Lecture Topic:
Portraiture, Issues of Beauty and
Commodification
Issues of Beauty:
What is beauty? Cultural,
historical, ethical & economic considerations
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beauty
http://www.ephotoartist.com/Home.jsp?digitalphotoretouching=g
Retouching all the
originality out of us
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/09/fashion/09skin.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Artists
dealing with issues of beauty and commodification
Nancy Burson http://www.nancyburson.com/index.html
http://www.nyu.edu/greyart/exhibits/burson/
Bobby Neel Adams Age Maps: http://www.bobbyneeladams.com/age.html
Barbara Kruger
Cindy
Sherman
http://www.cindysherman.com/
http://www.thing.net/%7Ecocofusco/
The
Unreal Person:
Portraiture
in the Digital Age, Irit Krygier
http://strikingdistance.com/unreal/Pages/artists.htm
http://strikingdistance.com/unreal/Pages/irit01.htm
Making
our Game Characters more real than we are
http://www.webdesign.org/web/3d-graphics/tutorials/high-polygon-realistic-character-creation.5519.html
50 most popular female game
characters:
http://www.tomshardware.com/picturestory/382-the-50-greatest-female-characters-in-the-history-of-video-games.html
Then making us like our Game
Characters
The Face of Tomorrow http://www.faceoftomorrow.com/
The New Face of
Dan Ostrov The Faces of
RPI Project, IDI Sp’06
Open in
IE browser only:http://www.arts.rpi.edu/~ruiz/IDI-spring2006/final/ostrov/realization.htm#
---------------
What is a Portrait?
A portrait should capture the
likeness and spirit of the subject. It should go beyond the pleasing, the
anecdotal. It should be a work of art. It should live, not just for today, but
for generations to come.
Portraiture has always existed.
It is natural for people to record their presence, their image, for their time
and as a memorial to pass on. Portraits have been painted to honor those of
stature, from business leaders to political leaders to clerics. Portraits also
represent the love of one human being for another, the parent for a child, the
husband for a wife, a partner for their mate.
A portrait will illustrate a moment
or time in the life of a person. But it must also incorporate the spirit of
that person, something intrinsic at almost any age.
A portrait is a work of art. It
takes all of the artist’s skills and vision to incorporate the elements of good
photography, color and design necessary for a portrait that will invite viewing
over and over.
Portraiture
Portrait
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait
Daguerreotype Portraits (Prints and
Photographs Division, Library of Congress)
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/daghtml/dagport.html
Daguerreotype
info
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daguerreotype
Some Interesting Portrait
Photographers:
Screenings: The Language of Photography/The Merchants of Cool
Photo-retouching
Project: (in four
parts)
1. “Self Portrait”: Photograph yourself in front-on close up head view using a DSLR (Digital Single Lens Reflex)
camera.
Bring your image into Photoshop at
approximately 300 dpi 1142 long x 768 wide pixels. Work from copies of the original
images. Select the front on view that you feel is the best.
2. “Beautify”: Retouch the image to look as “beautiful” or “handsome”
as possible. Experiment with the many
tools in Photoshop including layers, filters, paint and drawing tools, colors,
palettes, etc. Hints found here and here
3. “Age”: Take the original “best” view again and this time age your
image to look at least 20 years older. Hints found here
4. “Interpretive Creative Portraits”: Experiment and create a chimera
of "I and my Idol" , or I and what I would like or not like to
be" or “interspecies morphings”.
For more tutorials see: http://www.lynda.com/home/DisplayCourse.aspx?lpk2=688
(also in dvd in class reserve in
library)
Studio skills:
Basic digital photography,(camera,
lighting set up) retouching, levels, image enhancement and correction, tonal
and color manipulation techniques, layers, masks, selecting and cutting,
pasting techniques (marquee, lasso, magic wand tools), tolerance, multiply, pen
tool, paths, inverse, color range, feather, modify, magic eraser and background
eraser, channels, saving selections to
channels. See hints also. dslr camera manual
*
Preliminary Depth
of Field Control
* Going
off Automatic by Oliva Robinson
* Getting
good photos out of your camera means taking control of the flash:
Video
Library Player: Yo Jude: Camera Flash Settings
Simple Photo Tips
http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=317&pq-locale=en_US
Simple
Portrait Photography Tips
http://photo.net/learn/portraits/
http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=339/423&pq-locale=en_US
Deliverables:
1. “Self Portrait”: Photograph yourself in front-on close up head view using a DSLR (Digital Single Lens Reflex)
camera.
Bring your image into Photoshop at
approximately 300 dpi 1142 long x 768 wide pixels. Work from copies of the original
images. Select the front on view that you feel is the best.
2. “Beautify”: Retouch the image to look as “beautiful” or “handsome”
as possible. Experiment with the many
tools in Photoshop including layers, filters, paint and drawing tools, colors,
palettes, etc. Hints found here and here
3. “Age”: Take the original “best” view again and this time age your
image to look at least 20 years older. Hints found here
4. “Interpretive Creative Portraits”: Experiment and create a chimera
of "I and my Idol" , or I and what I would like or not like to
be" or “interspecies morphings”.
Grading Criteria:
1. Assignment completed on-time.
2. Adherence to the size and file
format specifications
3. Exploration and application of
creative tools in Photoshop.
4. Quality and clarity of class
presentation
5. Quality, Realism and
Believability of photo-retouching as illustrated in your final beauty &
aged images.
6. Creative exploration and
experimentation in portraiture of others