Showing posts with label photo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photo. Show all posts

Friday, 24 February 2012

NEW ZEALAND ADVENTURES

Recently I spent 10 days across the ditch in New Zealand. It was the first time I got to experience what this wonderful country had to offer.

We began our travels in Queenstown, which is located in the South island of New Zealand, in the Otago region about 500km (310mi) South-West of Christchurch. Sometimes more well-known for its adventure sports than its scenery, Queenstown has much to offer everyone!

The minute you land you know its going to be special. The vast mountain ranges you briefly got to know from the air, now majestically tower over you as you disembark. Greeted by friendly customs officers, you know that this has already begun to be different to the norm. Such a relaxed town it sits alongside Lake Wakatipu, which  is NZ's longest lake stretching for around 80km (50mi). I knew this was going to be the place I was going to do majority of shooting. On this particular day, however, my wife and I had spent most of the day travelling and were ready for bed. We did the watch the sun go down at no doubt a popular area to do so - on the tip of Queenstown gardens. A beautiful area that is only a leisurely 5-10mins walk from town along the lake to the awaiting park benches.
So whilst the shot below was taken in Queenstown it wasn't taken until later in my trip, when we returned for 3 nights to conclude our trip.
On this particular sunrise shoot I had noticed the multitudes of thick but parting clouds, that I thought were going to give me a spectacular sky. I turned this way and that to try and get the right angle for the sunrise. The clouds actually hindered more than helped, because they blocked the rising suns light from hitting the clouds correctly. I ended up shooting looking away from the sunrise, which can be the right thing to do in many cases (as long as you don't have your own shadow in it). This image was shot with a 15sec exposure, giving me a nice water calming effect and a dramatic cloudscape over the aptly named Remarkables Mountain Range watch over the city of Queenstown and are simply stunning. In shooting an exposure for that long I had to use a 3 stop graduated filter. Which is almost like sunglasses for your camera. Because the scene has two very different intensities of light - the foreground (lake/mountains) and the sky, I had to level the playing field by filtering how much light the camera was capturing in the sky. Otherwise once the 15 secs was up, one of two things would occur - the sky would be perfectly exposed, but the foreground would be silouetted (not always a bad thing) OR the foreground exposed correctly, but the sky would be heavily overexposed (just white and boring).

This is the result below. I like the result, because I think it teachers you that the shot is always there for the taking you just need to know how to capture it.

Monday, 7 March 2011

$3million photograph...




The age old debate - what is art?
Dictionary.reference.com defines art as -"the quality, production, expression, or realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance." .........of what is beautiful? If "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" then surely no one person's opinion could possibly define what is art and what is beautiful. 

Did you know that the most expensive photograph ever sold, sold for USD$3,000,000! Only joking.....that would be a ridiculous amount to pay for a photograph. Well..... it actually sold for $3,346,456! 

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/bc/99_cent_II%2C_diptychon_-_Photo_courtesy_of_Sotheby%27s.jpg
Andreas Gursky, 99 Cent II Diptychon (2001), $3,346,456, February 2007, Sotheby's London auction.

I really have to take my hat off to Andreas Gursky and the invester/s who bought "99cents" (above). I think we all do. Why?! 
Hands up everyone who has sold a photograph or piece of art in general for up to $100 [looking around the room]. A round of applause for all the people with their hands up. Well done! Now keep them up if you have managed to sell a piece for $1,000? OK, what about $10,000? Is anyone's arm getting tired? OK how about a $1,000,000? I think I made my point. But is that the only reason you would try your hand at photography or art?
All those people out there who would like to get into photography to make millions of dollars just by pressing a button. Don't bother. I will save you the time. Who wants to get up at 4am every morning to start work (to shoot the sunrise) and not get paid for your time? Photography is definitely about the emotional high a photographer has for his subject rather than how much they can get for the shot. Obviously, getting paid for your work is awesome. It allows you to travel to the new place, buy that new camera, open that gallery and so on. I think you would be hard-pressed to find a professional photographer who hates taking photos. It just wouldn't happen!

As a photographer, I get out of bed to shoot a sunrise with the intent to feel something. When you arrive, when you're waiting for something to happen, when it does happen and when you capture it. It's an indescribable feeling. It's that unknown, uncaptured feeling that all photographer's live on.
The below image was the first shot that really propelled my curiosity after I got "the feeling".

Soulmate's Saratoga, NSW
Maybe it's more to do with the people who throw away insane amounts of money to have these artworks. Or maybe I should broaden my back patting to include all the people who buy the books or the magazines that have theses images in them? But I want to go one step further and say hats off to the people who spread the word about these works, without spending the money!
Ultimately, I think it's all of the above. It's kind of like the chicken or the egg argument. Who sets the trends? The photographer or the buyers? Personally, I'm on the buyers side. Photographers can take all the images the what and put whatever price they like on it. But guess what? They won't sell unless people like them. They have to mean something!

Have you ever bought an artwork? If you have, you would know the true feeling inside that you get when you come face to face with something that captures your attention so much so that you can't look away, your skin tingles and you have such an emotional reaction to something that you could cry and its all you can think about (it does happen, believe me - I've seen it. Crying that is).
To give you an example - one of the few images that i have never forgotten is Steve McCurry's "Afghan Girl" which graced the cover of National Geographic Magazine in June 1985 (coincidentally the month and year of my birth).

http://www.ionlinephilippines.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/AfghanGirl-SteveMcCurry.jpg
Steve McCurry's "Afghan Girl"

I don't know about you, but I can't look away!

Ok..... back to me now!!!!

For all those people who haven't yet delved into the world of art, firstly - I hope you still have your attention and secondly, maybe you may now have a new appreciation for the photographer's that capture history and why people are happy to spend money on something that gives them such emotional pleasure. Just keep in mind that "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" and that "one's person's trash is anothers treasure." Only you can tell yourself whether something is worth striving to get.
I say - go buy that something tomorrow, hang on your wall and see if it makes you feel that feeling every time you walk past it. Is there something you have always admired hanging in a local gallery, online, at a friend's house or in a book or magazine? Go get it, I'm sure you won't be sorry. Plus it will help that artist further their career and produce more things that make you happy. Remember it is you that shapes the trends that make art history.

Have a great day.
Kind regards,
Josh