Have you ever taken a picture or been looking through a photo album and felt a sudden rush of emotion? Do you wonder what caused that emotion? Many find themselves captivated by a photograph and overwhelmed by the emotions that the photograph arouses. Believe it or not the arousal of emotion from those photographs was not caused by the content of the picture but by certain elements within the photograph. When a photograph is viewed it is not only the subject that triggers the overwhelming emotional response, it is the length of time that the film was exposed to sunlight, the way lighting is used and played with, and the strong detail of colors or lack thereof. While many believe that the subject acts as the primary stimuli to emotions, the …show more content…
Lastly, a huge component to a photograph that aids in arousing emotion is color, bringing out different emotions whether color is present or not.
When talking about emotion it seems a fairly simple topic and immediately "feeling" words come to mind; sad, happy, and confused. These are basic emotions and easy to understand. What isn't so simple about emotions is their process and how they form and work. Emotions are reactions to sensory information like sight, smell, taste, touch and sound (Tracing Emotion’s Pathways 94). However, it is not that simple; an emotional reaction or response is made aware of and understood by a part of the brain called the sensory cortex. These emotional responses or reactions to sensory stimuli are processed by a part of the brain called the amygdala (What’s An Emotion). The amygdala is a huge asset to the cognitive factors of emotions because in processing emotions you become able to understand, recognize, and control them. So then how do emotions evoke a physiological reaction such as tearing up when one feels sad, laughing with joy, and trembling with fear? These physiological reactions that one may experience come from the autonomic nervous system. The autonomic nervous system is, “a collection of fibers that extend throughout
Critically reflect on the positives and/or negatives of ethnic residential concentration as perceptible within specific landscapes in Sydney.
picture is an attempt to connect with the reader’s emotions by showing the strong feelings
The reader is able to construct his or her thoughts by observing the small keys in each photo. Some of these keys are the use of color, setting, expression and focus in the scenery and objects around.
Images have moods, or what they evoke from the viewer, that are often necessary to how text is interpreted. When text is written, it loses the verbal aspect and can often be left with an ambiguous mood. Images and illustrations that accompany text are able to reflect the mood of the text for the reader. Nodelman states, “the specific meaning depends not on the words themselves but on the tone of voice in which they are spoken. The mood of a picture is like the tone of a text. It's an overall quality that affects the meaning and the attitude viewers take toward it (Nodelman ch. 12). Pictures can be sad, happy, humorous, or serious and it is often easy to determine based upon the colors used and the style of drawing. The mood can also be used to show contrast between to images or ideas.
A lower ISO number means the camera is more sensitive to light, whereas a higher number means the camera is less sensitive to light.
I recently watched a Ted talk by Denis Dutton on the Darwinian Theory of Beauty. He makes an interesting point. That "[people] find beauty in something done well." This is true, but it is not the only truth. The painting of Jesus in This is Our World, by Dorothy Allison is not described as technically superior or particularly special in any way. Yet Allison describes it as having "The weight of art that face . . . the power to provoke, the authority of a heartfelt vision." What is exceptional about the painting was the emotion it stirred in Allison. The true beauty of art is in its power to create and channel emotion. There is a reason people say a picture is worth a thousand words. Art is the fastest, most poignant way to deliver a message, and it doesn't have to be conventionally beautiful or technically difficult to create emotion.
Another part of the artwork that highly influences our emotions is what the art is of. Because if the art contains an image or depiction of a boy in the rain,staring and frowning, then most likely we will feel sympathy or sadness. While if the painting was bright, and colorful, and had images of children playing, we would feel enlightened, and maybe in a
These photographs are emotionally charged and show varying degrees of emotional conflict by the facial and bodily postures.
Feelings and emotions in real life have different colouring, both negative and positive. Emotions in art are always positive.
The art of photography has always surrounded my childhood, so it was not very long until I was lured into it. It was six years ago when I first took noticed my cousins’ extraordinary photographs, which sparked my interest for photography. It was then I purchased my first DSLr camera, a Nikon D5100.
Many years ago, photography used to change people’s opinions. These days, it doesn’t really partially due to the fact that the public has become desensitized by what we’re currently seeing in most places on the web or in publications. These images try to find a balance between trying to tell a story and showing people a story that they’ll want to see.
Emotions are a critical part of our daily lives. We can go through many emotions throughout the day. My work revolves around emotions, whether it is an emotion I’m trying to invoke in the viewer or an emotion I was feeling while creating the artwork.
The name "Photography" comes from the Greek words for light and writing. Sir John Herschel, was the first to use the term photography in 1839, when he managed to fix images using hyposulphite of soda. He described photography as "The application of the chemical rays to the purpose of pictorial representation". Herschel also coined the terms "negative", "positive" and "snapshot".
The Brown sisters might gather occasionally together throughout a year, but there is one day out of every year where they have a photograph of them taken to capture their sisterhood. In the beginning of the series of photographs the sisters have a serious case of resting b*tch face. From 1975 to 1979, the sisters all have a hardened expression, and even after that there are occasional smirks, but the same look remains. Each photograph shows the sisters aging, and while they age their appearance becomes softer. This could be because of the experiences they have such as pregnancy and motherhood, or other events that could affect their life, and result in them aging softly. Because one can see the sisters age throughout the course of these photographs,
more on the emotion of the thing. E.g. there is a painting of a man