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Movement in the Still Image

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This is a design report which I did as part of my Final Major Project. It was also part of my Critical and Contextual Studies Module

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  • May 21, 2021
  • 39
  • 2020/2021
  • Essay
  • Unknown
  • B
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Long Exposures and the Representation of Movement in Art




Long Exposures and The Representation of Movement in Art

Introduction


Photography can be referred to “The project of turning life into a work of art”

(Featherstone, 1990). Most photographs captured today are movements frozen in

time. They are one instant and show little or no movement. Because of this, the

chosen theme for the Final Major Project was movement. This project is a

continuation of a previously completed project, Cinematic Scotland, which captured

dramatic images which could be considered as stills from films. Some of the

locations used in this project had potential for capturing movement, for example of

the sky or sea, using a combination of Neutral Density Filters and the Long

Exposure Technique. The working title of the Final Major Project was “Long

Exposures”.


The captured moment of a movement in a still image can completely change that

one photograph. If the long exposure technique is used to capture movement, the

result can be more dramatic. If a completely still image was taken, and a long

exposure photograph was taken from the same spot, the two photographs would

look completely different. This can be seen by comparing Figure 1 and Figure 2.


The long exposure technique does provide a wide scope for subject matter and

can include star trails, car light trails, slowscapes (landscapes taken with a long

exposure). Examples of these are shown in Figures 1, 3, 4 and 5 below: -


Ross Henderson Page 1 Student ID 1708485

, Long Exposures and the Representation of Movement in Art




Fig. 2, Rattray Head Still Image (Jamie Stodart,
Fig. 1, Rattray Head Long Exposure 2018)
(Graham Dargie Photography, n.d.)




Fig. 3, Car Light Trails, (Anon 1, n.d.)




Fig. 4, Star Trails, (Anon 2, n.d.)




Ross Henderson Page 2 Student ID 1708485

, Long Exposures and the Representation of Movement in Art


Other subjects could involve movement in nature as can be seen in the example

below: -




Fig. 5, Movement in Nature, (Martin Grace, n.d.)


This report aims to examine how motion is represented in photography and

paintings, to compare the difference between still images and long exposures and

to examine the evolution of the long exposure technique.


Movement in Our Lives


Before we consider movement in any art form we have to consider why it has

appealed to artists over the ages. Movement is all round us. It is part of our

everyday lives. Movement is banal, ubiquitous and essential. “All around us are

myriads of rhythms – rhythms of land, sea, air, work and machinery” (Driver,

2007) Movement will also appeal to us as humans as we are dynamic in our

nature. We need to keep moving, both physically and mentally. “People move.

Indeed, all animals move, and it is movement that allows them to respond to the

environment” (Smyth and Wing, 1984). We live in a constantly moving world.


Ross Henderson Page 3 Student ID 1708485

, Long Exposures and the Representation of Movement in Art


Without movement, there would be no changes in the weather, no rain or any

other forms of precipitation, we would become overweight due to inactivity and our

bones and muscles would become weak through lack of use. We would also have

no form of mental stimulation, leading to stagnation of body and mind. “The body

is a living thing and vital organism, rhythmic in its laws and moving in time and

space in a world which itself has a vast and cosmic rhythm” (Driver, 2007).

Every day movement is essential, even to complete the most mundane tasks, such

as drinking a cup of tea or opening a door. We were given two legs which allow

us to move, resulting in both physical and psychological stimulation. Perhaps, due

to its banality, this is what drove artists to capture movement?




Ross Henderson Page 4 Student ID 1708485

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