In these images I cut them into strips and made two images out of one image by just cutting.
I enjoyed doing this as it was interring and something I have never done before. I think if I was to do it again I would make sure all the strips are straight so the image comes out properly. And take my time doing it. |
I made a photo out of everything in our bag I didn't have much in my bag but I set all my things up in all different orders and took photos I made my things in a box shape and not all around the place.
In this lesson today we had different images of different people and folded them to created different face shapes. I enjoyed doing this as it was just a quick and easy task where we didn't need anything but only 1 image, but it was also a fun task to do. if I did this again I would folded the paper even more to see what it would look like. |
Born: 14 June 1956 (age 64 years)
Jean faucheur was born in Versailles, France.
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Born November 1, 1889
Died may 31st, 1978 Hannah Höch, née Anna Therese Johanne Höch, German artist, the only woman associated with the Berlin Dada group, known for her provocative photomontage compositions that explore Weimar-era. In this image I think that there are all different photos cut up into one image. The photos are of hair and different figures;BMW sign, bulb,clock,hand,car wheel and more. The background is all yellow or it could be a yellow filter. Its a 2D image also a photomontage image found in magzens. The image was made in 1920 in Germany. they might have used magzeans and cut out photos. If I was to rename this art work with a new title it would be called "Everything yellow" or "yellow mystery". I would name it this because I think it is a good title and because everything is yellow even know the BMW sign and more have a slight different colour to it also I put the word mystery as you don't really know whats going on in this image and it leaves you on a mystery |
He was born in 1975.
Over the past twenty years, Matt Lipps has developed a unique photographic practice, which he refers to as being “in, with and alongside photography”. His process begins with appropriated images, and involves collage strategies, sculptural tropes, and theater staging. The resultant works invite a dialog about the intersection of fine art and fashion, as well as bigger questions about the role of photography in contemporary society. |
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Daniel Gordon was born in 1980 in Boston, Massachusetts, was raised in San Francisco, California, and lives and works in New York. Described in a 2014 New Yorker review as an artist who “makes Matisse look like a minimalist,” Gordon creates works that dissolve distinctions between collage, photography, and sculpture.
Gorden appropriates images of. common still life objects and sometimes portraits, he finds them online- fruits, plants, combines these with forms he has produces. 'I print the images on paper before cutting them out, and then assemble a three-dimensional tableau in the studio that I then photograph.' I think his work is very bright and colourful, full of vivid colours. It is also ablaze. You can tell he has worked hard to do his work and looks like he has put his time into his work. It Is like hje cropped all different photos/images to make one. |
In Photography we are learning about prison photography. I think prison photography is interesting because they make work out of nothing and build it up to something really interesting.
Prison photography is a collection of photographs taken by the inmates of the bolzano-Bozen penal institution during a weekly photography course taught by nicoló degiorgis over a period of 6 years between 2013 & 2018 in collaboration with the alpha beta Piccadilly language school. Divided. |
Theses photos where taken around my house, my favourite photos are the top ones as the they only focus on the images and the window is blurry. if I was to do this again I would use more objects around my House to make the photo seem more packed and more to focus on.
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This image was made by Lorenzo Vitturi-from Monday must be made.
Flowers Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by London-based Italian artist Lorenzo Vitturi. The works in his new series Money Must be Made are based at the Balogun Market in Lagos, Nigeria, the second biggest market of its kind in West Africa. Lorenzo Vitturi (b. 1980, Italy) is a photographer and sculptor based in London. Formerly a cinema set painter, Vitturi has brought this experience into his photographic practice, which revolves around site-specific interventions at the intersection of photography, sculpture and performance. at the CNA in Luxembourg. Vitturi also participated to group exhibitions at MaXXI in Rome, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, La Triennale in Milan, the Shanghai Art Museum and K11 Art Space in Shanghai, and BOZAR in Brussels. |
The Mona Lisa is a half-length portrait painting by ltalian artist Leonardo do Vinci. Considered an archetypal masterpiece of the Italian Renaissance, it has been described as “the best known,the most visited,the most written about,the most sung about.
Mona Lisa is the most famous painting in the world. It is located at the Louvre in paris, behind history adds to the painting. The Mona Lisa is à very realistic portrait. The subjects softly scupture face shows Leonardo’s skillful handing of sfumato,an artistic technique that uses subtle gradation of lights and shadows to model form,and shows his understanding of the skull beneath the skin. The Mona Lisa is that famous that it has been stolen once on the 21st of august 1911 by an Italian Louvre employee. |
Marcel Duchamp re-created the Mona Lisa portrait, he drew a moustache and goatee on her face and he also added the letter
“L.H.O.OQ”. The captain combines Duchamp’s gleeful sense of wit with his love of wordplay:eliding the letters in french sounds like “Elle a chaud au cul”. Duchamp wanted people to view his art and notice the the culture and the society that made the work. This art was first conceived in 1919, the work is one of what Duchamp referred to as readymade or more specifically a reactified ready-made.
Why did Duchamp draw a moustache on Mona Lisa? Francis picabia in an attempt to publish L.H.O.OQ. in his magazine 391 could not wait for the work to be sent from New York City,so with the permission of Duchamp,drew the moustache on ,Mona Lisa himself. |
In today's lesson we had 20 tasks on the board that we had to follow and experiment with it.
I found this interesting because I liked to play with different things, for example I put my image under the tap and soaked it in water and It made the image look different when I took a photo, it had little rips on it. |
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