Thursday, April 14, 2011

Blog Eighteen

Artist Worksheet:
Matthew Currier

Name of Photographer: Dennis Stock

Title of Photograph: James Dean in Times Square

Artist Bio: Born: July 24, 1928
                   Died: January 11, 2010

Education: Dennis Stock did not have much education at all. He only earned a High School Diploma.

Upbringing: Dennis was born on July 22, 1928 in New York City. Dennis was an American photojournalist, documentary photographer and a member of Magnum Photos. Dennis soon went to war in 1947-1951 for the United States Army. He was not a photographer, but an infantryman. After Dennis returned home he began interested in photography. He met a man Gjon Mili while fighting side by side in Europe. Dennis soon met James Dean and began taking photos of him. The famous photo of James Dean in Times Square was taking in 1955. The same year James Dean died.

Art experience: Photographs, Postcards, and Posters.

Artistic Background:

Did your artists work in other artistic Mediums such as paint, clay etc?
No, he only worked with photographs.
Why is he or she a photographer?
Dennis became a photographer thanks to Gjon Mili and Magnum Photos. 
What inspires his/her work?
Dennis was inspired by photography by meeting and seeing photographers while he fought in world war two.
Has your artists encountered any hardships or successes in his or her life that are directly reflected in their work?
He fought and survived World War II.

 Your image:

Why did you select this image?This image would be great to recreate. There are so many options to recreate this photo. Anything can replace the cigarette in James Deans mouth and also anything could replace James Dean himself, as long as it makes sense.
How would you describe your photographers style? (in your own words)
Dennis Stocks style is older times, not modern, also in black and white and is based on one subject at a time not a bunch of photos thrown at you at once.
After researching the photographer what have you found most interesting about his/her photographic style or image production?
The most interesting thing I have learned about Dennis Stock was that he was focused on James Dean a very famous young Hollywood star at the time. All it took was one famous photo to trigger Dennis Stock’s career. How are you planning to recreate your photographers image?
Im am planning on having and younger teenager to replace with James Dean and have the kid with a lollipop in there mouth to show how times have change since 1955 also how modernized times square looks now. What images do you anticipate taking to recreated this image? (i.e. describe the shots you intend to take to reach your final goal)
Shots of Times Square, and it has to be sunny instead of a rainy gray day.








Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Blog Fourteen

Person Edit














           Before                                   After

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Blog Five

 A worm's-eye view is a view of an object from below, as though the observer were a worm; the opposite of a bird's-eye view. A worm's eye view is used commonly for third perspective when you put one vanishing point on top one on the left and one on the right.



A bird's-eye view is an elevated view of an object from above, with a perspective as though the observer were a bird.

Eye Level view is just eye to eye, human to human.



Thursday, February 10, 2011

Blog Two


2.  Aperture is based on the cameras lense. The main function of a camera lens is to collect light. The aperture of a lens is the diameter of the lens opening and is usually controlled by an iris. The larger the diameter of the aperture, the more light reaches the film / image sensor.

3. Shutter speed: controls the amount of time that your film, or digital sensor, is exposed to light. So basically the light that the lense is reflecting off from being open, is more or too little light so the shutter speed will basically take the amount of light let into the lense.

4. Put the camera dial on the image of the camera. Turn the camera on. The begin to shoot.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Blog One

1. This photo appeals to me because it not only drags you in, it very interesting in how the pattern on the roof reflects off the ground on to the people. Also having the people on the floor make the pattern look like it never stops.  I located this photo on Flickr, the URL is, http://www.flickr.com/photos/tjt195/380173157/. I would like to recreate this effect because the pattern could be changed in many ways and make this picture come more to life but in a fictional way. This photo is called “Canton Trade Fair”, it was taken on October 25, 2006 and the camera used is called a Nikon D70s.
2. This photo appeals to me because it’s a glimpse of a whole city ahead but behind a blurry and rainy clear umbrella. I located this photo on Flickr, its URL is, http://www.flickr.com/photos/lynhana/416152814/. I would like to recreate this photo to become a surreal photo. This could really happen but in surreal if the city was in space and the stars were the rain, that would make this photo awesome. This photo was taken on June 5, 2006 and this person used a Kodak gm400.

3. This photo appeals to me because it seriously makes me feel as if I’m standing on top of a building and looking out into the city. If I stare at the picture and act like nothing else is around it really works. I located this photo on Flickr, the URL is, http://www.flickr.com/photos/pmorgan/32606683/. I would like to recreate this photo by bringing it more to life than is already is like by making it float in the sky as if it was in year 3000. This photo was taken on July 15, 2005 in Lu Jia Du, Shanghai, CN, using a Nikon D70s.