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Showing posts from October, 2017

The Decisive Moment

This photograph which shows a decisive moment or a captured moment in time, to me seems grotesque because of the murky looking water and the look and feel of the photograph is black and white which also makes the image look grainy and aged which gives the photograph an eerie atmosphere. Henri Cartier Bresson waited for the man to come into the shot, and captured the moment at a specific time, in this case, he waited until the man was leaping across the puddle which makes the viewers left to question what happened next. This photograph makes me feel depressed with the horrible weather that I can see within this photograph. Henri Cartier Bresson The Gare Saint Lazare

Evaluation Of The Carousel (Week 2)

Materials Microphone Tripod Adobe Audition Computer Cameras Lights (spotlights, overhead lights) Autocue Script Props Processes Setting all materials that are needed. Creating a pitch and presenting to everyone else. Editing the audio on Adobe Audition. Acting out the media. Reading the script. Getting the correct lighting for the media. Media. Day 1 I was given the task to read a segment of the book, "The Cat in The Hat" by Dr. Seuss, into a microphone and then editing the audio from the microphone on Adobe Audition. I then added background music to liven up the segment of audio and to add a mood specifically for the story. I did this by following the following steps below. 1. On the file you have chosen, highlight the parts that you don't want/ need. 2. Delete the highlighted parts by clicking delete and then this part should be gone. 3. Once step 2 has been performed then you will need to begin layering the audio files. I

Man Ray

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/master-of-erotic-photography-man-rays-125th-birthday/a-18671829 Man Ray, born Emmanuel Radnitsky on 20th August 1890 in Philadelphia, America, was the most famously well-known representative of avant-garde photography in 1930. Ray is now considered as a pioneer of Surrealist photography. Ray's work is very wide-ranging, being a painter, object artist photographer, and filmmaker. Ray is also a part of the Dada and Surrealist movements. Ray was the very first artist whose photographs were increasingly more valuable to collectors than his artistic works. Ray made an important contribution to the revision of photography as an art form. One photograph of Ray's, "Noire et Blanche" (1926) was sold for a large sum of $550,000 in 1998. From 1897, Ray lived and worked in New York taking art evening classes. From 1911 Ray worked as a map illustrator and it was at this time that Ray also began painting and sculpting. In 1912 Ray moved to Paris, t