Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Kalee Appleton

Kalee Appleton is a Texas based photographer.  The series I'm most interested in is titled, "Bit Rot," which explores the digital age we live in, and how technology obscures how we view life.  She changes the binary code in each photograph, resulting in a very interesting, colorful, dissected photo.  The photographs are of various landscapes, and she searches for the particular landscape on wikipedia, then types in sections from the entries into the binary codes.

http://kalee-appleton.squarespace.com/bit-rot-/




Meadow (..@.z$)Mountain Peak (W....f$)Forrest (Yw.Zv.Ur.Zv.Us)Morning Light (m.xV.'Hr)Midwest (gdn3*R')

John Lusk Hathaway






John Lusk Hathaway was born in Memphis and received his MFA from East Tennessee State in 2012. He's currently photographing South Carolina and in the mountains of Tennessee for the American Guide Project.
These photos are taken from his One Foot in Eden series. For this series he talks about his interest in the way the inhabitants of these rural areas interact with their environment and the lives they are carving out for themselves. His goal is for this work to become a "springboard" for further thought on how we recruit nature to comfort us and how that affects us as people. He creates complex environments in the way he utilizes framing, lighting, and space in which the landscapes and characters vie for attention. To me, it's about humankind on a larger scale seeking a meaningful connection to the land.

http://johnluskhathaway.com








Mark Dorf

Mark Dorf grew up in Louisville, Kentucky and graduated from The Savannah College of Art and Design with a B.F.A in Photography and Sculpture. Employing a mix of photography and digital media, Dorf’s work explores the post-analogue experience - society’s interactions with the digital world and its relationship to our natural origins. Dorf scrutinizes the influence of the information age, and explores his theme through a combination of photography and digital media, examining in his most recent works how we encounter, translate, and understand our surroundings through the filter of science, math and technology. Mark seeks to understand our curious habitation of the 21st century world through the juxtaposition of nature and the digital domain.
http://mdorf.com/info.html

 In these photos Mark Dorf  explores the effect of internet and digital technology on our every day lives and how much we are affected by it. By using geometric form he contrasts this effect of technology versus  nature to show our tendency to digitize our surroundings. 
(https://www.lensculture.com/articles/mark-dorf-_path#slide-18)

 Photos of images of nature have continued through the forms that the artist has made in his photos. It looks like a mirror that is reflecting the surrounding environment to us.  The image of nature is  very smoothly absorbing  its surrounding environment through the very nice play with light.   Referring to the artist, these geometrical forms are refering to digital technology and how the understanding of nature is through technology . We prefer to see the image of natural life instead of experiencing the reality.  In these photos we have a mirror of nature, an image inside another image of a real place.  We are looking at these images through the internet via our computers. The whole process shows different stages that separate us from the real environment and how understanding of our surroundings is happening through the layers and  stages of image making. We experience our life through different images of reality  behind the computer screens  instead of really existing in the actual natural place. 




Matt Stuart

Matt Stuart is a street photographer who catches the right moment to create humorous photos "I can’t hide behind lights and technology, I am reliant on a small camera, patience and lots of optimism. But what I get in return is the chance to make an honest picture which people know immediately is a genuine moment and which hopefully burrows deep into their memories."


Megan McIsaac

Megan McIsaac, originally from the Metro Detroit area, lived and created images in Portland, OR, for several years before her recent move to Los Angeles, where she lives and works as a freelance photographer.

Her work is diverse, ranging from portraits to landscapes to fashion photographs and self-portraits, and is shot almost entirely on a medium-format Mamaiya using Kodak Portra film. Her images are incredibly casual with a classic appeal. In spite of their straightforward aesthetic, her photographs are also captivating and often haunting. Her portraits all seem to capture the subject at just the right moment, as do her landscape images.







Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Anton Gottlob

Gottlob is a German photographer from Cologne.  He works mainly with portraits, some documentary and some constructed.  The series I'm most interested in is called, "Work & Travel," which is a series of photographs of "Liebesmobilen" or "Love Mobiles" in Cologne, Germany.  There is apparently a big business of traveling prostitutes there, and they ride around in these trailers, assumingly conducting their work there as well.  The series has only a small artist statement, saying, "Für viele Menschen seien sie ein Symbol von Freiheit und Mobilität. Für Gottlob-Schoenenberg sind diese Liebesmobile ein Symbol von Verlorenheit." which basically means, "For a lot of people, [trailers] are a symbol of freedom and mobility.  These love trailers are a symbol of forlornness."


http://www.bildwerk3.de/2015/03/24/duestere-und-trostlose-fotografien-von-wohnanhaengern-in-denen-prostituierte-ihrer-arbeit-nachgehen/

http://www.antongottlob.com/

Clyde Butcher

Clyde Butcher was inspired by Ansel Adams' work and then quit working in the architectural field and got into landscape photography. He's done a lot of work dealing with landscape in the States, but has done much of his work in Florida.

He will most likely use an 8x10 view camera, but will change the size depending on what he's shooting.

"I try to use the largest film possible for the particular subject I'm planning to photograph. So, if I have a huge, broad landscape, I use the 12x20" view camera. If I am photographing something like the Ghost Orchid I use a 4x5" view camera," Butcher says.


His work interests me because I am interested in landscape photography and how he makes all these landscapes seem mysterious, as if they have a story to tell. I would like my work to reflect this in a way, make you question whats going on, what is this about, what is about to happen.


Most of his images are brighter scenes, but there are a few that have a lot of contrast and it relates to how my recent work has been. Knowing that he does this in film inspires me because he does all of his work in the darkroom, compared to how I am doing this on a computer to create the same effect, which is a lot more work.