Sunday, 23 September 2012

Photography 1 - Light Project The intensity of light Exercise Higher and Lower sensitivity

Leeds railway station

All images captured at the largest aperture available of f4.5


iso 800 - 125th sec


iso 100 - 2.5 secs


iso 1000 - 20th sec


iso 800 - 20th sec


iso 800 - 30th sec


iso 1600 - 60th sec


iso 1000 - 60th sec


iso 100 - half sec


iso HI -1 - 125th


iso 100 - 25th sec


iso HI-1 - 100th sec


iso 800 - 20th sec


iso 800 - 25th sec


iso 100 - 3rd sec


iso 1600 - 50th sec


iso 100 - half sec


iso 200 - third sec


iso 400 - third sec

The use of a range of iso sensitivities were required to freeze motion in these images of the railway station late in the day. Examination of the images reveals higher granularity at higher iso speeds. This would have been easier to see if I had used a tripod to ensure crispness in detail at the slower shutter speeds.

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

What makes great photography

Nan and Brian in bed, Nan Goldin 1983

My reading - this is a self portrait carefully composed to explore the relationship between men and women. Nan looks upset as she looks at Brian enjoying a cigarette after having sex. She looks dissatisfied whilst he seems relaxed in the world.

Val Williams - almost as above...

What makes great photography

Cafe Lemitz, Anders Petersen 1978

My reading - This is part of a series of photographs telling the story of the lives of working class people in Sweden (?). The woman is one of only two in the bar and she stands defiantly aware that she is in an unusual place for a woman. She is tolerated by the male clientele who are also aware of that her presence is unexpected.

Val Williams - the Hamburg bar provided an enclosed space to portray the intimacy of the relationships. More of a family album.

What makes great photography

Untitled film still, no 3, Cindy Sherman 1977

My reading - Again I know something about the work of Sherman. Here she has created a fictional still from a non existent movie. In this image she is playing the part.of a house wife washing the dishes or cooking the dinner whilst surreptitiously observing activity behind her.

Val Williams - a social comment on Womens place in a consumerist society (?)

What make great photography

Migrant Family, Dorothea Lange

My reading - I know something about this photograph. It is one of a series of photographs created by a small team of photographers commissioned by the Agriculture agency in the USA to capture the plight of migrants leaving the Dust Bowl states for a new life in California. Lange produced a number of images of this family but it is this one that has become iconic. It has become emblematic of the condition of migrants worldwide. Close cropping of the image and the turned faces of her children clearly focussed attention on the careworn face of the mother facing an uncertain future.

Val Williams - a child either side has a powerful symmetry - a Madonna flanked by Cherubs bedraggled by poverty (too MUCH!)

What makes great photography

Circus, Budapest, Andre Kertész 1920

My reading - This is a photograph taken of a married couple too poor to pay to visit the circus. There are strong horizontal and vertical lines in the image that give it a good balance.

Val Williams - closeness of the characters and the textural differences of the hat scarf and wood grain.

What makes great photography

Tic Tac Men at Ascot Races, Bill Brandt 1935

My reading - The Bookies are pictures signalling the odds for races. Communication is going in all directions and with an urgency that is necessary just before a race.

Val Williams - statues like preachers. Arrested movement and stilled time. Siloueted, locked a mysterious brotherhood. Identical suits, characters in a chorus. Cassandras forecasting the future.
Nope. Didn't get any of that...



Bijou au Bar de la Lune Montmartre, Brassai



Girl about to do a handstand, Roger Mayne