This is probably the most famous photograph by Sally Mann. It's called. Candy Cigarette.
Sally Mann is an American photographer, famous for her black and white photos she took of her children during the 80s and early 90s and then onto landscapes and rural scenes of her home in Virginia.
Tuesday, 30 November 2010
Sunday, 28 November 2010
Friday, 26 November 2010
Lovers Lost and Found
I forget his name, but he graduated the day this was taken, and this was our mock-up graduation picture.
Tuesday, 23 November 2010
Thursday, 18 November 2010
Thursday, 11 November 2010
Sunday, 7 November 2010
Christina's World
Christina's World, by Andrew Wyeth, is by far, my favourite work of art. Others come close, which I hope to write about in the future, but for me, Christina's World has always been my favourite ever since I laid eyes on it doing research for an art project at school, learning about American art. I learnt a lot about Edward Hopper, Grant Wood and an obscure naive artist known as Grandma Moses, but Wyeth's Christina's World stood out to me, at first only aesthetically, but then, like with most loved stuff, its meaning and my personal interpretations have been specified, making it extremely special. It is in the book '1001 Paintings to see before you die', and when I saw it there last week, it brought all those meaning back again.
A little about the painting: it was painted in 1948, and the scene is of a real farmhouse in a town called Cushing, in Maine. Around 1999, I was crazy about anything New England, and even had my bedroom decorated to what I thought represented that sort of country interior style. I was reading a lot about the witch hunts also, and loved collecting pictures of the houses and the autumnal scenes of that part of America. The farmhouse in the picture, is now an art centre.
The painting depicts on first look a scene, a field, asymetrically perfect, with the woman or girl in the foreground looking up, ahead, on the grass. Closer inspection shows this woman is struggling and her limbs are thin. The painting technique gives an eery realism to every tiny detail, every blade of grass and every strand of hair, a technique of painting Wyeth mastered which involved controlling the mixing of paints to create very specific colours, giving Christina's World an almost muted tone, which I feel works with not only the theme of struggle, but my feelings towards it.
How did it and how does it still make me feel? Well, it's a self pitying feeling, it represents struggle, and sympathy. It's a beautiful scene but there is woman is crawling towards a house. The juxtaposition of a scene where nothing could go wrong is forcfully confronted with a personal and physical struggle. Wyeth was inspired to paint this because he saw from the farmhouse one day the woman crawling across the field. She had suffered an illness in childhood which had effected her muscle growth and couldn't walk. It must of been a weird thing to see this woman in a dress crawling across the grass, but that's apparently how she got about.
I used to have a print of it and it was stuck on the wall as a poster during uni. Unfortunately for me, it got torn down during a drunken stupor one night when we rolled in and fell against it. I will get it again, and frame it next time, and I will put it in the living room of the next place I move to. It will be to me in my living room as what Monet's 'Poppies Blooming' is to my parent's living room.
Thursday, 4 November 2010
Corrine Day
Corrine Day, a well known semi fashion photographer who died only a month ago at age 45 from a brain tumour (a problem with brain cancer that she had dealt with for around 10 years) was the first, and only fashion photographer that made me realise that I wanted to take photos. It was around my age that she started taking photos, and it was around when she was 25, that she 'discovered' Kate Moss, and took those famous photo's for The Face magazine 20 years ago. I was about 17, and had bought a now very rare book called 'Kate: The Story', a photographic retrospect of Kate Moss' work from the beginning to around 1998/9. The book at the time was still relatively new I suppose, but is almost impossible to get. Unfortunately for me, I tore the book up in a rage, but kept my favourite picture, as seen below, which travelled with me and donned many walls of the houses I inhabited during my time at university.
My dream of photography and fashion photography has since been put on hold, and it wasn't really till the event of Day's death that I fully realised that to make a dream come true and to start creating something that I agree that I'm good at, you have to really do it. When I lay in the bath on the day I read the news of Corrine's death, I felt very sad, but unusually, inspired to be someone and try something, and to interpret my ideas, and to start creating something that I will love and will be my own vision, whilst at the same time involving my knowledge of fashion.
I studied her while I worked on my photography A-Level those years ago. Alongside with photographers like Hellen Van Meene and the work of Tracy Emin, I created 'self confessional' gritty, black and white photos that echoed the fashion trends of the early 90s that were deemed controversial for their promotion of heroin and anorexia. Below are a couple of photos of some of the photos I did about 8 years ago. The girl is an old friend I have lost touch with called Lizzy. She was perfect because she was very tall and very thin and very pretty and naturally photogenic and willing to pose anywhere and wear anything. We were running round Selly Oak and I was just taking photos. The other photo is a self portrait. I think I was about 18. I remember it being very hard to take, as the wire I had to take the photo wasn't very long. Now everything is digital, it is much easier, but do you sometimes think that has taken the fun out of photography?
My dream of photography and fashion photography has since been put on hold, and it wasn't really till the event of Day's death that I fully realised that to make a dream come true and to start creating something that I agree that I'm good at, you have to really do it. When I lay in the bath on the day I read the news of Corrine's death, I felt very sad, but unusually, inspired to be someone and try something, and to interpret my ideas, and to start creating something that I will love and will be my own vision, whilst at the same time involving my knowledge of fashion.
I studied her while I worked on my photography A-Level those years ago. Alongside with photographers like Hellen Van Meene and the work of Tracy Emin, I created 'self confessional' gritty, black and white photos that echoed the fashion trends of the early 90s that were deemed controversial for their promotion of heroin and anorexia. Below are a couple of photos of some of the photos I did about 8 years ago. The girl is an old friend I have lost touch with called Lizzy. She was perfect because she was very tall and very thin and very pretty and naturally photogenic and willing to pose anywhere and wear anything. We were running round Selly Oak and I was just taking photos. The other photo is a self portrait. I think I was about 18. I remember it being very hard to take, as the wire I had to take the photo wasn't very long. Now everything is digital, it is much easier, but do you sometimes think that has taken the fun out of photography?
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