1. I took this picture in the stacks of the library, amid shelves of books and through another bookshelf. I felt that this made the girl in the painting seem like she was hiding or afraid. Her body language suddenly seemed more huddled.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
3 Ways of Seeing
So I spent a long time picking through paintings that i liked and wanted to work with such as works by Vermeer, Rembrandt, and Dali and I struggled because often I was struck by one that immediately wanted to use...but I couldn't think of more than one 'angle' to photograph it. I'm not completely happy with the one i ended up choosing, "A Girl with a Broom" by Carel Fabritius (who was a student of Rembrandt's) but it's going to have to do for now.
1. I took this picture in the stacks of the library, amid shelves of books and through another bookshelf. I felt that this made the girl in the painting seem like she was hiding or afraid. Her body language suddenly seemed more huddled.
2. I took this picture in Benedict underneath a light in the stairwell. I felt that the girl in the painting seemed more rightful in being there, more comfortable and confident.
3. I took this picture while the photo was behind a door. I thought the girl seemed more forgotten and sad, but also watchful.
4. I also took this picture which was also in the library in a sitting room, because I imagined the locked and closed door was essentially a broom closet. Although this seems to be a given (a girl with a broom would be on a closet door, just as Rembrandt's "Girl Bathing" could theoretically be expected to be on a bathroom door) I felt that it was necessary to show the contrast of the picture in an 'expected' place as well as 'unexpected' places.
1. I took this picture in the stacks of the library, amid shelves of books and through another bookshelf. I felt that this made the girl in the painting seem like she was hiding or afraid. Her body language suddenly seemed more huddled.
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what a beautiful scary child. i like the picture of the stacks the most. the different colors of the book spines seem to contrast her dark colors.
ReplyDeleteI love the picture of the girl in the stacks. I love the angle you took the picture, through the bars so that it could narrow in on her instead of lose her against the white of the walls or behind the doors. She almost seems to fit there.
ReplyDeleteThe girl in the window of the door with the EXIT sign right above her struck me as sad right away. There's something about the attempted, yet impossible, escape...
ReplyDeleteMaggie!
ReplyDeleteI love the way you portrayed the picture in the stacks in the library, it really does make her seem like she is hiding.
Being in the stacks is creepy already but when you put this painting in there I think it brings it to a whole new level. I really like the technique you used almost as if you are looking past something. What I mean to say is, it makes the photo more realistic and believable.
ReplyDeleteI found all of these pictures to be extremely haunting. Especially the one in the stacks. It was very striking and a little scary. Great job.
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