Abstract photography[1]

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Abstract Art & Photography

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Representational and Abstract art

Piet Mondrian, Composition in red yellow and blue, 1921

Caravaggio, Supper at Emmaus, 1601

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In the Caravaggio painting the composition consists of the arrangement of people and recogniseable objects.The painting clearly represents people sitting around a table – things that we could find in the ‘real’ world.Works like this are called representational or figurative.

The Mondrian painting also involves a composition process, but in this case it is a composition of shapes, lines and colours.The picture seems not to directly represent anything which we would find in the ‘real’ world.

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Film ‘stills’ from the film La Jetee.

Abstract or representational?

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PatternDo you want there to be a center of interest in your photograph or painting, or would you prefer the image itself to become a pattern?

Jackson Pollock, Painting, 1948

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Photogram by Lazolo Maholy-Nagy

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Whilst some works are clearly representational and others clearly abstract, many photographs or artworks seem to be representational (figurative), and yet also have an abstract quality

Photo by Paul Strand

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Photo by Andreas Gursky

This is a photograph of a motor race track in Bahrain.

The pattern created by the track produces an abstract quality to the image – do you agree or disagree – discuss.

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When you view a completely abstract image it is usually meaningless to ask “what is it of?”

Many people today still believe that to qualify as ‘Art’, an image or artwork must be representational – it must be of something found in the physical world.

In the second half of the 19th century some artists began to break free of this constraint, attempting to produce art which was less of and more about the subject.

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JMW Turner, Rain, steam and speed, 1844

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Claude Monet, Water Lillies, 1915-26

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Photographers in the 1920’s started experimenting with the camera’s ability to ‘see’ in new and exciting ways (using startling viewpoints, close-ups, radical framing and so on).

They allowed the photography to revel in those aspects of the medium which made it different to other atistic media, rather than trying to make their photographs appear like other forms of art, such as painting.

Extension work: ‘Medium Specificity’.

Photo by Steichen

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Photographs by Edward Weston

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Photo by John Baldessari

Abstract or representational or …. a bit of both?

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Photo by Tomatsu Shomei

How would you describe this image …

Is it ‘of’ anything?

Is it representational or abstract?

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Photographs by Wolfgang Tillmans

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What are the essential differences between representational and abstract art/photography?

What might abstract photographs be good for?

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