Thursday, 28 July 2011
Rock of Joy Photoshoot
Last month a group of students from my photography class helped to set up and participate in a photo-shoot in which we raised money for The Rock Of Joy Trust. The charity helps to support a school in Uganda in its hopes to becoming completely self sufficient. We charged staff and friends for a fifteen minute photo-shoot, of which all proceeds went straight to the charity. I really enjoyed the day. It was good experience to photograph people other than those in my photography class. I also liked having the practise of using the studio equipment, directing people and being in a more professional environment. I learnt more about shooting in RAW, setting up lighting so that minimum post processing is needed and I learnt more about the different effects that you can get from faster lenses.
Take it to the streets exhibition
The exhibition was split between inside and out which I think gave a unique element to the exhibition because you could experience the photographs in a different environment. I think the outside element was also good because it would draw a lot of people into the exhibition who may be walking past, who might not normally visit art galleries. It helped that when we visited the exhibition it was a sunny day; in the pouring rain it may not have been as enjoyable. Because of the lack of space on the boards outside the layouts of the images was not as creative as the layouts of the images inside, but it all worked well together.
I liked the inside part of the exhibition more than outside. There was a wider range of styles of photography and I liked the different ways that the photographs were presented. As well as photographs, there were also videos which were part of the exhibition. The videos were interesting but as a whole I prefer still images and find them more interesting.
There were three photographers whose work I particularly liked, Bruno Quinquet, Raoul Gatepin and Giacomo Brunelli.
Giacomo Brunelli:
I liked these photographs because unlike many of the photographers Brunelli focused on animals rather than people. His portraits of the animals are very unusual, they are quite dark and mysterious and even though they are animals he still manages to capture intense emotion. I like the square crop to the images and I think that them having been shot in black and white makes them even more intense.
Raoul Gatepin:
I like the simplicity of these images, the emptiness of the places he has photographed. I like the composition of each of his photographs, I like the way he uses leading lines and bullseye composition. I also like the colour tones within the images and I think that because they seem almost desaturated slightly, it adds the the atmosphere of the images.
Bruno Quinquet:
I like how this photographer uses natural elements as the focus within his images, but still captures the street life surrounding them. I like the shallow depth of field that he uses and the way in which he uses natural forms to frame his shots. I think that the colours work really well within this set of images and helps add to the natural feeling that comes across when looking at the photographs.
Overall I really enjoyed the exhibition. There was a multitude of different types of work and styles which you might not have come across when simply doing your own research.
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