Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz Born 1949 · Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz Formal:...
Transcript of Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz Born 1949 · Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz Formal:...
Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz
Born 1949
Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz
Formal: emphasizes only the person who is the subject of the photo.
Annie Leibovitz photo for Vanity Fair of Kate Winslet and husband/director Sam Mendes.
Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz
Candid: captures the person going about their everyday activities.
Photograph by Annie Leibovitz: Barack and Michelle Obama during the inagural parade. Photos from Vanity Fair, March 2009
Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz
Environmental: places the person in a setting that says something about him/her.
Photo by Annie Leibovitz: BERRY GORDY JR. AND SMOKEY ROBINSON; The Soul Men
Portrait Photographer: Annie Leibovitz
What considerations does Leibovitz make to create successful portraits?
Annie Leibovitz, Vanity Fair: “AND BABY MAKES THREE Tom Cruise, 44, and Katie Holmes, 27, show off their new daughter, Suri, born April 18, weighing seven pounds seven ounces.”
Portraiture
3. composition: Are you showing the person’s entire body? Just the face? Just a portion
of the face? How much of the background will you see? Is the person going to be centered? To the side?
2. lighting: What type of emotional reaction are your trying to achieve? How does lighting relate
to that? Do you want a high contrast or low contrast photo in terms of value? What would severe
highlights and shadows infer? What would softer lighting and less contrast infer? How are you going to
obtain the lighting you want? Are you using sunlight, studio lights, multiple light sources?
5. working with people: What kind of subject do you think your person is? How will
you find out more about them? What part of their personality will you focus on? Will your
person look at the camera or look away? Are you going to direct him/her? How will you help
him/her to relax and feel comfortable rather than looking awkward or embarrassed? What do you do if your person doesn’t want to do what you ask of him/her? How do you decide on hair, makeup, facial expressions, etc?
4. color: what colors would add to the emotional effect of the photo? Are you having the
person wear certain clothing or colors to emphasize something? How do the colors work with your background and lighting?
1. setting and style of portraiture: Formal? Candid? Environmental? What are you
trying to emphasize about your person? Are you going to have him/her pose? Are there props? What’s happening in the background?
http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2009/03/behind-the-scenes-video200903
Portrait of Penelope Cruz and Woody Allen
Rihanna, in Havana (2015). Annie
Leibovitz/Trunk Archive