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Regina Spektor by Simone Lueck
simone lueck
LINK SIMONE LUECK
Photo 66, 67, 68, 69, and 70
Artist: Simone Lueck
Medium: Photography
Source: http://www.simonelueck.com/Cuba-TV
The images I’ve selected to add to my visual journal come from Simone Lueck’s project titled, “Cuba TV.” What initially attracted me to these images is that each TV seemed to have its own personality.
What I like about photo 66 is that Lueck included actual people in this image. This makes for more of an interesting photo (in a collection of images which all focus on the same thing) while not taking away from the central theme of her project too much. Photo 67 and 68 weren’t as interesting to me compositionally but the thing that I was attracted to in these images were the TV screens themselves. Each TV screen seemed like a picture within a picture that represented another art piece. The fact that the TV screens were often oversaturated with color, grainy, and distorted actually gave it somewhat of an artistic aesthetic for me. I liked photo 69 both because of the items on top of the TV, which create an ethereal ambiance, and because of the TV itself, which looked like someone had just passed a magnet through it. Photo 70 was one of my favorites because I thought it was kind of creepy. It seemed like the baby doll was used as a form of decoration to make for a prettier living room, but to me, it just added an eerie vibe.
What I hope to add to my creative sensibility is something that I will actually be doing for my final project. The kind of images that we see on each TV is the kind of images I’m hoping to create through a process called pixel sorting and data moshing/bending. These methods fall under a more recent art form called glitch art, which seems to be gaining popularity.
Simone Lueck, Telenovela 2, 2010
Simone Lueck
Photographer Holds Open Casting Calls for Some of the Greatest Roles of All Time
For American Movie, Brooklyn-based photographer Simone Lueck set up open calls inviting people of all ages and genders to audition for some of the most coveted roles in cinematic history. Honing in on the elusive and magnetic quality of fame, she allows her subjects to become—if only for an instant— a beloved character or an enviable starlet.
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