Jamie Pillers
Skeptic
I like images that simply play with color composition. This is one. Adding this to a series of similar ideas would be nice.
Yes, good memory! This one is better I think because it recedes to infinity.
That is stunning. Usually I don't think I'm a very good critic because I usually focus on if the picture is saying something, if it conveys something human, something that makes me want to look again... not on compositional rules or anything like that. That being said, I think that your pictures satisfies both of these sides of photographic critique:
1. On the one hand it says a lot. That bit about your dog frames the entire reading of the picture. In general I'm not a believer of the dogma that says that an image should speak for itself. Bourdieu and Foucault (as well as a postructalist like Barthes) tell us that there's nothing objective about a picture: it really depends on who looks at it, who has the power to decide what a picture says, the own psychological experiences of the viewer, etc. In other words: once you, as an author, make a statement about the picture you frame it and invite a specific reading. This picture wouldn't be as powerful if it weren't for that framing. For instance, within that reading of the dog, the blurred river (or sea) acquires a different meaning (heaven? ethereality? the fact that everything passes with time, that time cannot be held in place?).
2. On the other hand, composition wise, I love it. The picture emphasizes symmetry in everything, except for the dog. Thus that break in symmetry draws focus. Once again, this is connected to your narrative framing. Technically speaking and composition-wise I don't think I have much more to say. As I said, I'm a bad critic of these things 🙂
Hope this helps!
And then there are images that seem like they might fit well in a book of images that tells a story or shows a photographer's take on some subject or other. Some examples of this type of photo in this thread are FrankS's 'man carrying clothes rack', Helenhill's 'couple in New York diner', Keith's 'girl and tutu in closet', and Lawrence's "Myrtle Beach".
As an example, what kind of critique would one image from a young unknown photographer named Daido Moriyama receive here?
11500004 by lukas.boutholeau, on Flickr
Right. I consider this one of my best shots, please be very brutal. I'd like to offer my critique to others but I don't I am experienced enough to offer anything substantial to some of the people here, let alone you giants that produce wonderful work here.
Great metering here! I'd like to see a version with not so much black, and another with a lot more black. I guess that says I feel like this composition is sitting in the middle of two possible stronger ways to compose it.
My thought about photographs of other people's art... the composition of the photograph has to add something new. Otherwise its just a record of someone else's work. I think your photograph goes beyond that with the tonal range you've chosen... I like that a lot. 🙂
no, the couple are defined by her eyes. she does not care where they are; nor, i hazard to guess, does he. they could be in a jungle or on a mountain or in a pasture, and her eyes would BE the picture ...
Almost. This is a good shot, but less DOF or with no people in the background, it could be brilliant. IMO.
Frank, Stewart, you've made me curious. Show me your picture Frank.
All in all I would call this a first draft' image. There's a lot going on in terms of your subject- suburban architecture and environments. The street is HUGE in your shot- partly the wide angle lens and framing, but also it brings out the primacy and dominance of the automobile in the public space. Dang, you could build houses in the middle of these streets and still run cars between the houses.
Driveways and garages being the closest to the streets- telling about priorities and how we want to interact with others, how much consideration we want to show others compared to how much our private convenience is what matters.
The oak tree shadow and shadow hints at either the age of the development- planted as a stick when the houses were built- or possibly a survivor from the previous land use. It's one of the disconcerting things for me in suburban environments- the presence of 'nature' and natural elements, but always tentative, isolated like this oak.
The palm trees- Mexican fan palms, are they?- speak of another place, Los Angeles, but living in the Bay Area myself I know how common they are everywhere. I still find them confusing, and your image inclusion of them.
The people- so dwarfed by the road!
Well, I'll stop. I am not 'reading' the image, I am reading the landscape you show in your image. As an image itself, I find it underexposed in the main area, the homes. The tree shadow is compelling but not particularly strong. The flare you are playing with may be the most interesting thing for me to see you explore. The way the supposed center of such developments- the houses- is hard to see because of the dawn/evening sun dominating. I could see this image as a breathing space image in a series, but it doesn't do much for me on its own.
The subject matter, and what you are doing to it, playing with all these different elements of the environment, is interesting to me. I hope that you keep working this area.
This is a fantastic thread. Here's a picture I took about a year ago walking in Manhattan. For some reason (that I hope someone can help me understand) it is by far the picture with the most likes in my Flickr Photostream. I am open to critiques and comments 🙂
A Manhattan couple by Mahler_seele, on Flickr
This is a fantastic thread. Here's a picture I took about a year ago walking in Manhattan. For some reason (that I hope someone can help me understand) it is by far the picture with the most likes in my Flickr Photostream. I am open to critiques and comments 🙂
A Manhattan couple by Mahler_seele, on Flickr
It's a rule of thumb in portraits, not to crop at the joints of limbs.
Ankles, knees, wrists, elbows