- What did you gain from the experience
of having a gallery show?
- What advice can you give next year’s AP Art classes to ensure they are successful in creating a portfolio? The advice I would give next year's AP classes to ensure that all students are successful in creating a portfolio is that they need to work hard, and make sure they do not fall behind on their work. All of the assignments that are done in this class will help an artist find his or her specialization.
- What were the positive aspects of the class for you this year? I really enjoyed working on the Photo Story and Self Portrait assignments. I also enjoyed working with the different elements and principles of design, as they helped me explore different ways to take photographs.
- What could be done differently next year? I think it would be better if next year the assignment of Light & Mood with the three objects was not included, or was changed. Maybe just have an assignment in which the students explore with light and mood, but are able to take pictures of whomever or whatever they want to use as models for their images.
- What did you learn about yourself as an artist this year? This year I learned a lot about myself as an artist. I discovered that I really like taking pictures with value and contrast. I enjoy telling stories with my pictures. I also found that there is beauty and a story waiting to be told anywhere you look.
- How do you think you will apply what you’ve learned this year to your future life? This year I learned to problem solve, and I learned that there are always solutions to problems that are faced. I learned that only through exploring and taking risks can you find the type of person you want to be. In my future life, I will definitely be taking risks in order to continue to grow as an artist, and as a person.
Jesenia C
The main idea of my concentration series is domestic abuse against women. I know women who have survived abuse, and I know it could happen to me. My series follows the cycle of domestic violence. In my series, I explored the feelings and thoughts of women who are abused, fighting to survive, and learning to escape.
Monday, June 3, 2013
Final Reflection
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Essay Edited
The
main idea of my concentration series is domestic abuse against women. I know
women who have survived abuse, and I know it could happen to me. My series
follows the cycle of domestic violence. In my series, I explored the feelings
and thoughts of women who are abused, fighting to survive, and learning to
escape. Women who are abused often turn a blind eye to their reality. They often
feel mute, and believe no one will listen. These women feel scared and trapped,
not knowing that they have the strength to rip the cage open and escape. In my
images, I used value, contrast, and color to transmit a mood.
My
first three photographs are black and white. In the third image, we begin to
see into the hidden life of the victim. She hides behind crossed arms, but her
defiant expression shows that she is strong. She is looking away from the
camera because she is afraid to admit her reality. Contrast and strong lighting
show that she pretends her life is bright, but her reality is dark. The dark
lines of branches and shadows show that she is caged.
In
my second group I added color to show the victim’s feelings. This group begins
with a bruised girl. The bruises are revealed when the disguise of happiness
and invincibility is stripped away. In the last images she accepts her reality (image
8). My last image from this group is of the girl layered with a purple and
orange image of a plant. The girl is staring into the camera with a fierce
expression. She knows her strength and ability to break free from any cage.
My
last group contains photo stories. The diptych of the smiling woman shows hope for
a bright future, new beginning, and her success at escaping from the dark. The
last image is a summary of the broken cycle. The image of the car mirror shows
her escape, the flame shows the danger she was in, and the image of her
laughing shows her relief.
I
began to create my series by taking portrait, close up, and background images. I
edited my images using Photoshop. I first made them black and white, then began
to layer them with images. I created diptychs and photo stories. I explored
different ways to layer my images to find ways to edit them so they’d tell a
story. I then chose my final twelve.
1, 815 characters (no spaces)Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Friday, April 12, 2013
Essay on 12 Final Images
The main idea of
my concentration series is the domestic abuse many women go through at some
point in their lives. Because I am a woman, there is a possibility that this
will happen to me, and there are women I am close to who have had to learn to
break away from this type of abuse. My concentration series follows the cycle
of domestic violence. In my concentration series, I wanted explore the feelings
and thoughts of women who are abused, and who are fighting to survive and to
learn to escape. Using my pictures, I wanted to show that women who go through
domestic abuse often times turn a blind eye to the reality of what is happening
to them. Because of their manipulative and abusive partners, the victims many
times feel mute, like they have no voice, and no one who will hear them. These
women feel scared and trapped, not knowing that they are strong enough to rip
the cage open and escape from these terrible experiences. To show this in my
images, I used strong lighting, value, contrast, and color in an attempt to
transmit a mood.
My
first group of photographs is black and white. It shows the thoughts of a
person who believes the world is divided in black and white, the good and the
evil. The third photograph in this image is a black and white portrait of a
woman layered with an image of an orchard. This image is layered to show that
we are now beginning to see into the thoughts of that person, and the suffering
that she must face. The crossed arms show that she is used to always hiding,
and her defiant expression shows that she is a strong woman who has gone
through much suffering. However, she is not looking into the camera, which
tells us that she is afraid, but does not want to accept that she is trapped. The
contrast and strong lighting used in this image show what she prefers to think
her life is like: bright and full of happiness, and the dark reality that her
life really is. The dark lines of branches and shadows in this image show that
she is trapped in a cage.
In
my second group of images, I have added color, and my pictures are simply
layered portraits. I did this to show the moods the victim is feeling as she
fights with herself to find the courage to escape. This group of images begins
with a bruised, blind, scared, and mute girl who does not accept her situation
as a victim, who is scared because of the situation she is living, and who is
mute because she feels she is not able to go to anyone for help. The bruises on
her body are revealed when the disguise of happiness and invincibility is
stripped away. The last group of colored and layered images, beginning with
image number eight, shows her beginning to understand and to really see her
situation, and she realizes how strong she really is. It also shows her
thinking of the options she has, and the realization that she has the choice to
escape her cage and fly away towards freedom (image number 9). My last image from this group is the picture
of the girl layered with a purple and orange image of a plant. The girl is now
looking straight into the camera, with a fierce expression, which signifies
that she has finally realized the situation that she was in. The scars of her
past will only remind her of her success to solve a problem, and will remind
her that she is strong and able to break free from any cage. To me, she looks
like a tiger, a survivor and a strong animal that is always able to land on her
feet when she falls.
My
last two images are colored, layered, and photo story photographs. The first
diptych is an image of a smiling woman looking into the camera. The background
image that I used to layer the portrait is an image of a rose with warm colors.
This layered portrait shows the hope of a bright future and a new beginning for
the woman. The bottom image of the photograph is a picture of the woman
driving. This image shows the success of the woman to begin a new and
successful life away from the dark abuses of her ex-partner.
My
process for this concentration was long and stressful. I initially did not know
what I wanted my idea for my concentration to be. I only knew that my images
would be layered and in the photo story form. I began by taking portrait, close
up, setting, and action images. I also took images of pictures that I could use
to layer my portraits. I then began to edit my images using Photoshop, first
making them black and white, then adding background images to my portraits. I
created some diptychs and photo stories. When I began to find a pattern in the
moods my images brought to me, I finally realized what I wanted my
concentration to be. I finished editing my images, and chose my final twelve.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Week 4 & 5
During Spring Break, I am planning to take more Portrait and Action images. I plan to take my camera everywhere I go, and take as many pictures as possible. This week, I played around with my images, and made some more diptychs.
Below are some of the images I worked on this week:
More Layered Portraits:
Finished Photostory:
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