jemmayoung23
Jemma Young
168 posts
HND2 Photography
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Beauty in the banal: New Topographic movement
Topographic photography is a technique in which a scene (usually a landscape) is photographed as if it were being surveyed from afar, practiced most famously by the 1970s ‘New Topographics’ photographers, including Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Nicholas Nixon, and Bernd and Hilla Becher. These artists inspired Becher’s students at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, who in the 1990s composed the influential “Dusseldorf School,” composed of such photographers as Andreas Gursky and Thomas Struth.
The New Topographers 
A label for a group of photographers who came to prominence in the 1970s and brought a new perspective to landscape photography that focused on an objective documentation of locations. Often, works labeled New Topographics also emphasized the relationship between man and nature through the documentation of industrial intrusions on land and scenes of suburban sprawl, motels, and parking lots. The label has its origins in a 1975 exhibition at the International Museum of Photography in Rochester, NY. Key artists from the exhibit include Robert Adams, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Joe Deal, and Stephen Shore. The New Topographics were influential on much of contemporary photography, particularly Becher students like Thomas Struth, Andreas Gursky, Thomas Ruff and Candida Höfer, who became known as the “Dusseldorf School of Photography”.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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White shirts final
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Wait for it Final
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Stock accepted submissions. 
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Something Told Final
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Something New Final.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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A Sense of Place finals.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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People make Glasgow Final.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Lockdown City Finals.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Grid System Final
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Geometry Club Final
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Doorstep Portrait Finals
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Beauty in the Banal Final.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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‘The old masters’. Something Told
The old masters were painters who worked in europe before the 1800. More specifically, it refers to the ones who were working at the top of their game and many of their pieces will still be displayed in galleries around the world to this very day. 
There are many things that we can learn from ‘the old masters’  that we can and do use today in the world of photography. 
1. HDR (Higher Dynamic Range) 
Higher Dynamic Range which in reality translates to very little pure black shadows and very little pure white highlights in your shot. In effect, you use tools like multiple exposures or multiple lights to ensure that every part of your image is evenly lit. Done poorly and your image will look flat and visually very confusing. Leonardo Di Vinci was a master at interpreting light and he would often use his ‘artistic license’ to convey the impossible in his outdoor portraits.Painters were masters at somehow never over-exposing their backgrounds and of course that’s because they didn’t have to worry about one single exposure, they could use whatever brightness they wanted in their backgrounds.We as photographers need to bear the same things in mind, because detail in the background of an outdoor portrait is nearly always preferable to blown out highlights. 
2. Using colour to seperate foreground and background
In the shot below, you’ll see that using a very shallow depth of field to throw the background out of focus so as to force the viewers attention onto the subject.
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Unfortunately, the Old Masters didn’t have this ability. In fact, it’s very rare to see a painting where every aspect of it isn’t in sharp focus, it’s really only when cameras came along that this became a more creative visual element in imagery. So because painters had everything in focus in their images, they had to use different ways of guiding the viewer where they wanted them to look and they did this with colour.
In the below image we see Orazio Gentileschi using very bold and bright colours on his subjects yet behind them we see nothing but drab, grey rocks and dirt. It might seem obvious, but this is a very powerful way of creating a clear separation from foreground to background and guiding your viewers gaze.
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3. Composites 
Composites is merely a modern word but the act of bringing multiple elements together to form a unique piece has been around almost as long as art itself. One of the core reasons for bringing multiple elements together in paintings was often due to larger paintings that had many, many subjects involved. Artists rarely got 10 important people to stand around and pose at the same time so they were often painted separately until the entire painting was complete, effectively creating an impossible shot. But multiple subjects wasn’t the only reason for composite painting like this. A great example of composites from the Old Masters was in still life painting. The painting of still life subjects upon a table was incredibly popular, but it wasn’t until Jan van Huysum came along in the early 1700’s and began creating impossible paintings that their popularity skyrocketed. Jan Van Huysum was nothing short of a genius with his brush and at his peak, he literally could not paint fast enough to keep up with the demand for his exquisite work.
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4. Composition and Leading lines
This one should come as no surprise, but composition and lending lines have been a big part of the art world for a while now. But although you see this as obvious, strong composition is so often overlooked in modern photography in favour of simply recording what’s in front of you. As photographers, we need to be thinking about telling a visual story and to do that many great artists will use composition and leading lines to take our eyes on that visual journey around a frame. 
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This painting of ‘The Night Watch’ by Rembrandt van Rijn in 1642 is likely one of the most studied paintings of all time, as art students across the globe discuss its art tropes and it could easily fill an entire article all by itself. But if we just briefly look at composition and leading lines alone, you’ll see how Rembrandt clearly uses shape, form and objects to create leading lines that all lead us to the centre subjects. This is one of those elements in artwork that may seem obvious once they’re shown to you, but to the unknowing viewers eye, this is an incredibly powerful visual tool.
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Beauty in the Banal plan
For my beauty in the banal brief, i want to capture something that we see everyday and not really give it a second glance. I think i will chose to do a typology as i think they can show of beauty of basic everyday. 
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Wait for it research
‘The Decisive moment’
The decisive moment is a concept made popular by the street photographer, photojournalist, and Magnum co-founder Henri Cartier-Bresson. The decisive moment refers to capturing an event that is fleeting and spontaneous, where the image represents the essence of the event itself.
Images taken by Henri showing of the ‘decisive moment’ 
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jemmayoung23 · 4 years ago
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Doorstep Portraiture research
Portrait photography, or portraiture, is a type of photography aimed toward capturing the personality of a person or group of people by using effective lighting, backdrops, and poses.
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