I used a lot of long exposure shots for my final project. For many of them, they were outside during the daytime, and I had to use a neutral density filter. This article talks about how that works.

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Today's Document
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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if i look back, i am lost
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@departingarrow
I used a lot of long exposure shots for my final project. For many of them, they were outside during the daytime, and I had to use a neutral density filter. This article talks about how that works.
All semester, I was separated from my family as I finished my degree. That separation ended a couple of months ago, and now our third child, Nikolaos, was just born. I’m getting to put my new photography skills to the test in taking baby photos for my family. I hope you enjoy a small selection of them.
I wouldn’t go so far as to say it’s not real photography. It’s definitely a sub-media form within photography (imho). However, his second and third points are really strong.
I decided to start posting fun stuff on here again now I have arrived in Germany. Here is my lead off. #LittleFan #BigTree
Some photos since I finally arrived in Germany and have been reunited with my family.
I’ve missed these buggers so much.
These are some photos I took tonight at the Texas Rangers vs. Boston Red Sox game. It was a lot of fun. Shutter speed was real high and so was the ISO. So, there’s a little noise...
#Capstone2018
Women’s Work - Exhibit
This afternoon, I went and visited the Women’s Work exhibit at the SP/N Gallery on the north of the #UTDallas campus. It featured several works by various women artists. When I arrived, the individual taking care of the exhibit greeted me and gave me some materials about the works within. This was very helpful as I might otherwise have been tempted to just walk around, not knowing who did which piece.
pic: A selfie with Libby Rowe
I spent most of my time in the back room of the two room exhibit. Bookending those works were two by @TheLibbyRowe. Unfortunately, the video for her piece called Feminization was not functioning while I was there. I did, however, have the opportunity to take a selfie with the artist herself (actually, her cardboard doppelgänger).
Libby was kind enough to give me a free pin, and asked me to “spread the word.” I wore that pin the whole way home.
From there, I was drawn to the work of Colette Copeland. The first piece I looked at, Ball and Chain, was an entertaining and yet serious twist on the notion of a women or wife being a man’s “ball and chain.” In the video, these roles were reversed. The man was following the woman around, in Victorian garb, hindering and slowing her movement. More than just a twist on the roles themselves, I think this can be seen as a commentary on man hindering woman in society and the world.
pic: Keeping a watchful eye on Copeland’s Ball and Chain.
The piece which was most visually alluring to me, however, was by Jessie Budd. Called Identity: Digital Self, it was a bit of red and white with 6 video screens and lots of fluff and yarn. Honestly, I’m not entirely sure how to describe it. I’m afraid I can’t quite do it justice. It felt...complicated. So, I’ll post a couple of pictures instead.
pics: Jessie Budd’s Identity: Digital Self
I really liked this piece. The red yarn reminds me of blood, gushing out like a waterfall. The white and red are both strong and contrasting. The rare glimpses of skin on the screens (folding shots of what is probably an eye on a face) is the only place in this piece you will not see red or white (unless you count the floor).
As a guy, it’s hard for me to understand the feelings and thoughts associated with menstruation, but I think the piece is deliberately invoking thoughts of that, perhaps to question the relationship between our digital and physical selves.
There were other works in the exhibit, and they are work seeing, but I felt these were the three artists most relevant to my classroom assignment. If you have the chance, you should go check this exhibit out. Your last chance is Saturday, April 21, 2018.
Friday, March 30, 2018 – Saturday, April 21, 2018, Venue: The new SP/N Gallery at Synergy Park North 2 Admission: Free
SP/N Gallery hours: Sunday - Monday: Closed Tuesday - Wednesday: 11:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Thursday - Friday: 1:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Saturday: 11:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
These are a handful of my photos from my final project: Pauses.
My goal was to use explore the emotions and actions of this last semester at UTD, my last semester in Dallas, my last season living here in Texas. My wife and kids are already ahead of me, waiting in Germany, and I pause here between our old life and the one ahead.
I used a series of long exposure shots and carefully staged movement within them to create the appearnace of a translucent apparition. Then, I carefully constructed each photo to showcase a moment or emotion in this period of my life. I’m very proud of it, and I hope you enjoy this small sampling of my work.
Bruce Nauman
For my artist presentation, I looked at the work of Bruce Nauman. A pioneer in video art and acclaimed neon light sculpture, his work tends to make the ordinary seem uncanny and disrupt our sense of normalcy. I particularly enjoyed the quote on one of his neon works which said, “The True Artist Helps the World by Revealing Mystic Truths.” It makes me think about the role of the artist in the world. Is the artist a kind of priest, mediating between the world of normalcy and beyond?
I enjoy stop motion animation because of the difficulty and planning required to make it. When every frame has to be constructed, maintaining continuity, especially with lighting, becomes tricky.
Yet another reject.
Another reject.
Some more rejects...
I’ve been working on my final project. This is one of the shots I took today. I like it, but I don’t think it will get used.