In my older and less vulnerable years I see myself in a much more relaxed state, musing over my past adventures and ideas. It’s a wistful little escape, this daydream, but one that calms me in the trying present; it is a light at the end of the tunnel, a focus for someone that feels lost at times. The basis of this final project is the preservation of this vision. I wanted to create images that were timeless, grounded in a sense of quiet and intimate reflection. If, in ten years time, I am surrounded by the pictures I took, and am reminded of these younger and more vulnerable years, then this project will have been more than fulfilling.
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Final Project Progress (One Image)
Project 5: Portraiture
Project 5 First Draft
Project 4: Narrative
This project was hard to bring to fruition without losing the core of the story. I gave it my best shot, however, and tried to string the narrative around the photo in the second image, and carried it throughout. The result is somewhat cohesive, but capturing the fine details of the plot without blatantly saying proved difficult. I did, however, enjoy trying to play with perspective: the second image was first-person, and the last used a cardboard box, with a little cut-out for the lens. All in all, a fun project.
There was a crooked man, and he walked a crooked mile.
He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;
Project 3: Altered Perception
Perception is a timeless concept – it pervades, or is intrinsic rather, to nearly every aspect of life. For where would we be without recognition and understanding of the world around us? It follows, then, that altering the norm of this perception leads to entirely different recognition and understanding of our surroundings. I was fascinated by a certain condition of altered perception, dyschronometria, where individuals cannot precisely estimate the passage of time. Quite fitting for a physics major, but also quite daunting – time is a variable quantity, and to essentially push it aside is a task perhaps too difficult. What I focused on, then, was not the elimination of time in the photos I took, but rather the blurring of our perception of it – as if for some certain moment time was not a rigid quantity that passed systematically with each second, but a dense haze. The first thing that came to mind was the idea of an “endless night,” reminiscent of late-night projects where students like myself would work to an indeterminate hour – focused on the process and not the time that has passed. This idea is an easily accepted one. During the day we naturally associate the passage of time with the presence of natural light, such as the overhead sun and the elongated shadows. But during the night, when all we have to go by are the glaring lamp lights and the voided sky overhead, does time seem to move at all?
The Plant in the Corner
Helen Levitt
Helen Levitt was a street photographer that perfected a lyricism of pure, stage-like expression of the everyday lives of the people she happened to chance upon. Never searching for the perfect photo, merely receptive to it, she wandered the streets of not only New York City but Mexico City as well, ever vigilant for the poignant moment expressed by a child’s interrupted play or the longing face of a person caught in a moment of vulnerability.
This photo, taken in 1941 during Levitt’s adventure in Mexico City, illustrates her spirit as a photographer. Levitt was famed for being a master at capturing elusive moments, moments of raw life unfolding all at once. I especially admire the depth this photo takes: all the dogs orient towards the sidewalk, which itself continues on endlessly into the picture.
Some links to further musings:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Levitt#Later_Life_and_Death
http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-helen-levitt1-2009apr01-story.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/30/arts/design/30levitt.html
https://www.moma.org/artists/3520
http://erickimphotography.com/blog/the-ultimate-beginners-guide-for-street-photography/
And finally, there is a wonderful collection of Levitt’s photos from Mexico City contained in a single book:
Helen Levitt: Mexico City, Essay by James Oles, Doubletake.
Project 2: Still Life and Landscape
Camera Study Images: The Correct, The Incorrect, and The Ugly
Correct Exposure: 1/100, f/3.2, ISO 1250, WB 6250.
Overexposure: 1/50, f1.8, ISO 2500, WB 6250.
Underexposure: 1/320, f4, ISO 500, WB 6250.
Highest ISO: 1/40, f2, ISO 3200, WB 6250.
Lowest ISO: 1/40, f2, ISO 200, WB 6250.
Correct White Balance: 1/40, f2, ISO 200, WB 6250
Incorrect White Balance 1: 1/40, f3.2, ISO 1250, WB 3570
Incorrect White Balance 2: 1/40, f3.2, ISo 1250, WB 2780.
Shallow Depth of Field: 1’/100, f1.8, ISO 1250, WB 7140.
Wide Depth of Field: 1′, f22, ISO 1250, WB 7140.
Standard Angle: 1/40, f5.6, ISO 1250, WB 7140.
Alternative Angle: 1/30, f5, ISO 1250, WB 7140
Stopping of Motion: 1/320, f1.8, ISO 1250, WB 8330.
Blurring of Motion: 1,’ f20, ISO 1250, WB 8330.