Changing image

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    showing the intentions of Recha Mora. To begin with the line, we can see that the artist used one point perspective in order to draw this painting. Therefore, this painting is consisted mostly from lines, we can see the lines in the center of the image that takes our eyes until the end of the road where we can notice the buildings. Moreover, there are a lot of horizontal and vertical lines in drawing the buildings and some of them in drawing the shops and windows of the building. Value in this painting

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    He became well known for using the darkroom while printing one image using multiple negatives in one image. Using this technique he was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship for experimenting in multiple printing techniques in 1967. Then in 1972 he received a National Endowment for the arts grant. Jerry Uelsmann revived artistic recognition

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    Yasumasa Morimura

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    photographs throughout the ages, though The Blind Leading the Blind is the earliest dated work that Morimura has appropriated (Marsh, Watts, & Maylon, 1999). Morimura super-imposes a composite self-portrait on top of Bruegel’s painting, successfully changing the meaning of the piece. The different historical contexts of the two pieces in conjunction with appropriation allow the accumulation of ideas to present two separate meanings pertinent to the ideals of the times. Morimura’s simultaneous use of

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    because within the photo lay an untold story. Therefore, these images captivated

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    to make the images she took available to the public eye and hopefully get a positive response to them. Because of her decision to take the photos of the woman with her children, she managed to capture the attention of the millions of Americans and had them witness the full impact of the collapse of the economy and its effect on the people living in constant turmoil and strife because of it from the viewpoint of a set of images taken by a simple camera. The demand of these set of images was to invoke

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    Jerry Uelsman Case Study

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    Like many movements in Art, the ever changing present challenged tradition. In this case, Photographers challenged the rigid rules imposed on them by the f/64 group, and straight photography. For example, Jerry Uelsman layered negatives and used combination printing. However, he was not always so liberal with his work. In fact, he started off studying portraiture and stuck to the strict rules of Photography because he was raised in purist tradition. Later, he found that he could make work for personal

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    Discuss the notion of the found image in the work of John Stezaker. What particular temporal qualities do you think the found image adds to these works? Photography has always been a way of documenting time, a memory sealed into an image and held there forever. This is a brief documentation of a place or a person capsuled in time, with the history and the memory intertwined with the image. However, as the photographs age and the decades pass, the images stay the same but the memory fades away along

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    corroborate other materials. This is especially true when examining the documentation of the counterculture in the 1960s. A book called Hippie compiled by Barry Miles offers a composite portrait of hippies in America in the 1960s, contextualized with other images from other key events outside of the realm of the

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    childhood. In this paper, I will discuss two photographs that had the initial purpose of reform, but after much circulation and viewing, became an icon to child labor. Americans viewed these images so much, they lost their ability to strike change in the people, and because a common image to see. However, these images still brought reform even though they caused desensitization in people. Although there are other theories that oppose Sontag’s application to photographs of children in the Industrial Revolution

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    asked to shift your position on the table. This will allow your entire esophagus to be viewed. • The health care provider will watch the barium flow through your esophagus using a type of X-ray that allows images to be viewed on a monitor in a movie-like sequence (fluoroscopy). X-ray images will also be stored for later viewing. AFTER THE PROCEDURE • You can return to your regular activities and diet unless instructed otherwise by your health care provider. • Your stool (feces) may be white

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