| CMH Art Department |
| Computer Imagery Resource Links |
| http://digitalstudio.ucr.edu University of California-Riverside; Museum of Photography. Click on "Anaglyphs" (3D images) Review the tutorial and try this for yourself! http://travelbrochuresgraphics.com This is a virual online gallery created to display and share the best items in a personal collection of 1920s and 1930s travel-related ephemera. "Ephemera" is a general term that includes paper items such as travel brochures, airline time-tables, ocean liner time-tables, auto road maps, luggage labels, advertising, and graphic design publications. The images included in this site are primarily from Europe and Asia and, to a small degree, the U.S.A. Notice the sophisticated use of color and dramatic yet simplistic compositions. http://www.museumofcomputerart.com/index.asp Museum of Computer Art, an online gallery of contemporary artwork. This is a "Must See." http://www.itgoesboing.com Artwork by Kenneth A. Huff, an award-winning innovator in computer imagery. http://www.photo.net Click on "Gallery" to have thousands of digital images to view. Most are pretty straightforward photography and because users can upload their own, not all images are good. Take a look. What appeals to you? Does anything give you any ideas? http://masters-of-photography.com/S/stieglitz/stieglitz.html Not only showing work by Steiglitz but also including work by 40+ other historically significant photographers. It's work by these photographers that brought photography into the category of "Art." http://www.nga/gov/collection/gallery/ggphoto/ggphoto-main1.html A collection of photos from the National Gallery of Art. What makes each special? Which ones inspire you? http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/wcf/wcf0001.html This is an historical look at the work of some significant, early, women journalists/photographers. The photos' function was to tell a story and some were done artistically. Evaluate each for composition, dramatic angels, and lighting. |