Monday, February 13, 2012

Kill Your Darlings, Fibonacci Reflection

  1. How did you develop your craft with this assignment?
    1. I developed my photographic craft pretty well with the assignment. With the two roles of film I really used the first to get a sense of what worked as printed photographs and narrowed down on the mood I wanted to portray with the series. I thought the use of the Fibonacci view finders were really useful in helping to set up the frame of each image. 
  2. What problems emerged? How did you solve these problems?
    1. I had some problems at first in deciding what my overall mood or feeling would be. I wasn't really sure with the first roll of film and had pretty much three different sets of pictures with different moods. With the second roll I really chose one of the previous three sets and focused in on a more ominous and dark mood. I had some problems at first trying to find stuff to take pictures of that fit in the Fibonacci view but eventually I focused more on the mood and only used the view finders as a frame for the pictures. 
  3. What ideas, feelings or meanings did you want your work to express? How did you go about expressing it?
    1. At first I tried pretty much three feelings in the first roll of film. These were the pictures of the tea cup, the skull, and the teddy bear. The cup was meant to express warmth but it didn't really achieve that because they were pretty dark pictures. The teddy bear was meant to show a sense of abandonment or lonesomeness but I didn't like the pictures so I went with the skull pictures. They were meant so express a sort of dark and scary mood and I think they did a nice job with it. I went on with that mood in the second roll and expanded it to pictures that didn't include just the skull but also had other pretty dark objects. 
  4. Write about one of the photos that you "killed". Was it a darling? What is intriguing about it? 
    1. I really liked one picture of the skull that was on cement platform with ivy hanging around it. I thought it was a really amazing picture because it was so dark but the skull really stood out as a clear white. The setting also really contributed to the mood I was going for and it was a darling. I decided to kill it because there were some strange dots on the film that I had unsuccessfully tried to wash off but it was still a very intriguing print. 
  5. Write about the photograph you chose for display in the library foyer. What makes it the right photograph for group display?
    1. I chose a close up picture of the deer skull as my library foyer photograph. I thought the composition of the picture was really great with the focus on the front of the skull and the black background. I chose this picture as the one for the group display because I felt like it really fit with the general sense and composition of the other prints. A lot of the photographs are really dark and this fit in that category. 
  6. You peers gave you feedback on your photographs. Did their preferences mirror yours? 
    1. My peers chose pretty much the same pictures as the ones that were my favorites. Many of them were particularly drawn to the intriguing picture of my cat but that picture was vetoed for obvious reasons.