Friday, October 12, 2012

Stuck - Dull Vs Bright Rion Dayao (43039618)



 
Created by Rion Dayao (43039618) 
                                   
Theme: Stuck
Sub-Theme: Dull vs. Bright
Created By: Rion Dayao (43039618)
Music: Sleepy He@d - Done with the Stuck (Beat Handbook 2012)
CC Licensed: Attribution










In the video are still photos along the theme "Stuck" with the sub-theme of "Dull vs. Bright". The photos reflect the everyday aesthetics within the theme and sub-theme. No photos were edited (except cropped to 16x9 HD in Iphoto) as to keep the raw, urban,  ‘perfect’ and ‘imperfect’ photography (Murray 2008,161) feel to it. Although not chronologically ordered, the photos were arranged to give a sense of story with the music, lyrics and beats. The effects of fades were incorporated to give a sense of "you're" the person walking around looking at all these images, along with the music convey what the viewer and the subjects together were feeling.  

The pictures were captured with an Iphone 4, cropped with Iphoto, compiled and produced in Imovie with music provided through Soundcloud.com under the Creative Commons: Attributions License.

Carpets and Textures by Claude Essman & Ashish Sachdev

 

The theme of our Photo Essay is Carpets which is a perfect example that demonstrates the concept of everyday aesthetics described in the Susan Murray reading. Carpets are the base of our every steps in everyday living and common lifestyle that is an unnoticed part of our routine.

Murray describes photography as a phenomenon that “has become less about the special or rarefied moments of domestic living and more about an immediate, rather fleeting display and collection of one’s discovery and framing of all the small and mundane" (Susan Murray)

Carpets are the nucleons of the small and mundane everyday ignorance. All the  pictures in the slides are clicked on the iPhone 4s and therefore some grainy textures. This Grainy quality of few pictures reflects Murray's discovery that there is a place for both perfect and imperfect photography. Essentially through our photography and editing we wanted to illustrate the Commonness and mundane attributes of the everyday walked all over carpet.


Theme: Carpets

SubTheme: Texture

CC Licensed Under Creative Commons Attribution License type 

By Claude Essman & Ashish Sachdev

Damaged and Deteriorated by Isabelle Miller and Georgia Farrell

                            'Damaged and Deteriorated'

                                         By Isabelle Miller and Georgia Farrell

Theme: Public Transport                    Sub-Theme: Damage
Created By: Isabelle Miller and Georgia Farrell
Music: DUST ft. Bijou – ‘Ghost Key’ (2012)  
CC Licensed: Attribution, Non-commercial, Share Alike
The theme for our photo essay is ‘everyday public transport’ with a sub-theme of ‘damage’.  We chose this theme as we believe it directly encapsulates the concept of an ‘everyday aesthetic’ as referred to in the Susan Murray reading, ‘Digital Images, Photo Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics.” Public transport, such as trains, buses, the monorail and the ferry captured in our photographs, are part of on an everyday process of instances, events and objects that are overlooked and become part of a routine. Our aim as amateur photographers was to capture a collection of photographs of things that in an everyday environment are unnoticed, and apply various different frames, angles, and effects, through iPhoto to create something aesthetically pleasing and appealing. We selected the song ‘Ghost Key’ by Dust ft Bijou to accommodate the deteriorated and damaged sub-theme of our photo essay, and to add to the character of the photos. Essentially, we tried to make the ‘mundane’ aspects of public transport become noticed and photographically appealing through capturing a different perspective through our photographs and editing.

Drains and Waste - Chris Heaslip and Vicki Nessis

Chris Heaslip and Vicki Nessis - Drains and Waste
Music by imaginaryband - GREEN&ORANGEnowater CC Attribution


Rationale 
In an environment where we have relatively unlimited access to water it is easy for us to disregard and forget that H2O is a precious resource which isn’t so readily available in other countries around the world. We can mindlessly watch this invaluable commodity be flushed down the drain without a second thought of the millions of people who are struggling without it everyday.

It is with this thought we decided to closely observe and analyse urban drains, which otherwise would be forgotten and overlooked. By putting the spotlight on drains the consumer considers our societies water treatment and if it is the best course of action for us, and if it is making the most of our bountiful supply of water. 

We aimed to capture contrasting types of drains to portray the variety of issues within this world wide problem, including neglected, overused, large and small. The inclusion of photos depicting rubbish built up in some of the drains highlights our passive and careless nature to our water treatment. Though hopefully our photo essay will greater awaken us to the role of drains in our urban society.



Hidden World: Windows Rosa Willis and Abi Walsh


Abi Walsh and Rosa Willis


In Murray’s reading, she discusses in depth the decentralization of photography and identifies the “shift in the engagement with the everyday image”. Murray states that photography “has become less about the special or rarified moments of domestic living and more about an immediate, rather fleeting display and collection of one’s discovery and framing of all the small and mundane.” This idea is one we wanted to explore further in our photo essay. As our stimulus for our project, we used Murray’s ideas of the everyday aesthetic and amateur photography. The theme for our project was ‘Windows’ and our supporting sub theme was ‘The Home’. The intention of our project was to create a collaboration of images which personified the traditionally mundane object. Through effective use of editing, angles, colour, lighting and sound, we were able to manipulate the images into becoming more then just the everyday aesthetic, rather as fleeting, malleable and lively (Murray 2008).  In order to create an effective and engaging project we set the following guidelines:

-     -    The windows of choice must be taken from the outside of homes (our subtheme).
-     -   The windows must reflect a sort of personality, eg natural decay, style etc.
-     -    When editing, we decided that we would accentuate this idea of personality within the windows through cropping, zooming and contrast in order to highlight the reflection of the window.

We named our project  ‘Hidden World’ to enhance and support the story our images tell. In order to create a sense of cohesiveness within our project, our initial and ending slides are images of windows on the front door of a home. The music incorporated in our photo essay is ‘We felt the fall – Lemolo’ (a cover by coMa and Sorrow). In iMovie, we edited our sound to have a cathedral effect in order to support our eerie and ghostly style. The process of our photo essay closely reflects Murray’s key arguments, in particular her idea of the progressive relationship with the everyday image in helping alter the way we “construct narratives ourselves and the world around us.”


Our video can be found at: http://youtu.be/TRQwL8XUDq0








Follow Signs- Weathered and Rustic By Hannah Farrell & Joshua Rust




The Follow Signs photo essay is themed signage with the sub- theme of weathering and rust. These themes reflect Murray’s notion of the “ temporal relationship with the everyday image” (Murray 2008, 151). This essay narrates chronologically a ‘road trip’ from the urban city landscape to the coastal suburban landscape.  The locations chosen have autobiographical connections to both creators of the essay, reflecting a characteristic noted in Murray’s study of successful Flickr pages.

To capture the images both photographers used iPhone 3G’s. This convergent technology, accentuated the amateur practice of capturing ‘snap shots’ spontaneously. At times the qualities of images are poor however this emphasises the sub-theme of ‘weatheredness’ and the rustic character of signs.  The grainy quality of some photos also reflects Murray’s discovery that there is a place for both ‘perfect’ and ‘imperfect’ photography (Murray 2008,161).

 Photos were edited in iPhoto; lighting and warm colour tones were adjusted to highlight the signs features. iMovie was then used to compose the photos in a narrative; dissolve transitions most successfully expressed the sub-theme’s character, black outs and white outs were also useful in connecting the photos fluidly.
The music was selected from SoundCloud under the Creative Commons Attributions  and Share Alike License. "Summer Jones" by KuyaGood (2012). The track was also slightly edited in GarageBand in order to compliment the video it was placed alongside.


Hannah Farrell 42467187
Joshua Rust 


BibliographyMURRAY, S. 2008. Digital Images, Photo Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics. Journal of Visual Culture, 7.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Trash and Treasure. 
By Patrick Eid and Matthew McAnally.
  

Theme: Trash
Sub-theme: Texture
Produced by Patrick Eid and Matthew McAnally 
Music: Well, funk's for nothing- By choir shark 
"Well, funk's for nothing" by choirshark is licensed under a Creative Commons License

The photo essay, entitled ‘Trash and Texture,’ is in direct response to the understanding of ‘Everyday Aesthetics’ reflected in the Susan Murray reading, ‘Digital Images, Photo Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics.’ The theme, trash, was selected because it not only reflects a “rather fleeting display of one’s discovery of the small and mundane” (p. 151) but also challenges the assumed principles in everyday living. Hence, the nature of the title concurrently emphasises the timeless concept of trash and treasure together with the ironic contrast of the assumed, cliché metaphor by replacing the word ‘treasure’ with ‘texture.’ Together, the subversion draws a parallel with our subtheme, texture, which highlights “fascination (of the subjectivity of treasure) with the process of compilation and comparison” (p. 155). On this note, the choice of exploring texture by progressively coloring sepia photos through blurred transition symbolises how “Subjectivity shifts and (how) our relationship to the temporal can never be fixed” (p. 156) once we adopt another view in life. Lastly, Choirshark’s funk and jazz fusion track, ‘Well, Funk’s for Nothing,’ compliments the alternative view of trash being interesting by the use of increasingly upbeat tones to describe it as nothing short of spectacular.

Food & Vibrancy - Caroline Kim & Stacey Aranha

MAS110 Photo Essay - Food & Vibrancy

By Caroline Kim (42861144) and Stacey Aranha (42866804)




Theme: Representations of Food in Urban Spaces
Subtheme: Vibrancy
Music: Bright Lights, Late Nights (S Strong Remix) by The Speakeasies Swing Band (2012)Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License Type

The central theme that inspired our photo essay was to explore the versatility of representations of food in urban spaces. Significantly, we strived to capture the vital essence of food in everyday life, centring particularly upon as Murray (2008: 155) refers to as the “ability to locate the beauty in the mundane”. Additionally, in order to emphasise the beauty of food, opposed to the mundane and practical uses of food in everyday life, we chose the sub-theme of vibrancy. Hence, by juxtaposing the varying colours and tones of food, places where food are served and consumed allowed for a broader range of images to be produced. Food, being an essential aspect of life ‘often goes unnoticed’ due to its disposable nature and thus, transcends upon Murray’s category of ‘ephemera’. This closely interrelates with ‘everyday aesthetics’ as it significantly demonstrates something such as food that is very much regarded as an integral, immediate function and necessity of a human being's everyday life. The photos used were all taken in the CBD as we felt this distinctly accentuated upon the concept of the ‘everyday aesthetic’ quality as it fundamentally encapsulates not only urbanized shots of the way food is presented but also analyses and captures the ways and places people serve, buy and consume food.





References


Murray, S (2008) 'Digital Images, Photo-Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics', Journal of Visual Culture, vol. 7(2), pp. 147-163.
    


Katie Glynn (42426723) - Photo Essay 'STUCK'







In this assignment I focused on the theme ‘Stuck’ and the sub-theme, ‘Colour’. The concept behind this theme is the idea of finding mundane items that are stuck, whether they are glued, taped, or naturally formed, on every day areas i.e. walls, floors, ceilings and other objects. By visiting urbanised areas i.e. the city and Balmain, I found a variety of different items i.e. posters, nails, stickers, tape, hair, fluff and gum. As I focused on the ‘colour’ sub-theme, I was able to capture interesting aspects of these items by emphasizing their vibrant colours in my photographs via natural lighting and in the editing process. I could also determine how long that item has been stuck for by looking at the richness in colour of the objects, and I also could judge whether that object was stuck intentionally or just a natural occurrence. 

Through this assignment I was able to alter my interaction with image and the everyday aesthetic. By focusing on the small items of life that go unnoticed, I highlighted the main concepts of Week 5’s reading, ‘Digital Images, Photo-Sharing and Everyday Aesthetics’. This article centred on the case study Flickr.com and was based on the social use in digital photography.  Murray argues that there has been a significant shift in the way we interact with the everyday image as, digital photography has ‘become less about the special or rarefied moments of domestic living and more about an immediate, rather fleeting, display and collection of one’s discovery and framing of the small and mundane’ (Murray 2008: 147). Murray also commented on the role of the amateur photographer that ‘can create and comment on with relative authority and ease’ (Murray 2008: 151) and the idea that their photographs have ‘some sort of artistic aspirations or pretensions in their composition, use of lighting or framing’ (Murray 2008: 155). In my collection of photographs, I discovered objects that are in fact, ‘small and mundane’, and took on the role as the amateur photographer by focusing on an artistic aspect of taking a photo i.e. colour. In my findings, I discovered a range objects that were full in fantastic rich colours, whether they were on posters, gum and signs and some that were rather dull in colour i.e. nails and webs, which I could make interesting comparisons in vibrant colour vs. dull colour. In the editing process I used tools that brought out these vibrant colours even more. My choice in mundane photographs, sharp editing transitions, fast paced editing, and choice in music with a bouncy adventure feel, created a realistic urbanised environment. I feel that with these photographs and the way they were transformed into a short video, I captured the concepts that were discussed in the Murray reading and the theme ‘Stuck’ and sub-theme ‘Colour’.

Murray, S (2008) Digital Images, Photo-Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics. Journal of Visual Culture August 2008 vol. 7(2). 147-163.

Copyright Holder: 2007-2012 SoundCloud Ltd.
Title of work: Walking Down The Street
License Type: Creative Commons License: Attributions

"Bumps and Bitchumen" by Bradley Owens & Brendan Ridley



Bumps and Bitchumen explores the theme of roads and pavements with a sub-theme of texture. We took a creative approach to the sub-theme of texture, incorporating cracks, paint, litter, shadows, flora and fauna and other environmental features which reflects the 'everyday aesthetic'. The images were shot in both city and suburban settings in order to show a contrast in the subject matter of the overall theme. In iPhoto we used various techniques, including contrast and exposure, to enhance the visible textures in the photos. In iMovie we used the Ken Burns effect to draw the viewer's attention to certain details and in some photos the effect was used to simulate driving down a road. We chose a track in the 'lounge' genre to accentuate the atmosphere of both settings. In order to synchronise our project with our chosen soundtrack we used the flashy 'Fade to White' transition to match the driving rhythm at the beginning of the song and then the smoother 'Cross Dissolve' transition was used, as well as longer timings on the photos, towards the end where the music slows down.

By Bradley Owens and Brendan Ridley

"The Gold Lining" by Broke For Free licensed under Creative commons: attribution, noncommercial.

Photo Essay By Ashliegh Wilson and Yan Yang Li




'Splish Splash'
By Ashliegh Wilson and Yan Yang Li

Rationale:


Water is a vital material for all human beings as all our intercellular processes take place within water. This is why we chose water as our theme as it appeals to the everyday aesthetic. Everyday you will see water whether it be due to rain, or a drink. However the movements and pattern water creates instantaneously can considerably be overlooked. By using a Single Lens Reflex Camera and iMovie program, the production of ‘Splish Splash’ was created. This production attempts to emphasise the multiple patterns water can make through its movement hence our sub-theme of patterns/movement. In order to evoke a sense of modern relaxation, an upbeat yet tranquil soundtrack was created using Garageband. This appeals to Murray's 'everyday aesthetic' as the photos capture different patterns in which water has automatically created due to a disturbance, which isn't always admired in ones everyday life.