Monday, February 9, 2009

AJ at EMS

 

This photo is available for downloading to make digital art. Click on picture to show larger version, then right click on this version and "save picture as".

Student photographer's analysis of the photo:

It was a cold day and there were not a lot of people in the courtyard. The place where I took this picture, I think that it is very mysterious. In some way, it looks like a bow and arrow. That is what I titled the picture when I handed it in. But, I just don't know. I really like this picture, and I hope that many other people will like it too.

1 comment:

Harold Olejarz said...

Aj,
I love your photo. I like the snow in the back round.

Julia

Instructors


Harold Olejarz is Art and Technology teacher at Eisenhower Middle School, Wyckoff, New Jersey, U.S.A. He began his career as a sculptor and exhibited in Soho, NYC, in the early 1980s. His work evolved into Performance Art and his living sculptures installed themselves in museums and public spaces in the US and Europe from 1985 to the early 1990s. He has been exploring digital media as both an artist and an educator since 1997. “Capturing the Moving Present,” an essay by Harold Olejarz, is included in Video Art for the Classroom, a National Art Education Association publication. Olejarz has made presentations on the use of digital media at state and national educational conferences.

Tom Chambers is Technology Applications teacher at Raul Yzaguirre School For Success [Junior School], Houston, Texas, U.S.A. He was Visiting Lecturer in Digital/New Media Art for the Fine Arts Department at Zhaoqing University, Zhaoqing, China, 2005-2007. He was Executive Committee Member and Juror (2003 - 2005) for the International Digital Art Awards (IDAA), and was instrumental in expanding the content of the IDAA to include New Media Art, and served as on-line New Media Director (2004 - 2005). Chambers has been a documentary photographer and visual artist for over thirty years, and he is currently working with the pixel as Minimal Art (Pixelscapes) which begins to approach a true, abstract, visual language in Digital Art.