Friday, 23 May 2014

Matt Wisniewski Own Example




This is my own example of Matt Wisniewski's work, as a photographer he created images that had inside shots of models and contrasted them with the outside world. In my image I have captured an action image of my model and combined it with an outside shot which I believed combines well.

Cris Wicks Own Example



 

This is my own example with inspiration from Cris Wicks, this photographer was very creative and artistic in the images he created. The photographs he created showed feelings and had inspirational words or beliefs. In my image I have contrasted music with expression.



Barbara Kruger Own Example

This is my own example inspired by the creative Barbara Kruger. This photograph is based on her artistic work using the idea of the face being split in three to create a positive/negative portrait, using the statement 'We are not what we seem'. In my image it is negative as my model is looking directly at the audience in both eyes, however the lighter side of the image shows more positive relations.

Monday, 19 May 2014

Stina Persson Own Example

This is my individual photograph inspired by Stina Persson. I created this image by taking 10 photographs of my model creating different facial expressions. After this I opened the best image onto photoshop and adjusted it slightly with the different washes creating a nice blend within the models face.

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Stina Persson Artist Research



This photograph was produced by Stina Persson, who would creat portrait images using watercolour washes and masking off different parts of the portrait. An example of this artist's work can be seen below. As you can see in this image she likes to create weird vibrant shapes and create a mix of colours for presentation.

Julian Wolkenstein Artist Research



This photograph is inspired by Julian Wolkenstein, she produces two mirrior image portraits. She does this by selecting the same photograph and pastes it on 2 or 3 columms. After this she changes the transformation of the photograh to get a different effect. This image shows that the human face is not the same and has variation.

Friday, 9 May 2014

Julian Wolkenstein Own Example

These images were exactly the same before editing took place, I took these during a double lesson earlier this week. To make the normal images look like this in the insprtation of Julian Wolkenstein I had to tranfrom the images at different angles.