This module provides an overview of the camera arts and how they’re used. They include:
Film photography
Photography’s impact on traditional media
The Human Element
Color Images
Photojournalism
Modern Developments
Digital photography
The invention of the camera and its ability to capture an image with light became the first “high tech” artistic medium of the Industrial Age. Developed during the middle of the nineteenth century, the photographic process changed forever our physical perception of the world and created an uneasy but important relationship between the photograph and other more traditional artistic media.
OBJECTIVES
Upon successful completion of this module, you should be able to:
Explain the effect photography has on traditional artistic media
Compare and contrast different photographic processes
Recognize and explain issues of form and content in photographs
Explain the three elements of photojournalism
Describe the effects photojournalism has on the news media
- is a style of sculpture that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s and was associated with Erwin Hauer and Norman Carlburg
It's based on carefully structured modules that allow for intricate and in some cases infinite patterns of repetition, sometimes used to create limitless, basically planar, screen-like formations, and sometimes employed to more multidimensional structures.
is an Australian born American sculpture who studied first at Vienna's Academy of Arts then later under Josef Albers at Yale.
Hauer was an early proponent of Modern Constructivism and an associate of Norman Carlberg. Like Carlberg, he was especially known for his minimalist, repetitive pieces in the 1950s and 1960s.
These pictures are from his installation at Church in Liesing, Vienna, Austria
Design 3 (1952) 50cm module, cast stone
Architect: Robert Kramreiter