Post on 12-Apr-2017
ART 3 BrainstormPreparation to your personal starting pointTo record our generation of ideas we need to create brainstorms1.On your brainstorm, there must be your initial thoughts on possible concept ideas for your photography project. Write down any key themes, issues and ideas that spring to mind. (the more the better)2.Consider what genre those ideas would be shot in. What is your access to that issue? How? Where/locations? When? Is time an issue? And most importantly Why its personal to you or someone who is close to you?3. Its early days but include as many photographers and artists you can think of who make work under similar themes/concepts/locations. Write down Influence-Name-Body of work-Image if at all possible.4. What other subjects do you do at college, can the issues you learn about be used as inspiration as a photograph project?5. What are you passionate about? What do you care about? What interests you?6. How will you visualise your idea, from that an idea into stunning images?7. Do you have any medium ideas? Effects, techniques, camera tech?
Getting you started
-Use the useful websites section on the blog to find photographers work to draw inspiration from
-Use the genre labels on the blog to look through conceptual work
-Use student work label to draw ideas
1) Collect, Select, Arrange 7) Negotiating Barriers
To generate ideas in your exam you were given stimulus in the paper, you could try to use that again to generate ideas?Just search for Stimulus on the blog;
Assignment 1- Collect, Select, Arrange
Perfect Composition
HoardingOCDObsessions
Creating Art From ordinary objectsCollecting
Changing something's identity
Abstraction
Digital Montage
Taking objects out of context
Valuable items
Deconstructing a object to its individual parts
Assignment 7- Negotiating Barriers
Overcoming Problems Overcoming barriers/restrictions
Poverty
Different lifestyle to the normEG. Bohemian lifestyle
Escaping our environments restrictions
Emma Livingston-Urban Trees
Dealing with an incident
Eugene Richards
by Ed Van Der Elsken
Loneliness
Addiction