Friday 16 December 2011

Thermographic Cameras/Lenses

I've been reading a bit about thermography and how images can be made from energy sources outside the spectrum of visible light. It looks amazing especially for low light imaging. It looks very expensive but I'm going to keep looking for cheaper options.

Photos from the 15th AKA Karl Hein Rich Von Day

Alan's cup was pretty funny.

Tom's paint was less so.

But it did make a clever disguise.

Tom had been making disguises for a while.

Some of his photographic disguises had shrunk in the wash.

Luckily the guitar was still nearly big enough to hide behind.

Andy had never considered his guitar a disguise.

The idea almost frightened him!

Tom sat resolutely with his guitar.

Elsewhere in painting.

Stuff.

The Painters Sale Day

The man in red was thinking. I don't have twenty on me to buy this. Maybe if it was just a tenner.

I could just take it, oops.

He's called the feds! Vanish!

The magic to simulate sirens, thanks stubble.

I wonder what Jamie would look like on a perfume advert?

Well I'd look like this. Now move on.

On to work.

On to work.

I just entered the WPO world photo competition

http://www.worldphoto.org/competitions/about-the-sony-world-photography-awards/

I submitted photos for two categories.

Wednesday 14 December 2011

Imagine a building that spanned the U.S.A horizontally

http://io9.com/5867782/too-bad-this-one+million+person-city-from-new-york-to-san-francisco-was-never-built?popular=true

http://www.butchersmarket.com.br/indexhibit/indexhibitv070e/index.php?/ill/mega-structures/

It was proposed by Alan Boutwell and Mike Mitchell in 1969. It would have been well underway if not long finished.

Sunday 11 December 2011

Photos from the 11th of December

In the world called Earth time seemed oddly slow and lingering.

Even on the darkened streets.

The night lingered over the city.

As the lights wandered through it, spreading slowly.

Which helped to illuminate the dark world.

With empty bridges.

And dark, all but empty streets.

Photos from the 10th December

Robbie was smiling, but that's not strange.

I wasn't smiling, that's not strange. I'm in a photo, that is strange.

Naomi had a cup stuck to her face that was slightly strange, possibly.

Robbie was contemplating the strangeness of fingers.

Having detached the cup from her face Naomi directed attention to her nose.

Robbie thought deeply on the consequences of noses in art.

And then how weird hands are.

Laughing, Naomi wondered what else might be happening in the world.

Someone called Jamie might be preparing a surface for painting.

It might cause shock or astonishment.

The shock or astonishment might fade as a fellow student sat in his chair.

 Then JJ appeared,  in Emma's space.

Jamie had to think on that...

JJ was only thinking about flying saucers made of expandable foam.

It all ended with Hammertime.

Artist Research

In his article Illuminations Brian Dillon talks about Roland Barthe’s flawed observational skills for not noticing ‘a gold chain’ which was a pearl necklace. Barthes was known for reading between the lines, semiotics is important because we attach meaning to certain image paradigms. Barthes perhaps looked so far beyond the image into its meaning that he missed what might have to others only observing the image on face value. Those observations were made by James Elkins in What Photography Is which I hope was presented in a more aesthetically pleasing format than his website, just saying.

Vincent Callebaut - The Lilypad

EDDITT tower by  T.R. Hamzah and Yeang

I believe both Dillon and Elkins were making the point that attention to detail is important. Vincent Callebaut’s designs can not be faulted for attention to detail, yes I know, weak link. Designs like the Lilypad from 2008 display ambition and forethought for the wellbeing of the planet. Callebaut is hardly the only architect working towards a more ecologically sustainable future as Dillon probably knows since The Guardian’s article Green architecture: 12 designs of the future featured EDITT tower by T.R. Hamzah and Yeang. I was looking at architects like Vincent Callebaut as research for my dissertation with reference to the future as the subject was time travel during which I looked back through all of my issues of New Scientist magazine. It’s hard to find art in relation to such an intangible subject as time itself which is the task of Natalie Nicklin. Her work combines bold shapes and colours, photography and vector images.

Natalie Nicklin (this image was in New Scientist magazine)

Tessar Lo

New scientist was also useful for finding Tessar Lo whose work deals with themes of nature and has a very oriental feel to it. Themed similarly to the work of Sung Dynasty painters Chao Ch’ang and Chao Pochu Tessar Lo’s work has themes of the power of nature and mythical creatures. Guy McKinley’s work is much more modern in it’s style but with the same attention to detail. Manga is an easy inspiration to talk about considering the drawing style and the colouring. Sat One uses similar bright colours and compositions as complex. The inspiration for Sat One is more obviously abstract forms in graffiti art and still nature as well though often clashing with technology which can also be said for Xenz but with more focus on nature and often a much loser feel. Duncan Jago’s work is often detached from any definite form, more abstract design than drawing but always brightly coloured.

Guy McKinley

Sat One

Xenz

Duncan Jago