Posts Tagged: study

EXPERIMENTATION: Light Painting

  • Emma Marie Horn Photography light graffiti
    'Bright Monster'
  • Emma Marie Horn Photography light graffiti
    'Light Meal'
  • Emma Marie Horn Photography light graffiti
    'City of Light'

A number of years ago, I got into light graffiti in a big way. It started when I began following artists like light artist Michael Bosanka as well as collaborative light painters Cenci Goepel and Jens Warnecke.

I tried my hand it. After dressing myself from head to foot in black – including a black wool beanie to hide my auburn curls – I headed outside and spent a couple hours spreading L.E.D lights in sequence.

Standing deathly still, wearing heavy black clothes, in the middle of a humid autumn night after several weeks of rain, was less than exciting.

Even less thrill-inviting was the amount of unwelcome guests that made their temporary home on my skin. Every inch of my uncovered skin was covered in mosquito bites, and even some of my covered skin showed signs that the bloodsuckers had strayed into uncharted territory.

But every welt, every itch, every moment of discomfort was more than worth it for the final product. I would do it again in a heartbeat – hopefully with an even greater outcome.

I originally submitted this series into the 2013 Heart of Annandale exhibition and won the Du Moulin Gallery Prize for Digital Art.

STUDY: New South Wales Central Coast

  • Emma Marie Horn Photography seagulls Gosford waterfront
  • Emma Marie Horn Photography seagulls Gosford waterfront
  • Emma Marie Horn Photography seagulls
  • Emma Marie Horn Photography Gosford street art
  • Emma Marie Horn Photography Gosford street art

I’ve lived in the same house for my entire life. I’ve grown up in this suburb, attended the local high school and seen pretty much everything that’s worth seeing here.

It’s easy to resent the mundane. It’s easy to overlook the simple pleasures of our world when we experience it every day. We take it for granted, and that’s pretty natural.

I live in one of New South Wales’ most beloved holiday destinations, but since it’s my day-to-day world, it doesn’t feel that way to me.

One day in 2012, I decided to break the monotony of my life. I took Meredith (my camera) and drove around my hometown, experiencing my world afresh. The photos I took I submitted into the 2012 Heart of Annandale exhibition and won the North Annandale Hotel prize for Digital Art.

It’s amazing what can happen when we see our lives through a different lens.

STUDY: University of Sydney

University of Sydney

The University of Sydney is Australia’s oldest academic institution. It was established in 1850 and hosted such notable alumni as Australia’s first Prime Minister Edmund Barton.

The main campus spreads over Camperdown and Darlington in Sydney’s Inner West. Its iconic neo-Gothic sandstone buildings have been named in the world’s top 10 most picturesque universities – according to the British Daily Telegraph, Huffington Post and even Disney Pixar magazine.

In 2013, the university ranked within the top 0.3% of the world on the QS World University Rankings.

It’s a wonderful university but at times, I think, it’s students can become disillusioned with its beauty. They say familiarity breeds contempt, and in my case, I think that’s true.

So in order to revive its beauty in my own eyes, I took a day in early 2013, before classes had started, to capture Australia’s top university from the eyes of a tourist.

I forced myself to forget I was a student there and experience the beauty of the campus and adjoining parks anew.

Later on in the same year, I covered a story on the university’s education strikes as a photo journalist for Australia’s oldest student-run newspaper Honi Soit. View the gallery of photos here.