I attended Tim Gaudreau artist lecture back on February 15th with my friend Leah. I went into the lecture expecting Gaudreau to be a photographer who was going to talk about his photos and his methods. Instead I was surprised when he called himself an "eco artist", saying how he want to connect people to the world around us through his art. Once he started showing us some of his work, I began to understand what he meant by Eco artist. Some of Gaudreau's work was done by working with children and helping them learn how to help the environment through art. For instance, Gaudreau mentioned how he worked with many children to create recycle bins for their local town. The children painted tiles and then placed them around the outside of the recycle bins to create mosaics. These children were able to learn the importance of recycling as well as get to relate it to art by making the tiles. Tim also worked with children at a local school to create an outside classroom for them. The kids got to help carve the wood of the benches, that would create the outside classroom. These children also got to learn about the environment, since the wood they were carving used to be an old tree on their school property. I thought that it was very creative of Tim to come up with these two ideas since he had to find a way to get the children involved with the project, teach them about the environment and do it in an artistic way for him and the children.
Also during the lecture, there was some projects that he showed us that I had a hard time seeing as art. For instance, he talked about how he dressed up as a polar bear and walked around the street talking to people about global warning, for one of his projects. I could see how making the polar bear costume would be an art project, but I couldn't see how the rest of it was. I guess it makes sense for an "eco artist"to do something like this, but I think because it was just so far from what I was expecting him to show us, that I had trouble accepting it as art. One of the other projects that he showed us towards the end, that I had no trouble seeing as art, was when he took a picture of everything he threw away in a year. He displayed these pictures in a very interesting way where they created a mosaic pattern that appeared as different colored swirls. I thought this project was very interesting because it was able to be artistic in the way the photos were displayed, and since it gave a "green" message to its viewers, showing them how much they throw away in a year. I also liked how he labeled the project as a self portrait since it showed who he was, through his trash. Overall I did enjoy listening to Tim Gaudreau's lecture though it was not what I expected to see in the beginning.
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Holga Final Prints
After shooting with the Holga for this project, I have to say that I really enjoyed this camera for many reasons. I liked how I did not have that much control over how my pictures would turn out and the excitement I got seeing my negatives for the first time, not knowing what to expect. It was fun for me to just come up with a random idea for a picture and quickly take it without hesitating or having to adjust the shutter speed or the aperture. I was able to experiment with a lot of ideas, without having the camera hold me back. I also liked how easy it was for me to take double exposures. Since there was no focus on the lens of the camera, it was easy for me to include my face in some of the shots, since I didn't have to worry about keeping my face in focus while holding the camera out. Another aspect of the Holga that I really liked was how all the pictures came out looking really old. I don't know how to describe it, but all the photos that I have taken give me the same eerie, old feeling and I do not think it is because of the subject matter. I have shot with a Holga before this project and those pictures gave me the same feeling even though they were of buildings and landscapes. Overall, I really enjoyed the Holga and plan to use it again in the future and maybe experiment with color film.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Tierney Gearon Video
I really enjoyed watching the documentary about Tierney Gearon. I found her way of taking photos and working with her family really interesting to me. I loved how all of her photos had a really personal, private feeling to them that showed the viewer what her relationships with her family were like. While watching how Gearon talked and interacted with her family members while she took photos of them, was able to give me a different feeling about the photos, than if I just saw them on their own without any introduction. I loved being able to see the conversation leading up to the picture being taken, and then seeing the final photo after. All of her photos were very personal to her, about her life or reflected her childhood growing up. I think the photos that I liked the most, that we saw in the documentary, were of her mother. The relationship that they had was very interesting to watch since her mother would be yelling at her one minute and then be smiling and laughing with her the next. I think their complex relationship with each other was what made it possible for Gearon to capture such beautiful shots of her and her mother. I think one of my favorite moments for the documentary was when Tierney was telling the camera about the last photo we saw her take, of her mother sitting on the grass with her baby laying away from her in the sun. While Tierney was describing this image and what it meant to her, she started crying, saying how growing up she was like the baby being left unattended in the sun while her mother didn't pay attention to her. Watching her cry and talk about this made that particular image way more interesting and made me understand its meaning even more.
If I could compare Tierney Gearon to another contemporary photographer I think it would be Sally Mann. Though Mann's photos do not have the same feeling or look to them that Tierney does, she takes pictures of her children naked, playing around, just like Tierney. Once we finished this documentary, I had a hard time thinking of another contemporary photographer that shot like Tierney, but then I remembered my brother showing me Sally Mann's work and him telling me how some of her pictures of her children naked are a little intense. This is what made me relate her to Gearon because her photos of her children naked stirred up a lot of talk about them being child pornography. Sally Mann's photos are very soft and strange looking at times while Tierney Gearon are more candid and realistic, but also disturbing and strange as well.
Tierney Gearon's Work
Sally Mann's Work
If I could compare Tierney Gearon to another contemporary photographer I think it would be Sally Mann. Though Mann's photos do not have the same feeling or look to them that Tierney does, she takes pictures of her children naked, playing around, just like Tierney. Once we finished this documentary, I had a hard time thinking of another contemporary photographer that shot like Tierney, but then I remembered my brother showing me Sally Mann's work and him telling me how some of her pictures of her children naked are a little intense. This is what made me relate her to Gearon because her photos of her children naked stirred up a lot of talk about them being child pornography. Sally Mann's photos are very soft and strange looking at times while Tierney Gearon are more candid and realistic, but also disturbing and strange as well.
Tierney Gearon's Work
Sally Mann's Work
Monday, February 20, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
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