2. Visual Communications
Use Words, Pictures, and Designs in
Equally in Respectful Ways:
THINK and QUESTION
Question everything!
The More You Know, The More you See
5. War 1945
Joe Rosenthal Photo
Visuals become iconic but are they natural scenes or manufactured?
6. It’s easy to manipulate any photograph
A picture is not always reality
7. Visuals make us question
Is this necessary?
Nagasaki
War- what is it good
for?
8. Visuals tell a story
of a particular day
They make us feel
War is over 1945
A famous kiss by
two unknowns
Alfred Eisenstaedt photo
9. A Visual can become iconic
Revolutionary
Che Guevara
Would he be happy with
the way his picture is
used today?
Alberto Korda photo
10. A Visual can affect opinion of war, perhaps help change events to come
1968 Viet Cong- War
When war was televised
Television in the living room
An iconic image can be
re-purposed to make a statement
Adbusters
Edward Adams photo
26. Thanks for taking the class!!!
Continue to question everything
..communicate!!
Notas del editor
Can show protest and create more protest
Just because everyone is there it doesn’t mean it is the place to be, or where “news” is
We can’t just glorify the past..there is some good and some really bad- we evolve
Every group needs representation fair representation
Images and people sharing images can change the world
Robert Cornelius the first recorded instance of the selfie harkens back to what may have been the first photographic portrait. In 1839, a young Philadelphia chemist named Robert Cornelius stepped out of his family’s store and took a photograph of himself:
He took the image by removing the lens cap and then running [into the] frame where he sat for a minute before covering up the lens again. On the back he wrote “The first light Picture ever taken. 1839.”
The term, whose first recorded use as an Instagram hashtag occurred on January 27, 2011, was actually invented in 2002, when an Australian chap posted a picture of himself on an internet forum and called it a “selfie”.