Ask the Internets Part 1,037
Jun. 30th, 2009 02:59 pmI'm on a hunt for interesting photographs, paintings, drawings, PSAs, images in general, and, perhaps, even short YouTube videos that I can collect together and give to my 101 students as choices to write a rhetorical analysis on. (If you're not up on your Aristotle, this is essentially a 1,000-word explication of what argument you think the image is making and how it's making it via subject matter, composition, color, pathos/ethos/logos, etc. etc. etc.)
Anyone got some favorites I can add to the list?
Current ones I'm considering are:
- this photo of New York, New York in Las Vegas
- Lange's "Dust Storm at the War Relocation Authority Center..."
- at least one William Wegman photograph
- Tim Davis's "Searchlights"
- one of Layla Essaydi's Converging Territories series
- Roe Ethridge's "Great Neck Mall Sign"
- #2 (both images) in Yeondoo Jung's "Bewitched" series
- Florien Maier-Aichen's "Untitled (2005)"
- others I can't find online, but which are in a book called New Perspectives in Photography (I particularly like an Anna Gaskell photograph that's sort of a modern take on The Wizard of Oz)
Anyone got some favorites I can add to the list?
Current ones I'm considering are:
- this photo of New York, New York in Las Vegas
- Lange's "Dust Storm at the War Relocation Authority Center..."
- at least one William Wegman photograph
- Tim Davis's "Searchlights"
- one of Layla Essaydi's Converging Territories series
- Roe Ethridge's "Great Neck Mall Sign"
- #2 (both images) in Yeondoo Jung's "Bewitched" series
- Florien Maier-Aichen's "Untitled (2005)"
- others I can't find online, but which are in a book called New Perspectives in Photography (I particularly like an Anna Gaskell photograph that's sort of a modern take on The Wizard of Oz)
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Date: 2009-06-30 07:43 pm (UTC)I tend to enjoy the roundups in Smashing Magazine. The shadow photographs at http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/01/showcase-of-beautiful-shadow-photography/ may be a good place to start.
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Date: 2009-06-30 08:26 pm (UTC)http://www.newyorker.com/online/2008/09/29/slideshow_080929_platon?slide=16#showHeader
It's an amazing photo, but again, not sure if you want something so controversial. If it sparks your interest, though, rest of the pictures from that slide show also offer some extremely potent images.
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Date: 2009-07-01 12:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-01 03:22 am (UTC)Ooh! Here's the link I was looking for: Running the Numbers: An American Self Portrait (http://www.chrisjordan.com/current_set2.php). The artist says he "looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something...This project visually examines these vast and bizarre measures of our society, in large intricately detailed prints assembled from thousands of smaller photographs." The one with Prison Uniforms gives an awesome idea of the scale of the completed works.
A lot of them are just nifty designs made from all the small pics, but with some, the final "big picture" is part of the argument. You'd obviously have to give them the full set of pics for each one (ie, the zooms) and the stats. Really good ones for this specific exercise might be Energizer, Building Blocks, Constitution, Pain Killers, Denali Denial, Skull with Cigarette, Barbie Dolls, and maybe Toothpicks and Ben Franklin. At least, those are the ones that I think I could write about, given the basics of the assignment.
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