Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Beauty OF Color.

From the time we wake until we close our eyes at night, we are immersed in color. Yet, some people (and I am one of them) rarely think about color, nor do they consider how it affects their lives.

I never recognized the color spectrum as very important. However, after I read the assignment about the color and then we discussed it in the class, I started thinking and pondering over everything I saw. I started feeling how the world around me was filled with mixed and combined colors.

It is very true that color pervades our physical world, affects our emotions, and gives other important clues about our personalities and mood. Thus, it is important to give color than a passing glance in both our general living and in our creative endeavors.

According to Joen Wolfrom, in his book (The magical effects of color), in art, color used as a visual language. It is the communication link between creator and viewer. Color is visually musical, being both rhythmic and lyrical. It sets the tempo of a design through the blending of a multitude of hues.

Obviously, each color has its own beauty and individuality. Symbolically, green is closely associated with nature. For centuries the nature concepts of birth, rebirth, life, growth, healing, rest and regenerations have been linked with green. Green reflects the freshness and joy of youth.


         Google


The photo of the two birds has several colors that stand out. The natural beauty is not from the creation of man. The colors green and red really attracted my attention. The combination of the light brown with the orange colors also stood out as very unique. By simply looking at these color combinations, a person is able to feel a sense of comfort or relaxation and peace within oneself.

It seems they live peacefully in their kingdom. Although, the red and green colors are of primary colors, the other combinations are also very attractive. For the first time in my life, I feel that I truly wish I was one of those birds with such colors. It is really a deceiving moment because the photographer was able to take this picture while the birds were asleep and their feathers were puffed up as if they were in a different world.





Doughlas Finkbeiner
Department of Astrophysics- Cygnus Nebula
In the constellation Cygnus (the Swan), dark clouds in front of Lynds Bright Nebula 258, from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The red, green, and blue color planes represent the infra-red, red, and green filters of the SDSS, so ionized hydrogen (actually red) appears green in this image.

The photo of the stars is filled with all types of colors.  I have always longed to see outer space.  Thanks to the help of advanced technology, I am able to see the beauty of space with its colors that are magical and glamorous.  It is amazing to see such diversity of colors in the sky when, with the naked eye, we only see black and white.  Green is one of the primary colors, but it is also a symbol of life, and therefore we see the beauty of life through the color green.



Floods of Pakistan - Al-Jazeera Staff

I wondered about this photo for a very long time. Each time I looked at it, I thought of the figure of the photo, the ground, the rule of thirds, etc. However, after class, this photo grabbed my attention especially because of the red and green colors. They work together very nicely. Although the color green is a symbol of life, but this photo also has the color red. In this photo, the color red may symbolize danger as communicated in the floods of Pakistan. Red warns the viewer and photographer that danger is on its way and these individuals do not have another choice but to continue walking through the flood.


Muhammad Az Aldeen - Egypt 

People try to create a comfortable environment from which they live in.  In this photo we see the streets in Egypt; clearly, this street is in a poor neighborhood.  However, the civilians living in this neighborhood have good tastes in the colors they chose to decorate or include in their neighborhood.  I remember when my friends and I were kids; we tried to decorate our street by all means just to make it looks nicer than the other streets in the neighborhoods. In this photo, one can see the whole color wheel.  The young man seems pensive and thinking deeply, I  assume that the colors around him have created a nice environment to help him thinks deeply.  Finally, I like the cropping in this photo.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Motherhood






Photographer : Mohammed Al-Sawaf - Iraq


It seems that all children, no matter where they live or who their family may be, have a strong sense of curiosity. In this photo, it is through the eyes of the child, the movement of his face, his mouth, and his nose, that the audience observes how the child is eagerly peeping outside of the Abaya (the woman's black cloak) to learn what is happening. Although half of his face is showing, and the other half is cropped by the scarf, the child's face is still beautiful and full of inquisitive expression.

Traditionally, elderly Iraqi ladies living in rural areas of the Middle East wear abayas to cover the whole body with the exception of the face and the palms. So, in this case the black color is not a symbol of sadness or death, but is rather a symbol of decency among the older people. 

The love and passion that this woman possesses for the boy is represented in her aims to keep him close to her under her abaya. She worries for him. The protective covering shelters him from the heat of the sun, the chill of a cold night's wind, or the envy from the eyes of strangers. There is a longstanding myth among older women in Iraq that a child under the age of one year should be far from the eyes of strangers. This shared belief may be related to the idea of the evil eye, a popular superstition in many cultures, includingTurkey.  


The old woman is looking elsewhere. It seems she is either pensive and preoccupied with something, or she is too shy to look at the camera. However, the innocent young boy has no experience and is just now starting to explore and wonder about the world around him.  

Although the dominant colors in this photo are black and white, the light that is emphasized on the two faces make this photo very beautiful.  

This young boy, and many boys like him, is very fortunate to have a grandmother as their main caregiver who can share her stories, her culture, and her traditions.

This photo has emotional intimacy because it reminds me of my grandmother and how she used to care for my siblings and me. 
It is very obvious that there are a lot of wrinkles in the woman face, but still beautiful? Yes, it is believed that wrinkles are a sign of wisdom, which is beauty in of itself.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

The Tannoor

Iraqi children look at a U.S. Army soldier during a routine patrol in
  Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 28, 2009. (AP Photo  Hadi Mizban)


In the Middle Eastern Arab countries, the Iraqi bread is very popular in its taste that is indescribable. When I first saw this photo, I remembered the bread my mother used to make each morning before dawn for the whole family.

The tannoor, or clay oven where the famous Iraqi bread is made, symbolizes the continuity of life in Iraq despite the war and destruction.

The six young boys standing with hands empty around the tannor, looking and thinking deeply at the armed soldier. It seems these children do not fear the soldier and are waiting for his reaction as the soldier approaches them. In their eyes, I see they have many questions and are angry at the situation. Through their facial expression, it is as if they are asking: "what do you want and why are you here?"

I am certain that the majority of these children have parents or family members that have been killed or taken as prisoners during the war. It would not be a surprise if all these boys are from the same family or extended family.

It is very noticeable the boy in the back hid his hands behind. This makes me wonder what he has in his hands. Does he have a rock to throw at the soldier or an object to make the soldier go away? I am not sure, but I predict this because I have witnessed a similar scene in front of my eyes in Iraq where young children like these through rocks and bricks at the soldiers. Unfortunately to see young boys involve in the bloody conflict, children at this age should not be a part of this violence. They should be in school getting their education. But where is education in such an environment?

The blurry focus of the soldier shows that these soldiers are all over the country and all look alike. Their emotions and feelings do not matter when they are dressed in this uniform. Therefore, we did not need to see his face or the rest of his body. We can also see that the situation in Iraq is still not clear and there is no end in sight.

The background is also blurred, not by the camera, but by the nature of the filthy air as a result of the violence and war. The weather of Iraq after the war has become very hot and unbearable in addition to 24/7 no electricity. There have been sand storms, humidity that changed the atmosphere and even the people personality. They made Iraq like a desert. Even the color green, which is a symbol of life, has disappeared.

The trees and plants are just colorless objects lying here and there. The color of the ground, the tannoor, the trees, the soldier, all have the same dull colors. It seems as though the war has militarizes the whole land of Mesopotamian, which was known as a land of peace and cradle of civilizations.

The composition of this photo is very good as it describes in the necessary details and the purpose of this shot.
Obviously, there is an abundance of emotions through the faces of the children.
I try my best to avoid photos about Iraq because they remind me of days that I am hardly trying to forget. Each time I search for a photo with a glimpse of hope, I only find photos of war and suffrage.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Siesta


                                 Photographer: Sudipto Das (From India)


This photo grabbed my attention and made me feel happy and serene because it reminded me of myself when I was a kid but in a different scenario. I felt that it showed companionship between the dog and the boy.
There is intimacy with this photo where the photographer was able to capture the moment where both, the dog and the young boy were asleep. I also feel an emotional intimacy through this photo. When I look at the subject of this photo, I remember my childhood years. It is as if I am the one in the photo.

When I was a child, I had a rooster that I played with in the garden. I always got myself dirty. Several times, my mother would come out to the garden and find that I have played with the rooster for a long time and got myself dirty and tired that I slept in the garden. Now, my nephew is 4 years old living in Iraq. His family gave him a bunny rabbit as a gift. My nephew always plays with the rabbit in the garden and gets tired and sleeps there. When my brother sees this scene, he laughs and says that he is just like his uncle, Amir.

This photo has two meanings. One is that the young boy was playing with the dog outside the rooms of his house but at the entrance or doorway of the house. In some cultures, families do not allow dogs and animals to enter the rooms. That is why the young boy would rather play and sleep beside his dog outside for an afternoon as part of the loyalty, love, and trust the two have for each other.

The second interpreting for this photo that crossed my mind as soon as I looked at it was the lock at the door. It seems that the young boy and the dog were outside the house playing. When they came back from the farm or orchard they found the outside door locked. It also seems that the rest of the family is outside the house; either at work, or out somewhere. The young boy and the dog sat at the doorsteps waiting for their family. They waited for a while until the boy felt sleepy. He slept feeling safe and secures that his friend the dog will protect him and be at his side.
 Of course, the boy started by dozing off as he was sitting on the doorsteps. Slowly, he felt that he needed to spread his legs and feel comfortable. He was hoping to find some people close by to open the door for him. But suddenly he dozed to a deep sleep. It also seems that the dog was tired and wanted to rest as well. Through this second meaning, I feel it was not the boy's choice to sleep with the dog outside; rather it was the fact that there was no one there to open the door for him.

This child is not from a poor family. Although his clothes are dirty, but that is the reality of the people of the small villages. The children always play in the gardens and among the animals and the families are always busy. In general, the environments in rural towns are different from the atmosphere in the urban cities.

A while back, I visited the Amish farm near Columbia, MO. I found the children to be in the same shape as this child in this photo: dirty clothes, bare feet, among the animals, and in the gardens or farms.
I do not know how long the young boy will wait outside his home until someone comes and opens the door for him. However, at the end of the day, he is happy and relaxed with the dog and with what he has done so far in his day.

There is a similarity between the boy's t-shirt and the colors of the photo and between the lines on the door and the color of the dog and the ground. In spite of the fact that the boy and the dog are asleep; the color green gives them the symbolism of life and beauty.

I believe that cropping was done in a nice way because every part of the photo has a deep meaning.
The movement of the boy's hands, legs and fingers are very calm and peaceful, as if he was placed on the steps in this position without much thought. This photo could be considered as part of the Innocence-Harmony type of photos through the composition and the layout. Happiness, comfort, security, and innocence are evident through the faces of both the young boy and the dog.