Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Book intro





Working on the first few pages of the book. I think I have the Idea down a little bit more. Not sure about the typeface just yet.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Book Test Page

Oliver Herring


Where do you find people who will spit food coloring all over their face. The process that Herring uses captures a moment of vulnerability in personal trust and space. The images of the food dye on the skin changes over time and in the comparison of a fresh image (liquid) and moments later (faded and drier) the duration of the process can be seen. The emotion is high, but to what kind is unknown, is this guy mad, puzzled or is he just a statue posing for a picture. The organic blend of colors interestingly, bring out the blue of the man's eyes.

Reza Abedini and Saed Meshki




Both artists make use of negative space. Meshki's text is very stark against minimal backgrounds if any. Text is clearly his subject. Abedini blends his text into the objects, forcing emotions, by spacing, overlapping, crowding letters. Both artists blend form and function of the text and enhance the feelings of the words graphically.

Arturo Herrera

He photographs his finger paintings, sketches and other small images and adds a random factor to the development of the photos by dropping the roll of film into water(hot, cold, iced). I find the process interesting and the resulting images are quite random. As far as his thoughts on the images communicating, I cannot say that I communicate with these images as I just see them as random multi-processed forms. They could be great elements for textures or collage.

Tom Scott


Sand Photos: He captures some natural and unnatural photos of patterns made from sand, rocks and water. I use the word unnatural for the photos where he obviously placed rocks in a particular manner to "finish" the photograph. He does a great job of bringing the random beauty of natures forces to the photographed artwork. Natural patterns are everywhere, one just has to slow down and look at them, not necessarily for them. Rain, wind, sand, snow, dirt, water, fire etcetera all create random images to be interpreted or interpolated. They eyes can usually see what the brain wants them to see and every once in a while you get a pleasant surprise.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Sarah Moon

This video was full of nonstop chatter about her photo shoots and how her creativity never stops, looking through the camera and becoming one with it. She was always wondering if the shot would come out or not. Continually shooting over and over, catching the lighting, matching patterns of foreground and background, the compositions are endless. Contrasting and blending everyday objects and people. To keep shooting a subject over and over making compromises with each shot finding a look.