Wednesday 28 November 2012

David Seidner



David Seidner (born 18 February 1957) was an American photographer known for his portraits and fashion photography. He died of complications from AIDS on Sunday, June 6, 1999. David Seidner was nineteen when his first cover picture was published and twenty-one when the first of many solo exhibitions of his photographs was shown in Paris. . His signature imagery from the 1980s included photographic fragments, paint, shards of glass and reflections. His influence then was the music of John Cage.
His immense cultural knowledge enabled him to draw on the past to create modern yet timeless images. His nudes evoke Greek classical sculpture; his portraits from the mid-Nineties were inspired by John Singer Sargent and evoke the paintings of BoldiniIngres and Velázquez; his black and white portraits of artists recall busts of Roman emperors.
Seidner's work had several defining periods. In its evolution, his images became more and more pure, ending with the simplicity of the orchid series, which was taken in his Miami apartment using an auto- focus camera and colour negative film.
A very important phase of David Seidner's work was his series of nudes.


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BETTY LAGO - CHANEL - DAVID SEIDNER 1985

1986: Betty Lago in Azzedine Alaïa, photographed by David Seidner

 





Ahn Duong for Yves Saint Laurent
Photographed by David Seidner
1986
  • Drama 
  • Presence of black

Herb Ritts

Herbert "Herb" Ritts (August 13, 1952 – December 26, 2002) was an American fashion photographer who concentrated on black-and-whitephotography and portraits, often in the style of classical Greek sculpture.
Vogue Daily — <em>Stephanie, Cindy, Christy, Tatjana, Naomi, Hollywood, 1989</em>
Stephanie, Cindy, Christy, Tatjana, Naomi, Hollywood, 1989
 
Photo: Herb Ritts Foundation, Courtesy of Edwynn Houk Gallery 



Versace Dress (Back View), El Mirage,1990
 
Photo: Herb Ritts Foundation, Courtesy of Edwynn Houk Gallery




Female Torso with Veil
Herb Ritts
Paradise Cove
1984

  • Sensuality of the fabric
  • Contouring to the body
  • Anonymity - no face

Louise Dahl-Wolfe



Louise Emma Augusta Dahl (November 19, 1895 – December 11, 1989) was a noted American photographer. She is known primarily for her work for Harper's Bazaar, in association with fashion editor Diana Vreeland.



"I believe that the camera is a medium of light, that one actually paints with light. In using the spotlights with reflecting lights, I could control the quality of the forms revealed to build a composition. Photography, to my mind, is not a fine art. It is splendid for recording a period of time, but it has definite limitations, and the photographer certainly hasn’t the freedom of the painter. One can work with taste and emotion and create an exciting arrangement of significant form, a meaningful photograph, but a painter has the advantage of putting something in the picture that isn’t there or taking something out that is there. I think this makes painting a more creative medium."
~ Louise Dahl-Wolf, 1984






 
 
 

 

Guy Bourdin for Charles Jourdan

Guy Bourdin was a French fashion photographer with a taste for controversy and stylisation. In 1957 he began his first advertising campaign for Charles Jourdan shoes, completing his final advertisement for the brand in 1981.







Friday 2 November 2012

Jodi Bieber



Gideon Mendel



Seamus Murphy


-incredible movement and dynamism
-sparse space
-white background
-dark foreground
-linear horizontal line
-spread of legs and arms



Angelo Turetta

  • Crisp, clean white shirt
  • dirty ground and worn wall
  • smiles contrast visual of blood on shirt


  • 

    Bill Phelps

  • Bluish tone - eyes, dress, background
  • blurring of background
  • concentration leads to eyes



  • 

    Jan Dago


    • Freetown
    • contemporary film posters
    • modern culture vs old fashioned method of carrying fruit on the head
    • calm of lake vs town

    Vladimir Velengurin

    
  • Divide in colours and tone
  • horiziontal vs vertical composition
  • tension of soldiers body vs relaxation of soldiers sunbathing

  • Noel Quidu



    
    

    • perspective of receding buildings
    • perspective of shot taken through windows
    • sense of distance
    • window frames the image
    • protest - masses create chaos in the photo but they are calm
  • gesture
  • deep contrast of black figure against white smoke
  • pattern on ground



  •  Year2000
  • Photographer                               Noël Quidu
  • Nationality                                   France
  • Organization / Publication          Gamma for Newsweek
  • Category                                      General News stories
  • Prize                                              Honorable mention
  • Date                                               05-10-2000
  • Country                                         Yugoslavia
  • Place                                              Belgrade
  • Caption:   Opposition members leave the parliament building with a chair they said symbolized the throne of Milosevic.
  •  
    In October, a revolution in Serbia toppled President Slobodan Milosevic. The opposition had claimed victory in the September elections, but a Federal Election Commission called for a second ballot, claiming neither side had an outright majority. A general strike and mass protests followed. On October 4, Yugoslavia's constitutional court annulled the election; by dawn on October 5 people were converging on Belgrade. By 16h00 protestors had captured the parliament building, and at 18h30 opposition leader Vojislav Kostunica addressed a rally of some half a million people and declared himself president.

    Dudley.M.Brooks

    
    • Perspective of corner
    • rich textures of floor, walls, galvanized tin
    • deep contrast of tone
    • living vs dead
    • eye doesn't immediately comprehend the bodies.
     

    Amit Shabi

    
    CaptionAn Israeli border policeman argues with a Palestinian in the Old City of Jerusalem. The man had been refused entry to the al-Aqsa mosque for Friday prayers during Ramadan. Israeli security forces prevented Palestinian men under the age of 45 from attending prayers following unrest in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
     

    • Importance of hands
    • tension
    • light concentration leads eye from soldier's face down the hand to head of man behind
    • rich pink tones

    Arthur Elgort

    Arthur Elgort is an American photographer best known for his work for Vogue.









    Im actually not mad about Elgort all his photos seem a bit too artificial to me.

    Richard Avedon

    Richard Avedon was an American fashion phtotogrpher the New York times described as having
    " helped define America's image of style, beauty and culture for the last half-century"
     
     

       

    Helmut Newton

    Helmut Newton was a German- Australian photographer described as a prolific, widely imitated fashion photographer whose provocative, erotically charged black-and-white photos were a mainstay of Vogue and other publications." He worked particularly for Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. His style was marked by highly stylised erotic images punctuated with sado-masochistic, fetish elements.

    
    &#8216;Le Smoking&#8217; by YSL
Photo by Helmut Newton
    ‘Le Smoking’ by YSL
    Photo by Helmut Newton
     


    In a purely technical sense I like Newton's work, it's skilled, interesting and evocative but generally he seems to be considered a self obsessed, misogynist so im not too sure whether I should like him or not, I do love the photos he did for YSL.