Wendy Lesser's "Mulberry Street Café" depicts a girl who can talk to a mature man (Atwan 240) next door. In Italian style restaurant Caffe Bella Napoli, a young girl symbolizes the only teenager and woman in the photo. She placed herself next to a cafe and seemed to be checking all around herself and around herself. Her arms were stretched in her mouth as if biting his nails. For example, she looks frustrated with herself. "Is I always trapped here?" She is the only female and young person (Atwan 240).
Production of photographs and movies is a formal expression like writing. By blurring the boundary between facts and fiction, these artists can tell stories with less or more possibilities and perspectives with less or more detail and intensity. This is their decision as a creative artist and ultimately leads to communication with the audience.
In the remainder of this article, we will analyze the work of several artists starting from this turning point easily and ask about the relationship between today's own photos and their reality. Specifically, this work is selected to explain three important issues: post-production, over-photographs, and photos as social devices. Constant Dullaart is a Dutch artist whose work is a strict conceptual investigation on the cultural, social and political economic influence of equipment.
From the 1970's to the early 1980's, Steve Mann was both a researcher and inventor known for research on computer photography, high dynamic range imaging, wearable computing. Mann designs and manufactures several general purpose wearable computer systems, including various sensing, biofeedback, and multimedia computers, including wearable devices, audio-based computers, blind hearing aids and so on. In 1981, Man designed a 6502-based multimedia computer as a universal multimedia wearable computer system with backpack, head-mounted display with one eye.
The director interviewed simulation photographers Sally Mann, David Glodblatt, Jerome Liebling and others and understood how the career changed by the rise of digital photography. Co-authors of Photoshop and Steven Sassen who produced the world's first digital camera are also interesting. A question-and-answer session between the king and the bookmark follows after the screening. The opening night of the Lincoln Center Film Institute's annual non-fiction film festival (now 3rd year) is the world premiere of the short documentary of British supervisor Ben River about the 80-year-old artist Ross Willy. The movie provides a quiet portrait of artists at work and captures all the complexities of Wiley's creative process. Night also includes question and answer with river.