undoubtedly working for a minimum wage. Just as the cake is trapped in the airless foreground case, the waitresses seem trapped behind the counter in the drudgery of the menial jobs. The glare of bare florescent bulbs bouncing off linoleum, Formica, and plastic is a reminder of the period's deadening aesthentic of efficiency and modernity, while the monotonous lineup of jukeboxes on the counter opposite the patrons underlines the "sell, sell, sell" mentality of American business. It should come as no surprise that the downtown Detroit where this photograph was taken was largely destroyed during the race riots of the late 1960s." (Janson's History of Art, 8th Ed.)

Image - Drugstore, Detroit, 1955, © Robert Frank, from The Americans
Image Source - DIA (Detroit Institute of Photography) Blog


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Thursday, January 7, 2010

winter: white.black.gray






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Saturday, November 14, 2009

camera work magazine (1903-1917)


"Dawn" by Alice Boughton, photograph circa 1909


"Spider-webs" by Alan Langdon Coburn, photography circa 1908


"Experiment in Three-Color Photography" by Edward Steichen, photograph circa 1906


"Black Bowl" by George Seeley, photograph circa 1907


"York Minster: 'In Sure and Certain Hope" by Frederick H. Evans, photograph circa 1903

Camera Work was a quarterly photographic journal published by Alfred Stieglitz from 1903 to 1917. It is known for its many high-quality photogravures by some of the most important photographers in the world and its editorial purpose to establish photography as a fine art. It has been called "consummately intellectual", "by far the most beautiful of all photographic magazines", and "a portrait of an age in which the artistic sensibility of the nineteenth century was transformed into the artistic awareness of the present day."

A collection of Camera Work was appraised in Philadelphia on a 2007 episode of Antiques Roadshow with an estimated worth of $60,000 to $90,000. As of 2008, individual issues routinely sell for $2,000 to $5,000 depending upon the number and quality of photogravures in the issue.

Images and info via.


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Monday, November 2, 2009

movie poster: I am here


click image to enlarge

My final movie poster for I am here. I compiled a decent stack of images for this project and my original ideas were much more complex. I debated on use of color...or not. Black and white obviously won out. How much imagery to use to convey a message. The message of the film has underlying complexity {visit this post for a synopsis} but I decided to focus on the implied connections between the two main characters. After three designs it came down to, "keep it simple". I am glad I went with my gut on all choices, and I am pleased with the end result.

Leave me a comment, let me know, what do you think?

Looking forward to viewing all of my classmates projects and our discussion today!



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