Photomontage - PDF version

Transcription

Photomontage - PDF version
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Image Manipulation
From Photomontage to
Photoshop
Since it’s inception in the nineteenth century, Photomontage been used as
a graphic means of communication by visual artists.
Now, with the availability of image processing software such as Photoshop,
this technique has beautifully translated to the digital realm and is now
used extensively and creatively by digital image makers.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Image Manipulation
From Photomontage to
Photoshop
This is not to suggest that Photomontage laid the foundations of image
manipulation but rather that it was the start of one of the techniques now
employed by digital artists.
Similarly, although it was an interest in Photography which influenced
Photoshop’s creators, it was not written specifically with photographers in
mind but was initially created to solve a specific technical problem.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
Photomontage
Photomontage is the process (and result) of making a composite
photograph by cutting and joining a number of other photographs. The
composite picture was sometimes photographed so that the final image is
converted back into a seamless photographic print. A similar method is
realised today through image-editing software; this technique is referred to
by professional as ‘compositing’, and in casual usage is often called
‘photoshopping’
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
Photomontage
Photomontage as an art form has its roots in the First World War,
although the creative manipulation of photographs has a provenance going
right back to the invention of photography itself in the early part of the
nineteenth century. It was the Victorians, specifically Oscar Rejlander, who
produced the first and most famous photomontage of the era.
‘The Two Ways of Life’ (1857) was a seamlessly montaged combination
print made of thirty-two images and too six weeks to complete.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
Dada
The Dada movement in Berlin was
instrumental in making montage into a
modern art-form. They first coined the
term ‘photomontage’ at the end of the
war, around 1918 or 1919.
Major exponents were John Heartfield,
Hannah Höch, Kurt Schwitters, Raoul
Hausmann and Johannes Bader.
The word ‘montage’ in German, literally
means fitting or assembly line.
Hannah Höch 1919
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage - Dada
John Heartfield
For Heartfield the definition of “photomontage” was wider
than most, insisting that it should include the single photo
with caption, since text and image interacted with each
other in a similar way to multiple images.
Heartfield’s use of captions was, and perhaps still is, unsurpassed. Many
of his best works utilise famous quotes of leading Nazis, and subtly
undermine the intended message by quite ingenious visual puns. So, when
Hitler said, “millions stand behind me”, he was boasting of his popular
support, whilst Heartfield used this to reveal the fact that the Nazis were
being bankrolled by leading German industrialists.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage - Dada
John Heartfield
John Heartfield was born Helmut Herzfeld on
June 19, 1891 in Berlin-Schmargendorf,
Germany to Franz Herzfeld, a socialist writer
and Alice née Stolzenburg, a textile worker
and political activist.
In 1918, Heartfield made a decision that
would ultimately impact the rest of his career.
He became a member of the Berlin Club
Dada as a protest to Germany’s current
barbaric state and also joined the German
Communist Party.
In early 1924, he met and struck up a
friendship with Bertolt Brecht, an individual
who would have a major impact on his life.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage - Dada
Hannah Höch
Born in 1889 in Gotha Germany, Hannah
Höch studied graphic arts in Berlin and was
probably the only woman artist active in the
Dada movement.
Her photomontages depicted the
contradictory and faceless roles of being a
woman in the Weimar republic (along with
the sexism she experienced).
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Das schöne Mädchen (The Beautiful Girl, 1919 1920
Photomontage - Dada
Johannes Baader
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage - Dada
Raoul Hausmann
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
Dada – Part of the
Problem?
Dada rose out of the horror that was World War One, ignited by young
artists’ abhoration at that which had nearly destroyed their continent.
First and foremost Dada was an anti-war movement but it also changed art
and the way artists looked at themselves. Artists were starting to examine
their role in terms of social relevance; whether in fact they meant anything.
Were they part of the problem or part of the solution? Was art was a
vehicle for social change and, indeed, if it should it be?
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
1950s
As Surrealism took hold as the
dominant art form in Europe
photomontage gradually faded into
obscurity for many years. However it
enjoyed a renaissance in the 1950’s
partly inspired by a renewed interest in
Dada.
It was at this point, that the advertising
industry, inspired by the Pop Art
movement and the increasing
popularisation of art, started to produce
more photomontages, a trend which we
will see has continued to this day.
Richard Hamilton 1956
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Broken Missile 1980
Photomontage
1980s – Peter Kennard
It’s new found life in advertising,
photomontage has continued to be
used as a very graphic means of
communication by visual artists to
this day, such as Peter Kennard in
connection with the anti-nuclear
movement, Sean Hillen in
connection with Northern Ireland’s
civil war.
Defended to Death
1982
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
1990s – Sean Hillen
The Oracle at O’Connell St.
Bridge, Dublin 1995
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
The Lia Fail of
Waterford 1997
Photomontage
Photomontage to
Photoshop
Workshops
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
Photoshop and
Illustrator
Photoshop and Illustrator are two of a set of Adobe Creative Suite software
packages. Our versions are Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop CS4.
These are commonplace in all design studios and it’s essential that you know
the packages well, if you intend to work in that environment.
Photoshop is used for working with type and imagery and is bitmap based. So
be aware of the size at which you are working.
Illustrator is vector based and is used primarily for solid colour, typography,
and typographic design – it's main advantage is that vector based artwork
lends itself to resizing without any loss of image quality.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011
Photomontage
CMYK and RGB
When working with a piece that is to be printed, it’s important to work in
CMYK colour mode (cyan, magenta, yellow and black)
For screen work, such as web designs, you need to work in RGB mode (red,
green, blue).
Adobe InDesign (or Quark Xpress) is then used for publications, importing
elements from both Illustrator and Photoshop as necessary.
GDES1003: Creative Digital Imaging
Photomontage
Andy Screen 2011