[Field-Homework 1] Everyday Clichés & Entertainment

WIDE ANGLE / a glance at the mess.
AERIAL / when all the lights are on.
WORM’S EYE / let it down, or pick it up?
SKEWED ANGLE / a smart cube.
SERIALITY / multiple identities at home.
CROP / lack of gunpowder.
FOCUS / strange architecture.
ZOOM / deer of Santa in the green.
FIRST PERSON VIEW / game simulator.
PERSPECTIVE / sunk into loneliness
CHIAROSCURO / longing for blue sky.
VIEW FRAME / prisoned. / Even though respirator masks play an essential role in travelling, it is meaningless to those who have to be prohibited to go out. Viewing from the exterior to interior through iron fence, the place I have been living appears to be a forgiven isolated island. Depth created by low angle shot gives an illusion of prison.

 

CHAN UE YIN MONIQUE

UID:3035691729

 

1 thought on “[Field-Homework 1] Everyday Clichés & Entertainment

  1. Ina Wu says:

    You demonstrate a good understanding of and personal engagement with the course content with regard to the task. You offer some insightful reflections on your daily entertainment and routine. The sequence of photos is well thought through with an opening and ending on daily photos sandwiching entertaining activities in the middle. It narrates the theme well.
    You have some well-executed images, in particular the First-person view and the 3 photos in Seriality. The set photos of Seriality is at the same time humorous and informative on your concept of entertainment and daily living with the modifications of a constructed set. It gives us an insight into your daily roles. However, some photo techniques need to be improved. The image of the rubix’s cube is more of a tilt angle than a skewed image. In a skewed image, the subjects and perspective lines are usually distorted. Your Viewframe photo and Chiaroscuro photo better express a skewed angle. The bird-eye and worm-eye photo also needs to be rethought. The former refers to the view from above, like a google earth view (Literally a bird’s view when in flight in the sky). The latter refers to a view directly from below – literally what a worm sees when it looks up.

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