Friday, December 3, 2010

Final Project

When Vaughn told us we could do anything we wanted my first thought was landscapes. I love doing them and I was excited to finally be doing a project I liked. As I started shooting I began thinking about how I need to push myself further and start on something that I don't have as much experience with and that I have my own issues with. I decided to change my project to portraits. Of course I still did my landscapes and ended up with two books for my final. I'm glad that I pushed myself, but I still need work to perfect my technique. I worked hard and learned a lot and I know that I can become better.































































































































































































































Monday, November 15, 2010

Woman As Photographer: Picturing Life As A Woman

Mpls Photo Center - Call for Entries - Exhibit Competitions: "About the Call for Entries
Women have been actively involved with photography since the medium’s inception in 1839. The barriers to their participation were lower than in the other arts, and recognition often came faster. Yet women and their photographs have not been as visible as they should have been in view of their numbers and past influence. Only in fairly recent exhibitions and critical writings have women’s work in photography received due consideration.
Diane Arbus, Roni Horn, Nan Goldin, Cindy Sherman, KikiSmith and thousands more women use their cameras as instruments of revelation – often about themselves. In the process they challenge assumptions about what it means to be and be seen.
This International Call for Entry invites women from around the world to submit photographs that demonstrate a smart, critical take on women with cameras in this day of a more open and subtle notion of gendered identity.
Submissions are only limited by your imagination and may cover a broad range of challenging, personal, emotional, and political issues facing women today. Their work-life, home, family, friends, relationships, life partners, homosexual, heterosexual, politics, equal rights, stereotypes, causes, roles and wishes.
Christina Chang, Assistant Curator at the Weisman Art Museum, Minneapolis, will jury Woman as Photographer: Picturing Life as a Woman
Submissions Begin: November 15th, 2010
Submission Deadline: January 24th, 2011
Results Announced: January 30th, 2011
On Exhibit: March 4th - April 17th"

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Friday, October 22, 2010

Rare images beyond the naked eye | Yahoo! Green

Rare images beyond the naked eye Yahoo! Green:By Trystan L. Bass and Lori Bongiorno
Posted Tue Oct 19, 2010 12:25pm PDT
The annual Small World Photomicrography Competition sponsored by Nikon aims to showcase 'the beauty and complexity of life as seen through the light microscope.'
Indeed, the 2010 winning photographs reveal what's not seen or visible to the human eye. While many of the stunning images were taken to advance science, some are just simply beautiful to look at.
The following photos were amongst this year's 20 winners, but you can see hundreds of gorgeous photos featured from previous years as well. Some winning photographs are on display at museums across the country. You can also learn how to create your own masterpieces.



(Photo: Dr. Paul D. Andrews, University of Dundee, Scotland)


Cancer
Above is a picture of two human cancer cells sitting next to each other right before they're about to divide into four cells. They're derived from the now famous 'HeLa' line of cancer cells, which were taken from Henrietta Lacks in 1951 and used for medical research without her permission. 'Understanding how cells divide is critical to understanding how cancerous cells multiply and take over,' according to Dr. Andrews."

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Audubon Photography Competition brings out wild side » Evansville Courier & Press

"Banded Coral Shrimp," by Allen Campbell Henderson won first place in the Audubon Photography Competition.






"Hummingbird and Trumpet Flower," by Mike Matthews of Louisville took second place.








Audubon Photography Competition brings out wild side » Evansville Courier & Press: "In celebration of John James Audubon’s arrival in Henderson 200 years ago, an Audubon Photography Competition was conducted by the Audubon Committee, the Friends of Audubon and the Ohio Valley Art League.
There are 30 photos in an exhibit at Henderson County Public Library through Oct. 1. The top three winners are pictured here.
“As a nature photographer, I pay particular attention to technical difficulty, composition, exposure, animal behavior and creativity in judging wildlife photographs,” said juror Al Perry.
“The first-place image of a colorful underwater crab in its natural habitat gives us a view few of us will ever experience. The second-place image of a hummingbird is an example of technical excellence in exposure, action, focus and color. The third-place image of a young person and manatee is an image with universal appeal,” the juror said in his statement.
The Ohio Valley Art League board has voted to have the exhibit again next year.
Photographers accepted into this year’s exhibit are: Emily Mabee, Miriam Key, Gene Stinson, Polly Mulligan, Stephen Chandler, Susie Bailey, Allen Campbell and Mike Lawrence of Henderson; Lynn Smith and Bonita Gentry of Dixon; Tim Sandefur of Corydon; Natalie Evans of Morganfield; T.J. Byrd and Daniel Rodenberg of Evansville; Steven Young of Lexington; Mike Matthews of Louisville; Linda Martin of Elkville, Ill.; Mitchell Erwin of Olney, Ill.; and Ian Schneller of Waialua, Hawaii."

Five Photojournalists Win Getty Images' Latest Grants

Stefano De Luigi won for his project "TIA-This is Africa," a series of photo essays on various human crises affecting different regions in Africa. He will use his grant money to focus next on Sudan, Chad, and Darfur to document refugees' lives in what he describes as 'one of the worst civil wars of the whole continent and to document teh birth (hopefully) of a new modern state.'"
Five Photojournalists Win Getty Images' Latest Grants: "Five photojournalists from different parts of the world have each been awarded $20,000 from Getty Images annual Grants for Editorial Photography program to continue working on their respective photo projects.

This year's winners are: Stefano De Luigi of Italy for “TIA – This is Africa”; Miquel Dewever-Plana of France for “The Other War”; Edwin Koo of Singapore for “Paradise Lost: Pakistan’s Swat Valley”; Darcy Padilla of San Francisco, for “The Julie Project”; and Jerome Sessini of France, for “So Far from God, Too Close to America.”

The judging panel— which included The New York Times director of photography Kathy Ryan; SVA's photography department chair Stephen Frailey; photojournalist Eugene Richards; director general of Visa pour l’Image Jean-Francois Leroy; and senior photo editor Jamie Wellford of Newsweek—had to make their selections from 260 applications and proposals from professional photojournalists, as well as from 48 student proposals.

The four student winners, all of whom are studying photojournalism in the United States, will each receive $5,000 from Getty. They are: Bryan Anselm of Western Kentucky University; Julie Glassberg of the International Center of Photography in New York City; Julia Marie Rendleman of Southern Illinois University, Carbondale; andParis Visone of The Art Institute of Boston.

Getty Images' Grants for Editorial Photography program was established in 2005 to enable emerging and established photojournalists to pursue projects of personal and editorial merit.

More information, as well galleries of the winning portfolios, can be found at www.gettyimages.com/grants."

1rst Try at Light Painting

Today in class we worked on light painting. It took me a while to figure out how to work the camera and hopefully I will be able to vastly improve this technique in the future. I'm pretty excited about this project and can't wait to jump right in! Here are some of my test shots.

Visions of Light

ART 21

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Tiny Things

I started this project with dread and of course I blamed Vaughn for making me do something I didn't want to do. As I was working, I did what I usually do and did the cute crap. I found myself frustrated and decided to be a little morbid and a little humorous. Of course I now have stained my hands with red food coloring but I had a lot more fun destroying something. Will I do this again? I don't know, but at least I know that I can figure it out and get some frustration out even if it's not physically tearing someone apart. Lol