View allAll Photos Tagged surface

In-process Installation by Lisa Kellner.

- of the ferry to Styrsö Skäret.

If you own a Surface Pro 4 or a Surface Book, there is a good chance you are looking at picking up the Surface dock. The device, which will set you back $ 199, is not cheap but it does expand the functionality of your Surface quite a bit.

  

Earlier this week, I ordered two Dell...

 

www.solutionssquad.com/blog/how-to-run-two-4k-monitors-fr...

Theresa Dapra (Stylist/Designer) Location: Parts Express Junkyard, Brooklyn, NY

A photograph of the surface of a bubble by Victor Napolski.

Surface Morphologies; think make think repeat. Studio with Michael Ambrose, Kristen Fry, Fred Scharmen, and Jason Winters.

Sample textile design from 9-week "Exploring Surface Design" course at The Art League School in Alexandria, taught by Julie Booth.

 

Techniques: twisted resist, lace print

 

Spring 2010

University of Southampton Faculty of Engineering, Science and Mathematics,

School of Civil Engineering and the Environment, "Bituplaning: A Low Dry Friction Phenomenon of New Bituminous Road Surfaces" By John Charles Bullas BSc MSc MIAT MIHT FGS May 2007 Thesis for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy

Surface Tension opening night 20 October 2011.

Dylan Haskins.

Sea Lions close to surface

 

Hornby Island, BC

Dark short lines on the white surface and dark spots form a minimalistic composition.

I am in an exhibition at Cal Poly’s University Art Gallery "Beyond the Surface: The Photograph as Object", an exhibition curated by Aline Smithson from January 9 - January 31, 2020.

 

artgallery.calpoly.edu/2020/beyond-the-surface

 

As the practice of photography moves farther away from the tactile process of winding film through a camera and long meditative hours spent in the wet darkroom, the contemporary digital photographer is now experiencing an entirely different relationship to the image. With the proliferation of digital capture, with Photoshop replacing the darkroom, and instantaneous digital printing at the push of a button, photographs are now equally a product of the mind and technology, with the ability for limitless reproduction.

 

In response to this loss of the evidence of the artist’s hand, a number of artists are reconsidering the potential of an image with a move towards making rather than taking photographs. By using vintage and contemporary photographs as a starting point, artists are creating physically layered works of art that result in a handmade one-of-a-kind object, expanding the notion of what we consider photographic art. The exhibition Beyond the Surface features a variety of interventions and investigations that include collage, sewing, cutting, weaving and embroidery, all interrogating the material qualities of the physical photograph as an attempt to recover the magic of the photograph-as-object. As artist Maria Font describes, “My hands intervene with each work manually, and through this intimate, performatic ritual, the embodiment of the photograph becomes the common ground where the familiar and the foreign meet, as an individual attempt to blur the lines between the internal and external spaces of the body. The construction of these mental maps evokes diverse psychological states and emotions with meanings that are in constant flux, never fixed, just like our identities.”

 

Artists in the exhibition work in two ways, using imagery that they have created in camera or by using found or familial vernacular photos. The image is then punctured, deconstructed, or cut apart and reborn as a work of art, separate from the original image. Many of the artists explore themes of growing up, family, and memory; others use contemporary imagery to consider self or culture. Artist Liz Steketee states, “I use my life and family as material for my work. By doing this, I am able to explore the complexity that exists in the everyday and the richness found in the mundane. Through the use of montage, collage, and purposeful juxtaposition of photographs, it is my intention to examine the “truth” in life.” Artist Joe Rudko cuts and reorganizes found photographs to “break the illusion of the pristine image and suggest a variety of interpretations it can have. Working with analog methods in a digital era places these snapshots in dialogue with the present moment.”

 

Revisiting photographs with an Exacto knife or sewing needle provides a new way of examining, organizing, and interacting with more than just the image on the page. This reconsideration opens the door to limitless possibilities of creation, inspiring us to look more deeply at the potential of photographic imagination.

   

From my bathroom. Took a lot of shots to get a few really decent ones, but once my timing was in sync with the drip it was OK.

 

Also, laying in the bath holding position to get the shot isn't anywhere near relaxing.

 

I quite like the limescale - I thought of cleaning it off, but then I figured that this was more "honest" (if that means anything to you!.?)

 

Handheld

Sigma 70-300 macro

Kenko 1.4 Converter

EX430 flash

For my final experiment I attached several balloons and coated them 4 times with a mix of PVA glue and sand. I then popped all the balloons and was left with this hard, bulbous, sandy shell.

Yasuaki Onishi - Reverse of Volume RSK (2016)

Photo Hendrik Zeitler

Surface Line Week Sailing Competition finals on Aug. 17. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class (SW/AW) Rosalie Garcia)

Digiscoping, APO TELEVID 62

1 2 ••• 52 53 55 57 58 ••• 79 80