Thursday, October 30, 2014

5 Images - Final Project





BOOOOOM

A Thousand Souls by Maciek Jasik

I liked how in this blog, at least for the one that I looked at, there weren't any words or stories behind the images. They were completely up to the viewer to interpret and try to understand.
One of the reasons I clicked on this particular title was that it was the first one that popped up on the page, but I also was really interested in the title. I was really curious on how a photographer would be able to capture his interpretation of people, or what they're like using such emotion. One of my favorite parts about this page was how colorful each and every photo was, but still how he managed to incorporate movement and stillness in some of the work all at once.
Here's an example that is one of my favorites.


Thursday, October 16, 2014

Triangle

This blog didn't have any writing, and showed many different photographers works in a very simple way, in that you just clicked the next photo to see the next artist.

The first glance at many of these photographs caught my eye but I really liked Lauren Marsolier's work. When you click on her name, it directly sends you to her website and her work is very very calming and peaceful. The other artists were very good, but her photographs made me want to escape right then and there to locate the place she was photographing. I loved how simple and unique she made all her images and how the focal point is always in the center and the background is very wide and seems almost like it's never-ending.

She posts several transition posts, but they all have to do with very unique, spacious points of view. Her first and third use many blues and white hues, which make her photographs stand out much more in my opinion and seem to calm you down when you look at them.

Urbanautica

Night Cities
Jordi Huisman - Rear Window

This website was a lot harder to follow than the rest of the blogs that I've looked at so far, but I felt like there was much more of a variety on the subject matter that artists chose to photograph.
Jordi Huisman did an amazing job of focusing all the viewer's attention on the rear of a building, something that not many people think of or consider, and she made it look extremely beautiful. With the way that she edited the sky, it is hard to realize that it was taken at night, but I love the images that she produced. I like how she made something so simple seem so important and relevant to the viewer's eye.



Photo Credit: Jordi Huisman 

Multiple Images