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Programme 2: Wendy McMurdo - Photographic
dreamscapes
Activities
Programme 2 activities
Before viewing
Engage children in a discussion on portraiture. Use school
photographs and family photographs as examples. Ask the following
questions about the photographs:
- What is a portrait?
- What does it represent?
- What is the function of a portrait?
Ask the children to bring in a selection of family photographs
and take them through a short analytical exercise:
- What are the people in the photo wearing?
- What do their clothes or objects tell us about the date of the
photograph?
- What else do we read into the photo?
- Is it a formal or informal pose?
- Compare great grandparents’ photos and parents’
photos with photos that the children may have taken recently
– what does this tell us about the value, quality and
techniques of portraiture in photography through time?
Language development
Ensure that the children have an understanding of the following
artistic vocabulary and key terms:
- Digitally removed: something taken out of a picture
using either ‘cutting’, ‘paths’ or erasing
tools on any digital image manipulation package
- Cut and paste: as above, copying and pasting from one on
screen window (or page) to another
- Shadowing: following somebody’s actions as closely
as possible
- Output: your final picture, as it comes out of the
printer
- Doppelganger: your identical other, your imaginary twin,
a person with an eerie likeness to yourself
After viewing
Taking the children somewhere that fires their imagination will
achieve great results.
Ask pupils to think about their identity and how to present
themselves in a photograph that would give the viewer an
understanding of their interests. During this exercise, explain to
the children that in photography you can be anything or anyone you
like. This could be someone real or an imaginary person or thing
from a dream.
This exercise involves the children themselves as the model and
requires them to create a backdrop for their photograph using
relevant props, costumes, and locations. A digital or video camera
is required to take the photographs/stills of the children. If the
school does not have access to this equipment, disposable cameras
can be used, and a colour photocopier can be used to enlarge the
images so that they can then be cut, pasted and
re-photographed.
- Plan the portrait - what props will they require?
- Set the scene for the photograph
- Take shots of various angles, eg from the front, the back, both
sides, and from above. This will give the children more images to
manipulate. Use props if they eventually want to be interacting
with something in the work
- Transfer the images from the digital camera onto a
computer
- Manipulate the images – eg cut and paste, change the
colour, reduce, enlarge or rotate
- Print out using a colour printer
- Cut and paste the print using it as collage material, mixing it
with new images that relate to the child’s chosen subject,
taking care not to lose the essence of the original portrait
- Photograph the completed collage using a copy stand and the
digital camera
- The collage is transferred onto the computer and can be
manipulated again if desired, eg change the colour, enlarge, reduce
or rotate
- When the desired portrait is complete, a final print is made
which becomes the finished photograph
Materials needed:
- digital camera (as high a resolution as possible)
- compatible computer(s) and software or video camera/disposable
camera
- good quality colour printer (Epson or similar)
- access to colour photocopier
- various types of paper for the printer to give different looks
(eg glossy, matt, coloured)
- dressing-up material and props for creating backdrops
© 2000 Channel Four Television
Corporation
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