Wednesday, February 12, 2020
Dora Maar Exhibition
Cavalier c.1936
1: I chose this work because the picture clearly has a deeper meaning, and uses chess (I like chess) to convey it.
2: The genre is fine art since there is a message to the photo, and it appears like a painting.
3: The framing places the knight in the background in a higher position than the knight chess piece, as if to convey superiority. There is also white/black coloring, which doesn't appear to directly relate to the knight's ambition but moreso to the dichromatic nature of chess.
4: The first choice paints the chess piece's ambition to be like a real-life knight. Without putting the actual knight higher, you can't imply anything, you just have a comparison between two knights. While the second decision doesn't directly impact the message of the photo, it could imply that there is no in-between in being a chess piece or a real knight. Almost as if there is an even deeper message saying that there are no half-heroes, only real ones and fake ones.
5: The photograph is of a knight chess piece facing and looking up to an image on a real knight. This implies that the chess piece wants to be like a real knight.
Beggar, London c. 1934
1: I chose this because it depicts a beggar from the 1930's, the beggar appears very different from modern ones, wearing a full suit and tie.
2: The genre is likely a documentary/reportage.
3: The beggar is framed such that you cannot see who he is begging at. That leaves the photo much more open to interpretation. There is also a small use of lines here. In the background you can see multiple horizontal lines on the building behind them. These are parallel to his gaze, which is facing the ones who he is currently begging at.
4: The meaning here isn't strong, however both choices highlight who the beggar is begging at, so the overarching message could be that he isn't begging at someone he is begging at society.
5: The photograph is of a beggar, but the photo is about the conditions of society that put him there.
The Years Lie in Wait for You c.1935
1: I chose this one because the spider superimposed onto the woman's face is both interesting and meaningful.
2: This is a portrait, both about the outside of a person and the inside.
3: The use of colour is relevant here. The spider and its web are both very white, making them brighter than the brightest parts of the woman's face. There is also clearly a use of lines here via the spider's web. The lines likely are there to further point towards the inside of her head I.E. the true subject of the photograph.
4: They make the meaning clearer. They don't change the meaning; it would still be clearly a photograph on depression if they weren't there, but it enhances that meaning.
5: The photograph is of a woman with a spider's web superimposed onto her face. The photo is likely about depression, and how her mind has become like a spider's web.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)









No comments:
Post a Comment