Last fall I took Photo 101 for fun. I learned a lot and got to refresh my darkroom skills, my main goal. For my final portfolio, I picked abstracts. I was happy to see, during the final class, that my portfolio was not the best. I can think of at least two that I thought were as good or, honestly, better. One of the better portfolios came from Erik Bender, whose blog you can read here.
Here's my final portfolio. I'll add some notes about how I made each shot. I decided to attempt abstracts created by abstracting subjects, using darkroom processes, through macro work, and by simply photographing unrecognizable subjects. I managed all four, which I was happy with.
These first four received pretty wild speculation about how I captured them. People noted the movement in the last one, and the abstract forms in the first two. To me, the third should have been a hint that something ordered had occurred. A lot of people asked how I did them and I agreed to show the class after my portfolio showing if no one guessed the method. That received some interest. After my portfolio showing, I turned on my cell phone and switched to my Electric Sheep live wallpaper. I used a macro lens and took about 13 rolls of film of the wallpaper's renderings to obtain these four shots.
I made these two with a pinhole camera. The first pinhole is a Monster energy drink (how do people drink that stuff?!?) can with five pinholes in an "X" pattern. The latter is a Brisk Iced Tea can with two pinholes oriented at about 75 degrees.
These two were shots at the De Young museum that I manipulated in the darkroom. Prior to and during print exposure, I brushed very dilute fixers onto the images to cause a smoke effect on the prints.
This was a similar process to that above except with developer and a bright flash of light to solarize the image. In real life, it's actually kind of purple and green.
Just a photogram of nails. I set all the nails on their heads, so the different perspectives are from the angle of light casting shadows on the nails.
A macro shot of a white acrylic sheet resting on a beer stein back lit by a naked bulb. This was just a test shot, actually, to confirm focus, but it worked really well.
The bulb on my Repronar. I dodged the surround, otherwise it would have been black instead of gray.
This also stupified people, too. For this I used my Repronar and placed a plastic tray on the light plate and poured in some vegetable oil. I added oil-based paint and the different colors reacted and spread differently.
These two came from a stereoscopic pinhole camera. I've featured it on this blog before.
The first image was an accident created by exposing paper to light and then developing it in the light in developer being mixed and with a distinct temperature gradient in the fluid. The bottom is a contact print of the paper negative.
I don't take many portrait photos, but I think sometimes that I would like to. I love good portraits, though. Here are ten photographers who portrait work, I think, is simply stunning.
10- Steve McCurry
http://stevemccurry.com/
I really love McCurry's portraits. I first saw his work in National Geographic -- the Afghan woman that is such a well known photo. However, as great a photo as that is, I think many of his other shots are as good and similarly visually stunning. I would love to have an eye for images that's as good as his.
9- Bryan Adams
http://bryanadamsphotography.com/
It's hard to say if Adams is a portrait photographer or fashion photographer. He kind of does both but neither, to my eye, and I think his results are good. Much of his work that I've seen is similar in framing a structure, but the way he captures his models differently works for me.
8- Emil Schildt (this website contains some NSFW images)
http://www.emilschildt.com/__A-siden.htm
Calling Schildt a portrait photographer alone would be a grave injustice. He works with models and creates creative poses that seem to simultaneously embrace a hyperbolic realism harkening simultaneously to gaunt-chic 1980s culture and the Victorian-era. I like his work's creativity, pushing of photographic boundries, and artistry.
7- Rudi Amadeus Blondia
http://www.amedeusphoto.com/#
Simply stunning work. There's no way to put into words how great Blondia's work is.
6- Sam Wang
http://www.samwang.us/
Wang captures people in their environment. Through the image's surroundings, his portraits give the viewer a greater sens of who the person is than simply sticking a lens in their face could.
5- Sam Rambo (borderline NSFW)
http://www.samrambo.com/
Rambo has a great eye for lighting and studio work. Great composition, well-thought images, and technical perfection. One of the best, if not the best, on this list in terms of technical skill. For an added treat, check out his landscape portfolio -- wow.
4- Petr Sikora
http://www.petrsikora.cz/portfolio.htm
Sikora uses a number of alternative processes as well as analog photography. His portfolio is one of the most stunning on this list because not only are the images great, they were all difficult to obtain and required great skill.
3- Paul Do
http://www.pauldophotography.com/
More of a fashion photographer, his portrait-like work still captures my eye. I like the way he frames, poses, and lights his subjects.
2- Alex Timmerman
http://www.pbase.com/alex28/wetplate_photography
Timmerman's work with wetplate colloidion portraits is probably the best I've ever seen. Check out his work as it explains why alternative processes can still take a viewer's breath away in a digital world saturated by HDR photos and garish image filters. These images are hand-crafted and high-skill artistry as its best.
1- Andreas Feininger
http://life.time.com/culture/andreas-feininger-photographer-spotlight/#1
Feininger was one of those photographers who literally could shoot anything and do it well. His cityscapes are espcially breathtaking. However, I think his eye for capturing people is simply astounding.
Top Ten Tuesday will be back next week with Simple Photoshop Techniques to Improve your Post-processing,