Ryan’s Blog


One Sour Morning
May 4, 2009, 5:48 am
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Link to our film: http://www.vimeo.com/4362442

For some reason, it will not embed correctly on this blog.



A Flash of Light: A Lumiere Film
May 4, 2009, 5:43 am
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the sundance kids
March 30, 2009, 1:07 pm
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the-sundance-kids1



Suspense/Thriller
March 24, 2009, 1:51 am
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We chose to study the genre of suspense/thriller. These types of
movies are characterized by fast pacing, frequent action, and resourceful
heroes who have to work against and defeat an often more-powerful and
more well- equipped villain. Thrillers often take place in exotic settings
such as foreign cities, desert, polar regions, or high seas, and the
characters are often already accustomed to danger, though this is not
always true as they are also ordinary citizens drawn into danger by
accident. The lead character is often male, though recently there have
been more women playing this role.
In a thriller, the hero must thwart the plans of an enemy, rather
than uncover a crime that has already happened. In a thriller the identity
of a murderer or other villain in typically known all along. Jeopardy and
violent confrontations are standard plot elements. While a mystery
climaxes when it is solved, a thriller climaxes when the hero finally
defeats the villain, saving his own life and often the lives of others.
In recent years, when thrillers have been increasingly influenced
by horror or psychological-horror exposure in pop culture, an ominous or
monstrous element has become common to heighten tension.
The term mis-en-scene originated in French theater. In
cinematography today, it means “placing an angle,” and refers to
everything that appears before the camera and its arrangement. It
encapsulates four formal elements: the physical setting, the staging of
action, the manners in which these elements are framed, and the
manner in which they are photographed.

North by Northwest (1959)

Crop Duster Sequence: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6gm5n5WmxY

Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

Cary Grant is the leading man playing Roger Thornhill, and advertising executive who is mistaken for a government agent. This the classic ordinary citizen drawn into danger theme. In the classic crop-duster scene Hitchcock uses some common elements of the mis-en-scene of Suspense/Thriller Movies. First off, Cary Grant is alone in the middle of a desolate flat, where he believes he will be meeting the man that he is mistaken for. The images of Grant alone are largely wide angled, giving the shots great depth and emphasizing Grant’s utter solitude. The theme of the movie is one man versus the world, and this scene is microcosm of that. Grant is powerless against every element he faces; the empty flat, the plane. There is no music in the entire sequence unitl the final explosion of the plane crashing into the gas truck, but the noise of the plane engines fading in and out is menacing and builds tension within the viewers. The explosion can be seen as the culmination of this tension and nervousness, thus the appropriate time to resume the music. The entire seen is takes place in the middle of the day, at shadowless dead noon, adding to the intensity of the scene all together. The viewer might feel tense, suppressed, nervous, uncomfortable watching Grant make sense of his surroundings, of the plane that is chasing him, of the dead heat the envelopes him. Though there is little dialogue, one can sense the depravity of Thornhill’s situation.



From the Frontier of Writing
March 22, 2009, 6:21 pm
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fronteir2



Writer’s Block: A Story In Seven Parts
March 2, 2009, 2:06 am
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Annie Leibovitz
February 22, 2009, 7:07 pm
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Annie Leibovitz:

In the world of celebrity portraiture, there is no name more universally recognized than Annie Leibovitz. Her portraits are intimate, striking, and often controversial. From Bob Dylan and John Lennon, to Nicole Kidman and Kira Knightley, Annie’s approach to each portrait is unique, taking some element of each subject and bringing it out through her use of lighting, framing, and setting. The key to Annie’s success has been her ability to ignore the norms of celebrity portraiture and break her subjects down to their most human elements.

Annie Leibovitz was born in 1949 in Connecticut to a family of six children. Her father was an Air Force lieutenant, and her mother a dance instructor.[1] Annie studied painting at the San Francisco Art Institute, but developed a love for photography during her sophomore year while studying in Tokyo, Japan. When she returned to the United States she began studying photography more intensely.[2]

In 1970 Annie Leibovitz started as a photographer at Rolling Stone. Her first assignment was to shoot John Lennon. In just two years Annie became Rolling Stone’s chief photographer. When Rolling Stone began printing in color, Annie was faced with the challenge of learning how to use lighting and color effectively for the new format. “In school, I wasn’t taught anything about lighting, and I was only taught black-and-white,” she said.[3] Some of her most famous portraits from the mid-seventies were of Bob Dylan, Bob Marley, and the Rolling Stones.

In January 1980, Annie photographed a naked John Lennon and a clothed Yoko Ono for Rolling Stone for their album Double Fantasy. Several hours after the photo was taken John Lennon was gunned down outside of his apartment building. The photo ran for the John Lennon commemorative issue of Rolling Stone, and is regarded by many as one of the greatest magazine covers of the last 40 years. [4]

In 1983 Annie published her first book of photography, Annie Leibovitz: Photographs. In the same year she became a contributing photographer for Vanity Fair.[5] Her work for Vanity Fair is characterized by her elaborately staged celebrity portraits. Some of her more famous photographs for Vanity Fair are her portrait of a naked, pregnant Demi Moore, Whoppi Goldberg in a bathtub full of milk, and a family portrait of Tom, Katie, and Suri Cruise.

Annie is has been named a living legend by the Library of Congress, and has been made a Commandeur des Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government.[6] In 1991 Annie had her first museum showing, Annie Leibovitz: Portraits, at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC. She was the first woman, and second portraitist, to have an exhibition in the gallery. Annie published her critically acclaimed book Women, which features the portraits of female Supreme Court justices to female coal miners, in 1993. Annie continues to work as photographer for Vanity Fair, and has been honored with a number of retrospective gallery exhibits throughout the country. [7]

In Annie’s portrait of the cast of the television show the Sopranos for Vanity Fair, Annie used Leonardo de Vinci’s the Last Supper as a set reference, and recreated the scene in exact proportion with the 13 main cast members. Tony Soprano sits in the middle of the table, like Jesus in the Last Supper. Annie lights the scene from above, casting a down shadow on the faces of each of the subjects. Without a heavy lighting directly at the faces of the characters, the lighting from above lends a certain drop shadow to the features of every character, giving the image its dark overtones. The bright white of the tablecloth of the table contrasts with the dimly lit, dark colored wall of the background, and also reflects light onto the faces of each of the characters in the photograph.

Unlike the Sopranos photograph, Annie’s portrait of aged novelist and poet William S. Burroughs is intimate and emotional. This black and white photograph is typical of her early photography work, where she used primarily black and white Tri-X film.[8] The lighting of Burroughs’ heavily wrinkled face is straight on, leaving nothing hidden. The background of the photograph is flat black. Burroughs’ listless expression and glassy eyes, looking directly into the camera, tell a story of an artist that no words can. Only Burroughs’ face is in focus, his shirt and neck are out of focus, emphasizing his expression and his face.

Annie’s portrait of Bob Dylan is in the same intimate style as the Burroughs portrait, but uses bright colors and her subject to create a comical, positive feel to the portrait. This portrait of Dylan is a rarity in the massive amounts of photographs that exist of the singer/songwriter. In the photography, Dylan has removed his sunglasses and has his hand making a pair of faux-sunglasses. The photograph removes all the pretension and connotation that a photograph of Bob Dylan might carry, and shows that Dylan is man like anyone else, capable of making a joke and being funny. The close cropping, soft focus, the white background, and mild color of Dylan’s partly open shirt make the portrait a very unique one for Dylan, as well attention grabbing and interesting.

Annie Leibovitz can break down her subjects to their most human and elemental features and can also exploit them with elaborate settings and costumes. Her power as a photographer relies on her innovation, and her willingness to break the norms in all of her endeavors. When using just a 35mm and black and white film, she can capture emotion that no amount of megapixels, or expensive lighting could replicate, and when using extravagant settings and expensive lighting, she can create a unique aesthetic that is simultaneously honest and fantastical. Annie Leibovitz’s photography is essential to western popular culture, and will for generations be a reference for portrait artists and photographers in general.



February 17, 2009, 1:23 am
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Modern Graffiti/Street Art Movement
February 9, 2009, 2:13 pm
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When: Late 1960s-Present
Where: Originated in the poorer areas of major American cities, but has since become a global art movement.
Who: There is no list of street artist’s or graffiti writers, and almost all tagger’s and writer’s names are fictitious. But, Jean Michel Basquait was once a tagger who went by the name of SAMO, and the grafitti artist known as Banksy has garnered international acclaim.
What: Graffiti art and street art began with simple tagging, which was just a writer taking a can of spray paint and painting his/her name on a public surface, though over the years the art has evolved. Now many taggers and writers use stencils and pre-made posters to insert their art or message more effectively and interestingly. The art form has grown out of simple spray paint based creations to creations that span a variety of mediums. In a small impoverished african village a grafitti artist recently created thick, durable plastic silkcreen photos of the villager’s eyes to the tops of the many huts of the village that simultaneously provide effective roofing for the citizens of the village, as well as a poignant message to the helicopters and planes flying overhead.
Why: Grafitti/street art is poignant and heart-felt. It is far removed from ivory tower and extensive training, making it one of the truest most expressive forms of art. It’s origins are in racial-tension, rampant poverty, hunger, and political turmoil, and today it is used sometimes comically or satrically, and sometimes to make a statement about the human state of affairs.
Image One-History/Tagging SAMO- Jean Michel Basquait

Image One-History/Tagging SAMO- Jean Michel Basquait

Image Two- History/Political Berlin Wall

Image Two- History/Political Berlin Wall

Image Three- Line - A1one- Tehran, Iran

Image Three- Line - A1one- Tehran, Iran

Image Four- Form/Space Banksy- West Bank

Image Four- Form/Space Banksy- West Bank

Image Five- Color- Stephen Fairey- Obama

Image Five- Color- Stephen Fairey- Obama



Assignment #2
February 1, 2009, 4:27 am
Filed under: Uncategorized
Salvador Dalis The Elephants c.1948

Salvador Dali's The Elephants c.1948

Proportion:

Salvador Dali’s the Elephants emphasizes proportion in a work of art through the presentation of the enormous elphants on both the right and left sides of the work, and the very very tiny figures that stand in between them.  By making the people so very tiny, the elephant’s are seen as larger than life. We, as humans, compare everything to the human form, and so by making the people so small in this work, the elephants look larger.

Jan van Eycks Giovanni Arnolofini and His Bride 1435

Jan van Eyck's Giovanni Arnolofini and His Bride 1435

Balance:

In van Eyck’s renessiance masterpiece “Giovanni Arnolofini and His Bride,” Eyck balance his composition by using two similarly sized figures in his work and putting them on either side of the work. They effictevely balance one another out and focus the eye to their immediate center. By using balance van Eyck’s composition is more easily and enjoyable and guides the eye to what it needs to see.

Henri Matisses Dance 1910

Henri Matisse's Dance 1910

Rhythm:

In Henri Matisse’s Dance, Matisse creates visual rhytm through a flowing line that moves in a circle through the figures hands. Matisse guides the observer’s eye in a circle around the figures in the work, checking each one out on the way. This deliberate use of line guides the viewer’s eye in a rhytmic matter.

Edvard Munchs Scream 1910

Edvard Munch's Scream 1910

Emphasis:

Emphasis in a work of art is created by using a focal point and lines to guide the eye toward something important in a work. In the case of the scream, the focal point is off to the left of the painting following the boardwalk, but after the eye goes there it follows the boardwalk to the figure’s open mouth–the emphasized feature of the work. Emphasis used in this way makes a work very interesting.

Unity:

Unity in a work is achieved through a repetition of color and pattern. In this work, the artist uses natural tones throughout, and the shape of people moving in one direction creates an Esher-like pattern in the work. The work feels complete and unified, and can be visually absorbed very quickly. This work is harmonous and tells a story effectively.




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