One more crack at it for me.
Photogirl17 wrote:
You're welcome, but I'm Photogirl17 AKA Lesley..Photophile is Karin..
Sorry, too many pages to keep up with! Photogirl, whoops.
I really like the "Weeping Willow" photo. Bravo!
photophile wrote:
I like the red leaf on the fern branches most.
Thank you photophile. Thanks for looking.
Photogirl17 wrote:
Pg. 61 Wonderful additions to the Minimalist Challenge Thorny, Welcome to UHH and let us see more of your work.
Thank you Photogirl. Thanks for looking.
chase4
Loc: Punta Corona, California
Are these minimal? I think they could be. chase
Lorima wrote:
Thanks everyone for joining me in the next challenge.
Minimalist photography draws inspiration from the concept of minimalism in art ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂâÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂàa style of art that was used by many 20th century artists. Artistically speaking, minimalism depends on high simplicity and involves using a minimal amount of compositional components such as shape, color, and line.
Here are a few photos to get us started.
Thanks everyone for joining me in the next challen... (
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Sorry about the date on the first one. I don't do that anymore.
Photogirl17 wrote:
You're probably right hard to keep track with so many pages..lol
concur on page numb # as it
concur on ideas numbers matter
UHH is like a NUMBER ONE(W's/W)
UHH needs to page # more often .
let it be known the page # we UHH
speak of most the time unless your
(Live On Uhh/Night)no/day/light/to
compare with the old crew and find
the new/crew a delight to view, you
too and take pride in your works
Bill
RichardQ wrote:
Hi, Lorima! This image is along the lines of the Minimal Art movement, but not quite what the founders had in mind. Here's a website describing their intentions.
http://www.theartstory.org/movement-minimalism-artworks.htmThe successful Minimalists were immediately panned, because their creations were so simple (i.e., a large black square in a frame, or a row of bricks leading across the floor from a wall, forcing the gallery-visitors to step over them) that some critics asked, "Where's the art?". Some Minimalists argued that the simplest industrial tools, magnified in scale or context, were the best subjects (i.e., an image of a blank square box) and others created a mix of image and sculpture, in which objects protruded out of the flat image. Imagine a six-feet-high paperclip. Hardly any of them tolerated anything pretty in their creations -- their real intent was to open the public's eyes to the daily dormant geometries and textures that are viewed as mundane and uninteresting. Their Movement is generally seen as lasting about a decade in the 1960s, but that's open to debate, of course.
Hi, Lorima! This image is along the lines of the M... (
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can I quote you about history and art and photography and life/adventure or ...
who / what /where /why and did you do it too as a professional or lens/jockey ,
you work holds/sand/water/oceans with me and humble (my ideas of lens) too
witnessed WW-2's waste/land to extend into publication ideas (posted/past)work
can I quote?
UHH/Bill
watch much TV? (ME TV)?
and the war will soon be)
over (Hogan's/Heroes) on
@@@@@@@@@@@@@
never stare too long (comrade))
is there any choice to report /on
like take a right (on Red/Light))
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