Monday, 28 April 2014

Artist statement.

I have finished writing my artist statement for this project and it covers all of the vital points and reasoning for this project and the different things i have done throughout.




Lauren Morris is a British nature and landscape photographer based in Manchester, England. Through the use of photography Lauren creates abstract and informative photographs that explore the natural beauty of the everyday ordinary that is surrounding her. Lauren's work looks at the everyday things that may otherwise pass by unnoticed. Her intention is to provide the viewer with an alternate view of the environment.

One of Lauren's biggest influences within photography is Ansel Adams. Adams work is very much based on the environment, he documented the areas within national parks in America to allow people to see the things they were missing and to keep nature alive. One series of images that Lauren can relate to is a series based on Yosemite National Park in the west of America. This series was Adams way of making the public aware of the wilderness and as a way of promoting conservation of the National Park.

Similarly to that of Ansel Adams, Lauren wishes to enable people to bare witness to the beauty of their surroundings. Focusing on the elements that need to be kept alive and seen, her way of showing what should be conserved, the naturally beautiful elements of the environment.

Lauren has always had an interest in nature and landscape photography, this is due to the comfort and peace that is found when being within quiet and natural surroundings. These personal feelings help her to capture photographs that document the natural landscape and environment whilst providing the viewer with a sense of what she is witnessing herself, through the use of the photograph.

Lauren is currently undertaking a project which is titled 'The Beauty In Life', in which she is looking for and documenting the natural beauty of the environments that are surrounding her.  Lauren is doing this by focusing her photographs on the natural areas, forms and structures that are within different locations around the Manchester area. She is looking for the little things that to go by unnoticed and the different things that tend to be missed by people on a daily basis. This project and the photographs that are being captured are Lauren's way of getting people to appreciate what nature is providing them with, as well as providing them with a view of the things they may not notice themselves, showing them the beauty of their normal surroundings.

The route that Lauren has taken with this project is basing her photographs on natural forms and showing the life of these forms. Meaning she is documenting the birth and life of them, such as plants that are growing in a natural environment. It is a way of showing how the natural forms are living, providing more of an insight into how they form and live within the same environment as ourselves.

For this project Lauren has taken some inspiration from the work of Jessica Backhaus'. This photographers work is based on her documenting the different things that she finds interesting and beautiful on the different journeys that she takes on a daily basis. The idea of documenting the beautiful that can be seen is something that Lauren has always had an interest in. She has adapted this to her own work by documenting and showing people the beauty of the natural forms within the environment in which they are within everyday.


The photographs that are being produced for 'The Beauty In Life' all have a strong use of depth of field. It is Lauren's intention to have one very strong and definitive focal point for each of the photographs that she captures for this series. The focal point of the image is not always the foreground nor the background, she uses the scene that is in front of her to decide on the best composition and the best focal point for the photograph she intends to capture. None of the scenes within the photographs she captures are set up, they are simply photographed as they are found, without any intervention showing the natural beauty of the area.

Lauren does not like to set up scenes within her photographs, nor do test shoots. To capture her photographs Lauren simply points and shoots. There are no strict guides to setting up the scene within the view finder, the use of composition and depth of field are the two elements that Lauren uses within every photograph that she captures. This is a way of keeping her photographs very simple whilst providing the viewer with an alternate view of the natural forms and structures that are within their surroundings, which is the main point of the project she is currently undertaking.   

As the main intention is to provide the viewer with a new way of seeing the natural forms by documenting their birth, growth and life within the environment, Lauren has decided to crop her photographs into square format of 12 x12. This is due to how she wants the main focus of the photographs she has taken to be the natural form. She still has a strong use of depth of field by having on section of the form she has photographed the main focal point of the photographic composition. This is unusual for Lauren as she normally avoids any cropping of her photographs as she always likes to present the viewer with the exact composition that is framed within the view finder of her camera when the photograph has been captured. However, with this series of photographs presenting them in square format allows the photographs content to be more definitive and direct to the point of showing the natural forms that are surrounding us.  

'The Beauty In Life' is a project that Lauren is very passionate about. It has been the main way for her to express how she is seeing the environment in which she lives in, and a way of allowing other people to gain a new view of their surroundings, providing them with an alternate view point and a way of seeing rather than just their own viewpoint. 


**UPDATED STATEMENT!




Lauren Morris
Project Title: The Beauty in Life
Blog: www.majorphotoproject-laurenmorris.blogspot.com


Lauren Morris is a British nature and landscape photographer based in Manchester, England. Through the use of photography Lauren creates abstract and informative photographs that explore the natural beauty of the everyday ordinary that is surrounding her. Lauren's work looks at the everyday things that may otherwise pass by unnoticed. Her intention is to provide the viewer with an alternate view of the environment.

One of Lauren's biggest influences within photography is Ansel Adams. Adams work is very much based on the environment, he documented the areas within national parks in America to allow people to see the things they were missing and to keep nature alive. One series of images that Lauren can relate to is a series based on Yosemite National Park in the west of America. This series was Adams way of making the public aware of the wilderness and as a way of promoting conservation of the National Park.

Similarly to that of Ansel Adams, Lauren wishes to enable people to bare witness to the beauty of their surroundings. Focusing on the elements that need to be kept alive and seen, her way of showing what should be conserved, the naturally beautiful elements of the environment.

Lauren has always had an interest in nature and landscape photography, this is due to the comfort and peace that is found when being within quiet and natural surroundings. These personal feelings help her to capture photographs that document the natural landscape and environment whilst providing the viewer with a sense of what she is witnessing herself, through the use of the photograph.

In this project which is titled 'The Beauty in Life', Lauren  is looking for and documenting the natural beauty of the environments that are surrounding her.  Lauren is doing this by focusing her photographs on the natural areas, forms and structures that are within different locations around the Manchester area.  She is looking for the little things that to go by unnoticed and the different things that tend to be missed by people on a daily basis. This project and the photographs that are being captured are Lauren's way of getting people to appreciate what nature is providing them with, as well as providing them with a view of the things they may not notice themselves, showing them the beauty of their normal surroundings.

The route that Lauren has taken with this project is basing her photographs on natural forms and showing the life of these forms. Meaning she is documenting the birth and life of them, such as plants that are growing in a natural environment. It is a way of showing how the natural forms are living, providing more of an insight into how they form and live within the same environment as ourselves. One thing to be aware of is that Lauren had no knowledge of the different forms that were within the locations that she visited to capture the photographs for this project. She has simply worked with the elements that she has found upon the routes she has taken and photographed them in her style.
For this project Lauren has taken some inspiration from the work of Jessica Backhaus'. This photographers work is based on her documenting the different things that she finds interesting and beautiful on the different journeys that she takes on a daily basis. The idea of documenting the beautiful that can be seen is something that Lauren has always had an interest in. She has adapted this to her own work by documenting and showing people the beauty of the natural forms within the environment in which they are within everyday.

The photographs that are being produced for 'The Beauty in Life' all have a strong use of depth of field. It is Lauren's intention to have one very strong and definitive focal point for each of the photographs that she captures for this series. The focal point of the image is not always the foreground nor the background, she uses the scene that is in front of her to decide on the best composition and the best focal point for the photograph she intends to capture. None of the scenes within the photographs she captures are set up, they are simply photographed as they are found, without any intervention showing the natural beauty of the area.

Lauren does not like to set up scenes within her photographs, nor do test shoots. To capture her photographs Lauren simply points and shoots. There are no strict guides to setting up the scene within the view finder, the use of composition and depth of field are the two elements that Lauren uses within every photograph that she captures. This is a way of keeping her photographs very simple whilst providing the viewer with an alternate view of the natural forms and structures that are within their surroundings, which is the main point of the project she is currently undertaking.   

As the main intention is to provide the viewer with a new way of seeing the natural forms by documenting their birth, growth and life within the environment, Lauren has decided to crop her photographs into square format of 12 x12. This is due to how she wants the main focus of the photographs she has taken to be the natural form. She still has a strong use of depth of field by having on section of the form she has photographed the main focal point of the photographic composition. This is unusual for Lauren as she normally avoids any cropping of her photographs as she always likes to present the viewer with the exact composition that is framed within the view finder of her camera when the photograph has been captured. However, with this series of photographs presenting them in square format allows the photographs content to be more definitive and direct to the point of showing the natural forms that are surrounding us.  

'The Beauty in Life' is a project that Lauren is very passionate about. It has been the main way for her to express how she is seeing the environment in which she lives in, and a way of allowing other people to gain a new view of their surroundings, providing them with an alternate view point and a way of seeing rather than just their own viewpoint.

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