Wednesday, March 17, 2010

ghosts of amoebae




These are some extra shots I had from the series I recently posted at Osmosis. I like all the amorphous shapes that were formed out of this madness. I can't decide if they look more like ghosts or amoebae. But maybe amoebae have ghosts too, so perhaps it's both. Like I say in the post at Osmosis, I wanted to break the image down to basic light and dark tones to create something completely abstract. I went about this by shooting white styrofoam balls of varying sizes on white corrugated paper next to a large window facing west. I shot as the sun was setting so the light was coming directly through the window, which created sharp shadows from the styrofoam. That is where I concentrated my shooting, on the shadows, the "nothing in between" area. Then when I took the pictures I used several techniques simultaneously to really exaggerate the forms, the "abstraction heaped upon abstraction". First, I set my camera to overexpose the image making sure that the shutter speed was slow enough so that I could use camera movement as another effect. Then, I purposefully set the lens as out-of-focus as I could. When I took the picture I moved the camera in a variety of ways; across, up and down, zig zag, etc. at varying speeds. Then in my post-production, I added another level of abstraction by increasing the contrast as much as possible blowing out the highlights and darkening the shadows. I wanted to get as far away as I could from the way the actual "thing" I was shooting looked. I really like the way these images came out. Not sure if I achieved "a common truth of the human experience," but that is why I keep doing it and you never know it might just happen once.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

New Osmosis Post

My latest Osmosis post is up here. It's the closest I've come to a manifesto. I wanted it to work not only as a sort of artist's statement, but also as a manifesto of what I am looking for in the artists I feature on the site. Artists who can elucidate something about the human experience and connect us all through that experience.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Star Lee Magazine Cover


On Friday night I attended the launch party of Star Lee Magazine. It was a magnificent gathering of all the people who helped to create the magazine. I was honored to shoot the inaugural cover for them. The cover shot is a play on "Rosie the Riveter", the WW II icon representing female empowerment. It is a fitting symbol for the first issue of this magazine intended for the female entrepreneur who is, in their words, "seeking a work-life balance while remaining true to their values."