chiaroscuro/notan
I'd sure like to see Biersdadt's negative - we can guess what a woodblock print negative looks like. Thanks for putting those up. Very interesting!
The basic concepts have very little in common. Bierstadt (and Ansel) employed chiaroscuro as the basis of their visual structure. Japanese woodblock prints are designed according to the principle of notan, which involves the placement of light versus dark in flat shapes. In fact, all block printing MUST conform to the notan principle because the block can either print or not print. In western printmaking, chiaroscuro is achieved by dividing the print areas in smaller and smaller units, so that mixed by the eye, the illusion of gray results.
This is fascinating, for me. I had thought of Ansel being in the chiaroscuro tradition, but hadn't made the connection between Avedon and notan. A whole new area of study, and one that can be performed with the lens.
Bowz- yep
Which painting inspired Avedon, which Ansel ?
What do the negatives look like ?
Dead Link Removed
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I'd sure like to see Biersdadt's negative - we can guess what a woodblock print negative looks like. Thanks for putting those up. Very interesting!
The basic concepts have very little in common. Bierstadt (and Ansel) employed chiaroscuro as the basis of their visual structure. Japanese woodblock prints are designed according to the principle of notan, which involves the placement of light versus dark in flat shapes. In fact, all block printing MUST conform to the notan principle because the block can either print or not print. In western printmaking, chiaroscuro is achieved by dividing the print areas in smaller and smaller units, so that mixed by the eye, the illusion of gray results.
This is fascinating, for me. I had thought of Ansel being in the chiaroscuro tradition, but hadn't made the connection between Avedon and notan. A whole new area of study, and one that can be performed with the lens.
