Saturday, October 2, 2010

Week 4


Eighty-one projected slide photographs show the east side of Broadway from lower Manhattan to Columbus Circle in wintertime. Streets and buildings reflect bright, early morning light. A recorded voice describes a different set of photographs that the visitor does not see, which appeared in a book titled "Both Sides of Broadway" in 1910. The book tried to capture an entire street in a single volume, reproducing every building standing on Broadway. The pictures were made using negative plates manufactured by the Lumière brothers. Some of the photos show New York's first cinemas, where "story" films had recently replaced "actuality" films, the short non-fiction form of cinema developed by the Lumières. The portability of the Lumières’ motion picture system had transformed everyday life into spectacle and created an appetite for the encyclopedic on an international scale. "One Side of Broadway" leaves the visitor to try to reconcile visual totality with the incomplete record of Broadway she or he sees before them.


Just by looking at Buckingham's I think his work relates to mind because his work is so random.  He has many pictures of many different subjects and I don't usually focus on one subject either.  I'm not sure, but it looks as if he doesn't crop his pictures, and I don't usually crop.



My own work



Birthday Cake Sep. 26, 2010
This was my delicious birthday cake, it was so cute.




The Mercury Cafe Sep. 2010
I work here sometimes working the light's and sound for the plays and this place is so beautiful.
I like this picture because it show a little of the essence. 




Side Stage Sep. 2010
This is the side of the stage at Mercury Cafe and I like this picture because it's so alive with color.

No comments:

Post a Comment