Hockney

Post on 26-Jun-2015

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Transcript of Hockney

Pablo Picasso. ‘Still Life with Chair-caning’, 1911-12

What do you see?

What do you see?

What do you see?

What do you see?

Pablo Picasso. ‘Still Life with Chair-caning’, 1911-12

What do you see?

•‘JOU’ Short for a French newspaper called ‘Le Journal’.

•Different layers of newspaper.

What do you see?

What do you see?

What do you see?

Pablo Picasso. ‘Still Life with Chair-caning’, 1911-12

What do you see?

•‘JOU’ Short for a French newspaper called ‘Le Journal’.

•Different layers of newspaper.

What do you see?

What do you see?

What do you see?

Glass of water shown from the top (yellow circle), from the sides (straight horizontal lines), from the bottom (curve at the bottom.)

Pablo Picasso. ‘Still Life with Chair-caning’, 1911-12

What do you see?

•‘JOU’ Short for a French newspaper called ‘Le Journal’.

•Different layers of newspaper.

What do you see?

What do you see?

Lemon tea.

Slice of lemon.

Glass from the side and above.

What do you see?

Glass of water shown from the top (yellow circle), from the sides (straight horizontal lines), from the bottom (curve at the bottom.)

Pablo Picasso. ‘Still Life with Chair-caning’, 1911-12

What do you see?

•‘‘JOU’ Short for a French newspaper called ‘Le Journal’.

•Different layers of newspaper.

What do you see?

Cane chair, real cane used.

Oval table with real rope around the edge.

What do you see?

Lemon tea.

Slice of lemon.

Glass from the side and above.

What do you see?

Glass of water shown from the top (yellow circle), from the sides (straight horizontal lines), from the bottom (curve at the bottom.)

David Hockney

Joiners

David Hockney ‘The Desk’, 1984

Pablo Picasso. ‘Still Life with Chair-caning’, 1911-12

Pablo Picasso 'Guitar' 1913

How do you see the world?

Look around you - do you see the scene in front of you as a whole scene, a neat little square with every thing visible at once - just like a photograph or painting?

Or do you see a variety of elements and fragments?

David Hockney 'Pearblossom Highway, 11th to 18th April 1986

Hockney would have had to bend down to photograph the floor, climb up ladders to photograph the street signs and walk down the highway to photograph the horizon. All this took him 8 days so he did not only warped space and distance but also showed the passing of time in one image. The image also showed the scene from multiple viewpoints - just like way we see the world.

Photographers influenced by Hockney

TASK:

Create a joiner

Technique 1:Photograph the whole scene from three angles. In Photoshop we will cut sections from these three images and layer them.

Technique 2: Photograph different sections of he image separately and piece together in Photoshop like a jigsaw.