![Picture](/uploads/2/5/7/3/25735821/8857249.jpg?371)
1.
All of these artists blurred the lines between art and technology and used traditional methods of composition along with innovative techniques to create a new vision of the world.
Honore Daumier, Nadar Elevating Photography to Art
Daumier was known for capturing the first aerial photographs from the basket of a hot air balloon. Daumier also criticized the difficulties of the collodion process of exposure and uncertain but growing status of photography.
Eadweard Muybridge, The Horse in Motion
Demonstrated the new photographic methods that were capable of nearly instantaneous exposure.He Used photography for scientific research to study an animal's body in motion. Though Muybridge was primarily an artist, he inspired scientific investigations with his photograph.
Alfred Stieglitz, the Steerage
Stieglitz suggests that photographs are more than just a documentary of the truth. The Steerage shows a more complex, layered view of photography that can convey abstraction. He also believed that photography can provide more than one abstract interpretation.
2.
Honore Daumier, Nadar Elevating Photography to Art
Honor Daumier in a way rebels against society and the growing popularity of photography by satirizing the idea that photography is actual art.
Eadweard Muybridge, The Horse in Motion
Muybridge uses technology to fuel scientific research and innovation. Like the impressionists used new technology to travel and paint their scenes, Muybridge uses his technology to prove his ideas.
Alfred Stieglitz, the Steerage
Alfred Stieglitz can be linked to the theme of daily life. Stieglitz captured ordinary people on their way to Europe. Just like artists during the Realism period, Stieglitz wants to share an everyday scene which other people would recognize. He photographs what he knows, just as Courbet when he painted the Stone Breakers.
3.
Bruce Mozert pioneered underwater art in the 1940s with this series. I love this photograph because of the imagination and innovation that must have been a part of creating it and the contrast between the white suit and dark surroundings. All of the light seems to fall right on the subject, making her look beautiful and angelic while the way the netting flows behind her makes her seem graceful and light. I also love this photograph for the way it makes me feel. The ocean has a feeling of vastness and uncertainty, which can make a person feel small, but also a create a sense of grace and carelessness. The woman in the photograph is in such an empty and dark space but does not look lost or lonely, but at peace.
All of these artists blurred the lines between art and technology and used traditional methods of composition along with innovative techniques to create a new vision of the world.
Honore Daumier, Nadar Elevating Photography to Art
Daumier was known for capturing the first aerial photographs from the basket of a hot air balloon. Daumier also criticized the difficulties of the collodion process of exposure and uncertain but growing status of photography.
Eadweard Muybridge, The Horse in Motion
Demonstrated the new photographic methods that were capable of nearly instantaneous exposure.He Used photography for scientific research to study an animal's body in motion. Though Muybridge was primarily an artist, he inspired scientific investigations with his photograph.
Alfred Stieglitz, the Steerage
Stieglitz suggests that photographs are more than just a documentary of the truth. The Steerage shows a more complex, layered view of photography that can convey abstraction. He also believed that photography can provide more than one abstract interpretation.
2.
Honore Daumier, Nadar Elevating Photography to Art
Honor Daumier in a way rebels against society and the growing popularity of photography by satirizing the idea that photography is actual art.
Eadweard Muybridge, The Horse in Motion
Muybridge uses technology to fuel scientific research and innovation. Like the impressionists used new technology to travel and paint their scenes, Muybridge uses his technology to prove his ideas.
Alfred Stieglitz, the Steerage
Alfred Stieglitz can be linked to the theme of daily life. Stieglitz captured ordinary people on their way to Europe. Just like artists during the Realism period, Stieglitz wants to share an everyday scene which other people would recognize. He photographs what he knows, just as Courbet when he painted the Stone Breakers.
3.
Bruce Mozert pioneered underwater art in the 1940s with this series. I love this photograph because of the imagination and innovation that must have been a part of creating it and the contrast between the white suit and dark surroundings. All of the light seems to fall right on the subject, making her look beautiful and angelic while the way the netting flows behind her makes her seem graceful and light. I also love this photograph for the way it makes me feel. The ocean has a feeling of vastness and uncertainty, which can make a person feel small, but also a create a sense of grace and carelessness. The woman in the photograph is in such an empty and dark space but does not look lost or lonely, but at peace.