Artificial Arm
[4min 49sec]
Digital Artist
Camille Utterback - Interactive Projection Art - The viewer activates the art
Daniel Rozen - Reactive Art: 1 min 4 sec
Ai WeiWei and Olafur Eliassons 5 min 48 sec
AR Photography & How to document an AR experience.
Camera Angle
Close-Ups
A close-up (abbreviated "CU") is when the camera focuses on just one character's face or other part of him, taking up the entire frame. These shots are used often when a character is talking, because it puts the viewer in an almost face-to-face context. When the camera zooms directly into part of a person's face or body, so that the frame shows nothing but his body, this is an extreme close-up, or ECU. Going in the opposite direction, a medium close-up (MCU) is halfway between a standard CU and a mid-shot--which shows part of the scene and the subject.
Wide Shots
Wide Shots Abbreviated (WS) give a great view of the entire area your subject is standing in, and you can see the person's entire body against the backdrop of his setting. As the camera zooms out, making the person almost unrecognizable but giving a good view of the entire area, it becomes a VWS, or very wide shot. Finally, an extreme wide shot (EWS) takes the camera out so that you can't even see the subject, but gives the viewer a clear picture of where the viewer is supposed to be--these are generally used as establishing shots. VWS are generally taken from cranes, so they're sometimes called crane shots, and EWS can be taken from helicopters and called aerial shots.
First Person POV
The first-person perspective is a useful way to put the audience almost directly in the character's shoes. The POV shot is pretty much what the character would see--as if she is actually holding the camera herself. POV, meaning point-of-view, shots are often used to heighten the intensity of a scenario.
* How to create a 9 up on an 8.5"x11" of your Artist Trading cards for printing.
- create a new document 8.5 x 11nches at 180 dpi
- Flatten your image and save it as a photoshop PDF file - (not PSD but PDF. the printer center in Clark prints using PDF's)
- Repeat the process for your second artist trading card.
- Email your finished PDFs to copycenter@hartwick.edu
*Ask for two prints of each pdf file, color, 8.5x11 on cardstock. Say thank you.
Outside of Class Time
Outside of Class Time
- Review Vectary - How to import an STL
Projects
- Work on Project 3 Artist Trading Cards pt.2 & pt.3 and Project 4 Digital Sculptures













