Archive for the ‘art’ Category

Study Old Paintings to Breathe New Life into Your Photography

October 9, 2009

reprint from rising.blackstar com

By John Sevigny

John Sevigny was born in Miami and studied English and art history at Miami Dade College. He has spent more than 15 years as a professional photographer, working for the Associated Press, EFE News, and many newspapers. Currently working as an independent fine art and documentary photographer, he has exhibited his work in the United States, Portugal, and Mexico, where he currently lives. He is finishing a degree in art education at La Universidad Veracruzana and regularly gives photographic workshops. His writing on photography and the arts regularly appears in a number of online magazines. Check out his Gone City blog. in Art of Photography on September 22nd, 2009

Photography has existed since the 1820s, according to most historians, giving the medium a history of less than 200 years. Two-dimensional art, meanwhile, has been around for 20,000 years, as far as we know — with the animals painted on cave walls in Lascaux, France, being among the first-known examples.

As the infant of the visual arts, photography inevitably draws upon the millennia of picture-making that came before it. And the thousands of years of development, thought, research and hard work that have marked the history of art can provide powerful sources of photographic inspiration.

Here are just a few lessons that old paintings can teach us about photography.

Impressionism: Qualities of Light

Most photographers are aware of Impressionism, primarily because it is a movement dealing with natural light and the changing qualities of light. Claude Monet, Georges Seurat and others were more concerned with the way things were seen than with creating realistic descriptions of their subjects.

The movement paralleled the rise of photography. From about 1860 onward, there was a push and pull between the two, as each strove to define itself in relation to the other. At least one painter, Edgar Degas, created photographs himself, and those who study his compositions will recognize immediately that his unusual use of cropping was intrinsically photographic. In fact, it mirrors what most of us do today with Photoshop and other imaging software.

More than anything else, Impressionism reminds us that light is the primary source of an image, painted or photographed, and that the quality of light, which was of great interest to the Impressionists, can make or break a picture.

Chiaroscuro: Using Contrast

An Italian word for “light-dark,” the term “chiaroscuro” is used to describe the dramatically lit, high-contrast oil painting that reached its peak in the 16th Century. When a photographer today makes a portrait lighting a single side of the face while allowing the other to fade to darkness, he or she — perhaps unknowingly — is using a tool wielded by Ugo da Carpi, Giovanni Baglione, and still later, Caravaggio.

Chiaroscuro was a powerful technique in Renaissance art, and it remains so today in the hands of countless photographers. But as anyone who has worked in the studio knows, directing a single, highly directed light source can be a tricky business. Studying Mannerist and Baroque painting is one way to help master the technique.

Mastering Composition

The first and best masters of composition were painters and draftsmen. Most photographers have some awareness of the basic principles of composition: lines, the rule of thirds, shape, proportion and balance. The best painters were masters at using these elements together to create eye-trapping scenes.

Peter Paul Rubens, a Flemish painter working in the 16th and 17th Centuries, took compositional complexity to an extreme. Joan Miro, a 20th Century painter from Spain, used the same principles but applied them sparingly, including few elements in his paintings and drawings.

Some of our greatest photographers, such as Henri Cartier-Bresson and Miguel Rio Branco, worked with brushes first and cameras later. Both are masters of formal composition because they spent long hours studying it. A deep familiarity with composition in painting can be applied to photography to create true works of art rather than snapshots.

Abstract Expressionism: Going Deeper

Often characterized by the loved-and-loathed drip paintings of American artist Jackson Pollock, Abstract Expressionism was much more than that. The idea of covering an entire surface with marks, and using non-representational imagery, was one of the most important artistic revolutions of the 20th Century.

The idea is that there is something deeper, something that flows from the subconscious, which can be captured and expressed in art. This is fertile soil for fine-art photographers and those who are interested in pushing their photography in new directions.

Remember, two-dimensional art is at least 10 times as old as Christianity. Photographers should not ignore this part of their visual heritage, but rather, embrace it, build upon it, and apply it to their work. Painting is not photography — but it contains lessons that can make us better at what we do.

Talk and Presentation “Fred Stein: Art of the Street/Art of Intimacy”

October 9, 2009

Save The Date!    October 27, 7 PM

Talk and Presentation
“Fred Stein: Art of the Street/Art of Intimacy ”
Paris 1930’s, New York 1940’s, Portraits

Peter Stein, the son of noted photographer Fred Stein will be giving a talk and video/slide presentation about his father on October 27, 2009, at the Soho Photo Gallery located at 15 White Street, between West Broadway and Avenue of the Americas. There will be a reception starting at 6 pm. The program will begin  at 7 pm.

Street scenes of Paris in the years just before the German occupation, and New York during and just after World War II, capture the vitality and pathos of these two vibrant cities His portraits of intellectuals, artists, and statesmen reveal the unique character of the men and women who shaped the political and cultural events of the 20th century.

Educated as an attorney at German universities and deeply involved in anti-Nazi politics from his youth, Stein was forced to leave his country in 1933.  Unable to practice law in his adopted country, France, he made a vocation out of his photographic skill.  In 1941, before the occupation of Paris, Stein and his family again escaped the Nazis by emigrating to New York City where he worked as a freelance photographer until his death in 1967 at the age of 58.

Stein, whose works were recently on exhibition at the International Center of Photography (NYC), is represented in collections of The National Museum of American Art (Smithsonian), The National Portrait Gallery (Smithsonian), the ICP, The Jewish Museum (NYC), The Center for Creative Photography (Tucson), and museums, galleries, and private collections around the world.
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Peter Stein is a Professor of Cinematography in the Graduate Film Program at New York University. He has photographed over 50 feature films and television movies for the last 35 years.

Visit Soho Photo

Soho Photo Gallery has been showcasing a broad spectrum of imagery by emerging and veteran photographers since 1971. The Gallery is in New York’s historic TriBeCa district, three blocks south of Canal Street between West Broadway and Sixth Avenue. Subways: #1 to Franklin Street or the A, C, E, W, N, R or #6 to Canal Street.

Painting or drawing on prints

October 8, 2009

this is a post i made on one of my user groups about one of my work process that goes into my dancer series.

i use pastel chalks in some of my pieces because i am not happy with the gamut that i get from my printers. i use to use a Epson 1280 with dye ink which i loved that gamut but with my Epson 7600 pigment inks the gamut is much smaller. some colors just don’t reproduce as vivid as i’d like so i’ve gone back to my roots which is drawing.

i’ve talked to the people at Eastman Kodak about any destructive reactions that might happen to mixing the two mediums but since the, the 7600 and pastels are both pigments there should be no adverse effects. i do spray prints with printshield between mediums. archival? live longer than me? that never bothers me nor do i loose sleep over it. i try and make the best product i can, but looking at some old art in paris it too has seemed to have faded somewhat. what can you do? all of this planet is impermanent.

i usually print on hahnemuhle papers my fav being william turner textured papers but have moved to german etching. i know some use arches uncoated watercolor paper which i might go back to. i am thinking of looking into cranson. i’ll look around at photo expo for papers. one year i found kodaks metallic paper, woohoo.

now it seems to me in my ignorance that one could mix charcoal with b&w printing without a negative effect. the same would apply to india inks and sumi carbon which would give more permanency to the product. but do be aware that some gallery owners won’t touch my stuff even though its original and one of a kind. ignorance abounds. but the buying public seems to like these works as they do sell, alas not as many as i’d like but i am no name and people do like name dropping. but sometimes i get lucky in that my color gamut fits in with their decor.

personally i am not a big fan of acrylic paints or washes because i started with oil paints but hey what ever floats your boat and makes you happy then go for it. i think it’s all about exploring learning how to then letting the process go where it wants to. personally i am not here to make the rest of the world happy. i do clean up after myself, help others in need and believe it helps to love one another. i know too many people who don’t know how to love. that’s why i create art because i love to, it’s an inside job that i hope spills out into the world.where would we be if we didn’t explore all of creation?

i have started using adorama lab for my kodak metallic c prints, love those blacks but there again some colors just don’t come out. but hey maybe i’ll see if i can add some colors on top. it’s not brain surgery and no children or animals will be harmed,why not? just my two cents.

jene

http://www.jene youtt .com