Showing posts with label artist biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist biography. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2011

Alex Stoddard








Alex Stoddard is a only 17 years old, and is a great example of how photography is changing. Not specifically in terms of the equipment used to make photographs, but the possibilities available to show those photographs. Alex started taking photos not long before he decided to take on a 365 - taking a picture and sharing it everyday for a year. His photos greatly improved over the course of a year, and you can see his learning curve. I can see that some of his images are digitally manipulated - which means that more are, but I just can't tell!


Alex was born in Jacksonville, Florida, but is currently growing up in Georgia. I suppose he must go to school, but he recently quit his job at an arcade because he's officially self-employed. Based on comments on his flickr posts, he has several commissions for prom pictures and "other client stuff". He has a blog where he posts very little at a time - a short video, and answer to a questions, a link to a friend's artwork, and that sort of thing. He's currently on his 302 day of his 365, which not only means he only has 63 days left, but also that all of his current success in photography has come in the last 10 or so months.


He explains in this interview that his 365 has helped him discover his emotions, as well as his photography. This is very evident in his shots, which are quite emotional, and very ethereal. I find his photographs incredibly inspiring, both where it concerns living my life and taking my own photographs.


 He does mostly emotionally dramatic photos, but he has a sense of humor as well, evident in this photo.



Here is his very first 365. Awful, isn't it? The one in the woods is day 4. His color correction has much improved. That's what I like about this project. You really see the improvement of the photographers. And you don't see an amazing picture everyday, and that's okay. It helps me have less pressure on myself to always be perfect, because than I can just create what I feel compelled to create without worrying that others will judge my overall talent over one image.


Here's his most recent photo.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Janet Cardiff

Janet Cardiff and Georges Bures Miller
Her Long Black Hair, 2004
Janet Cardiff was born in 1957 in Brusself, Ontario. She studied at Queen's University and the University of Alberta. Currently she lives with in Berlin along with her friend and collaborator George Bures Miller. Her works tend to be installations, usually with audio involved.


She has been included in many exhibitions all over the world, including Scotland, England, New York, and Canada and represented Canada at the 2001 Venice Biennale with Bures Miller.

Ship of Fools, 2010
Some of their work includes walks, where they tour people around a city or a building with headphones and photographs. One example is 'Her Long Black Hair', where people carry photographs of a woman going to the same places around Central Park in New York. The walk is roughly 40 minutes long. Their most recent walk was in 2006 where visitors were taken on a walk through a landscape where the battle between the Prussians and Napolean took place over 200 years ago. The audio includes excerpts from Louise Seidler's journal, the painter of Goethe from Jena. The audio includes sound effects of battle scenes.

Telephone/Time, 2004
Cardiff and Bures Miller recently salvaged a thirty-foot Chinese junk boat. They took it to their studio and recreated the the interior. Viewers enter the cabin and discover many pointless contraptions, like a "underground workshop for nonsense". These contraption represent the people that ran the boat captionless - therefore pointlessly and without direction. It takes roughly six minutes to go through the installation.

Smaller works they have done together include one called Telephone. The visitor listens to a conversation on an old-fashioned phone. What they hear is a recorded dialogue between Cardiff and a scientist discussing space and time. It loops every two minutes.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Teun Hocks


Teun Hocks is from the Netherlands, born in 1947. He started taking photographs at the age of 14. By his early 20s he started painting on them. He makes his photographic prints on toned gelatin silver-print and uses oil paints to paint on them. I think more recently he has been digitally painting his photographs. These pieces seem more digital, but are conceptually in the same vein as his previous work. His list of solo exhibitions is quite grand. Hocks has also published several books of his work.


He photographs himself for his work, which is often humorous. I found myself laughing with much of his work. He definitely makes fun of life, but you can tell he has a joy for the little things. It's something I try to express in a lot of my work as well, and they way he pulls it off, you don't necessarily notice it right away. It's not big, like Hello Kitty. It's a subtle suggestion that you may as well enjoy life if you can help it. like a reminder - "hey, enjoy tripping" and that sort of thing.


What he says about how his ideas are formed,
"Sometimes I have an idea immediately, but most of the time I have half-ideas. So I make sketches. Sometimes I’ll look in my sketchbooks and find a drawing that I’d almost forgotten about. So I change something, and then I find I’ve started to make a work. I make a choice that I want to make a drawing into a work if I find I’m intrigued myself. But I need to draw. I have to draw to think."



His work is a combination of real and surreal, but they exist together as if they're the same thing. Like someone is so excited he can fly, but the viewer doesn't learn until the end that everybody can fly. So flying is surreal.



He begins his process by sketching and creating water color drawings of the final composition. Then, he paints or builds a backdrop for his scene. He photographs himself in black and white and prints the image. He uses transparent layers of paint to color the photograph, so you can still see the photograph underneath.

Judy Coleman


Judy Coleman was born in New York, New York, but now lives in Venice, California. Her education includes Cornell University in New York and the University of California in Los Angelos. She's had collections displayed all over the world and an impressive list of exhibitions in California, but also internationally.



She explains on her website that she discovered photography after becoming a newspaper reporter, and since, the camera has become her way of exploring body language, especially through the female form. Her technique blends photography, painting, drawing, and sculpture.


I think her art is incredibly beautiful, and sometimes it is difficult to tell whether something is photographed or illustrated, though I think illustrations are always involved. Her animal portraits are beautiful, but the following drawing just goes to show, even very talented people don't always make the best art.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Jessica Bruah

 Jessica Bruah was born in 1981 and in recieved her BFA at Columbia in Chicago and her MFA at the School of Visual Arts in New York, both in photography. She has won several awards and held many solo exhibitions, including one at ACRE Projects in Chicago, where she was an artist in residence.




Her most famous series is titled "Series", later to be renamed to "Series 1" after making a "Series 2". Both works include woman (sometimes men?) doing sometimes normal, but mostly unusual activites, like lying face down in the snow, posting post-its all over the house. None of them include the women's faces, therefore it's difficult to tell if the images sometimes have men rather than woman.

This is what she has to say on her series,


My project Stories originated as a way to merge my interest in writing with photography. The work is influenced by the formal qualities of short fiction and its tendency to focus on a single mood or event. Like a photograph, the short story is an exercise in brevity; they both exist as concise pieces that are at once resolved and unresolved.
My images are meant to be vignettes, presented as isolated fictional experiences. They are also filled with contradictions and ambiguities: the domestic settings can be seen as both comforting and confining; the scenarios presented have elements that are realistic and surreal; the nameless, faceless character presented in the images is both the subject and the photographer; the work is continually shaped by the convergence of the Decisive Moment and staged photography.
My hope is that the viewer becomes an active reader of the narratives presented as I continue to question the ability of storytelling within a fixed frame.

Her work to me seems very young and very playful. I love the colors and the lighting. She can create beautiful soft lighting and make the view take the subject less seriously. For example, the photo of the woman lying in the leavces would be quite depressing with somber lighting, but, but with the soft lighting, it seems like a petty or simple sadness that drove the woman to just into the leaves like that.

Erwin Olaf


Erwin Olaf is a Dutch photographer. He was born in 1959. He does both commercial and fine art photography. His commerical work included Levi's, Microsoft, and Nokia.

He studied journalism at the School of Journalism in Utrecht. He currently lives in Amsterdam. He got his start after winning the first prize for the Young European Photographer competition, which was followed by an exhibition at the Ludwig Museum in Cologn, Germany. He is also a videographer

His Fine art work includes a series of photographs titled "Grief", it depicts ordinary looking people in their homes showing subtle signs of grief. Sometimes it looks like simple grief, and sometimes it looks like deep deep grief.

Olaf plays with both high-key and low-key in his photography, occasionally meeting in the middle.

His series titled "Royal Blood" depicts famous royal people and how they were killed. Most of the royalty I cannot recognize (as he is using models), but Princess Diana is the most obvious, I think, especially with the Mercedes logo slicing her arm.

Olaf's works are usually provocative and humourous. And many people either love them or hate them.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Anton Corbijn



Biography
Anton Corbijn is a Dutch photographer born in 1955. He specializes in photographing the entertainment industry for magazine covers and album covers. He has also designed album covers for bands like U2, The Rolling Stones, and R.E.M. He is also interested in film-making and has directed several music videos and films, including The American and Control.



Significance
He seems to have a passion for still photography and film. He has a very grungy dark style, somewhat angry. I haven't seen any of his films, but from the look of the key art, they seem to emulate a similar dark style. His photography just doesn't seem clean, like it is a defiant teenager or a rusty car.



Composition
I do not think Corbijn has any rules in terms of composition. He seems to do whatever strikes him at the moment. Some images are centered while others are drastically cut off on the sides.

Concept
His work is not traditionally concept based. In his photography, he is representing others more than he is representing himself. He must find what makes the model tick and he photographs that. His photography is heavily rooted within the entertainment industry, and he does not do fashion photography extensively, he has
photographed Liv Tyler for the G-Star Raw 2010 line.

Joe McNally

Biography
Joe McNally needs to update his website so that I can write a biography on him, but otherwise, he has a very active online presence. He has a twitter, which I only assume is him because he's currently looking for "Leading men and ladies" that are "Hollywood types".
However, I was able to find more about him on. He was the first staff photographer for LIFE in 23 years from 1994-1998.


Significance
He photographed portraits around Ground Zero in the weeks after 9/11 using large Polaroids. Millions of people saw these photos in exhibits around the country. The booklet for the exhibit sold 55,000 copies, which raised $2 million for the 9/11 relief effort. He is world renown and has traveled to at least 50 different countries on photography assignments.



Art Historical Movement
His "Faces of Ground Zero" portrait series is considered the most significant artistic exploration of the 9/11 tragedy. He also photographed the 2008 Beijing Olympics.



Concept
He photographs dancers. These images are beautiful. Some of the images are in a studio, and some on location. Some seem editorial, but others appear more self-initiated and creative with a concept behind it. I would say most are simply beautiful photos of dancers. But occasionally he has a photo that feels like it represents what beauty is, and compares it to, say, the grungy setting. His current work is all over the place. I cannot seem to find a series, but he shoots on assignment.



Method
It is quite clear from his photography that he uses digital at least some of the time, but I could not find any other information (which makes it even more plausible that he shoots in digital).

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Blake Fitch

Blake Fitch

Biography
Blake Fitch was born in 1971 in Rochester, NY. She majored in Photography and minored in Photo History at Pratt Institute in 1994 on full scholarship for photography. She continued her education at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1998, and received her masters in Art Administration from Boston University in 2001. Her art focuses on humans.

Significance
Her photography focuses on portraiture, and capturing the human condition, such as identity, rites of passage, and civil rights.



Art Historical or Photographic movement
Her portraiture could be a snapshot, but she uses the lighting in very creative ways. She often uses the ambient lighting, but effectively to create a portrait that might look like the lighting was placed intentionally.

Review
Her work has been described as graceful and confident.



Composition
Many of her compositions follow the the traditional rules of portraiture, but often they look more like snapshots, with the tips of heads cut off, or the other way around and there is a lot of space above the head. Sometimes, she will have the subject stand in front of a flat background, but often she will have them in a space, such as sitting at a table or in a field. In her series Expectations of Adolescence, she photographs her cousin and half-sister, always in a setting that helps describe the portrait. These are very snap-shot-y, but continue to utilize the lighting in a very intentional way.

Concept
Blake Fitch likes to show humans and our lives, exploring relationships and growing up and the similarities between our lives, like the enjoyment of relaxing and how ex-boyfriends effect our lives.

Method
She uses a traditional camera, though I'm could not find if she uses mainly film or digital



Motivations
As she is really interested in humans, her motivations include discovering why people do things and understanding what people are thinking. As most people are often surrounded by people, her subject matter and inspiration is plentiful.

My Opinion
I really like her work of her cousin and half-sister, because it is always interesting to see people grow up in pictures. I really want to photograph my kids artistically and have a series where I see them grow up. You feel like you really know the person when you're done with the series because you literally watched him or her grow up.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Keith Loutit

Keith Loutit

Biography
Keith Loutit is from Sydney, Australia. He considers himself himself both a photographer and filmmaker. Although he is not the only photographer to experiment with tilt-shift and time-lapse techniques, his artwork seems to use the techniques in a way that really miniaturize the subject.

Significance
Loutit is one of the first photographers to experiment with the tilt-shift photography from such a great distance so that the subject matter looks like miniatures. He has been hired for commercials and has used the technique on his own, but as of yet, there is still a lot of room for application with this type of photography.

Art Historical or Photographic movement
Loutit works uses time-lapse video to create his stop-motion videos. Stop-motion can be so drastically different, and Loutit has found a way to update what stop-motion can do.

Rievew
I couldn't find an officially published review of his work, but I found several blog and forum critiques, the most official lookingbeing a review by Clay Parker Jones at ExitCreative.net, which is really just an explanation of what tilt-shift means. Other, more casual looking bloggers wrote how they enjoyed Loutit's work. They all said a variety of the same things, including how at first they thought it was miniatures or claymation, but through studying the videos realized it couldn't be and through research discovered these images were of real people and real boats, etc. After that, they all said how it was simply really neat and one must check it out.

Composition
Loutit's composition is dictated by the subject matter, be it a house, boat, or field. In the examle of a boat, the subject matter moves, and he doesn't necessarily know where to, so I think a lot of it is just point and hope for the best. That or the composition is not entirely important to the overall piece.

Concept
Loutit's series Small World's has been his most famous series. He traveled the world to document famous cities, monuments, and people. The people seem so tiny and abstract, so there are very little differences. Loutit is trying to say that today with increasing communication, the world seems smaller, but through Loutit's work we see mankind working together building things and driving and lounging at beaches or going to ballet class.

Method
He shoots several shots a second with a tilt-shift lens on his video camera, which creates the illusion of the subject being a miniature. Using a time-lapse to capture fewer frames per second makes the video seem more like a stop-motion rather than a video, where the "normal" frames/second is 24-30.

My Opinion
I think Loutit's work does a good job of expressing his intention - that mankind works together to create society, which is evident from the perspective that Loutit shoots from. His work is aesthetically unique, which makes it stand out. I think he just simply has fun with it, and that's a great reason to continue doing it.