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Truth and subjectivity : explorations in identity and the real in the photographic work of Clemetina Hawarden (1822-65) and Samuel Butler (1835-1902) and their contemporariesBarlow, H. G. January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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'Speaking to the eye' : Painting, photography and the popular illustrated press in Australia, 1850-1900Quartermaine, P. N. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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From Yokohama to Manchuria : a photography-based investigation of nostalgia in the construction of Japanese landscapeTran, John January 2005 (has links)
This practice-based research examines, analyses and responds to the use of nostalgia as an ideological mechanism in the development of Japanese national identity and as an integral aspect of modernity. In discussions of the construction of national identities, whether in terms of 'narrative' or material culture, 'image' and 'vision' have generally been used as metaphorical terms. This thesis investigates the use of nostalgia in photography as a de facto visual construction of national space. Three groups of archive photographic material are examined; landscapes of the late 19th century genre of Yokohama shashin, or tourist photo, pictorial photography of the Taishö-period (1912 - 1926), and propaganda photography produced in Japanese-occupied Manchuria from the 30s and 40s. Nostalgia is then investigated in contemporary sites of leisure and consumerism, where it is considered as elemental in attempts to redefine the identity of Japan as a post-industrial society. In exploring the use of nostalgia in different historical periods and styles of photography, the primary objective of this research is not to provide a critique of the formal attributes of these images. It is rather to examine, both theoretically and visually, nostalgia's reoccurrence as a mechanism of historical erasure, in which each manifestation posits its own version of authenticity.
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The design and implementation of a purely digital stereo-photogrammetric system on the IBM 3090 multi-user mainframe computerAzizi, Ali January 1990 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with an investigation into the possibilities of implementing various aspects of a purely digital stereo-photogrammetric (DSP) system on the IBM 3090 150E mainframe multi-user computer. The main aspects discussed within the context of this thesis are:-i) Mathematical modelling of the process of formation of digital images in the space and frequency domains.ii) Experiments on improving the pictorial quality of digital aerial photos using Inverse and Wiener filters.iii) Devising and implementing an approach for the automatic sub-pixel measurement of cross-type fiducial marks for the inner orientation, using the Gradient operator and image modelling least squares (IML) approach.iv) Devising and implementing a method for the digital rectification of overlapping aerial photos and the formation of the stereo-model.v) Design and implementation of a digital stereo-photogrammetric system (DSP) and the generation of a DTM using visual measurement.vi) Investigating the feasibility of stereo-viewing of binary images and the possibility of performing measurements on such images.vii) Implementing a method for the automatic generation of a DTM using a one-dimensional image correlation along epipolar lines and experimentally optimizing the size of the correlation window.viii) Assessment of the accuracy of the DTM data generated both by the DSP and the automatic correlation method.ix) Vectorization of the rectification and correlation programs to achieve higher speed-up factors in the computational process.
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Passing Through: An Installation of PhotographyHunter, Natalie January 2013 (has links)
Passing Through, an installation of photography, encourages the nature of memory through an engagement with the materiality of photographic images. Considering memory as an ephemeral phenomenon, I am interested in exploring the emotional and psychological affects that images have on the body and mind. Strategies of collecting and tracing are employed as a means of forming connections between people, places, materials, objects, and images. Recounting personal history, storytelling and participating in the immediate present, I actively seek out images as a means for re-experiencing memory. Triggers reveal themselves during the collection and deconstruction of both personal and found photographic material. Re-assembling this information produces an archive consisting of real and re-imagined fragments of spaces and narratives. Together, these processes produce a body of work that considers the image as an experiential entity that is inherently memory based; triggering memory to create an emotive response in the viewer.
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Bridging Adelaide 2001 :Holmes, Ashley M. Unknown Date (has links)
The written component of this thesis is presented in accompaniment with an experimental hyperimage documentary artefact entitled Bridging Adelaide 2001. It is a hermeneutic text reflecting on practice that incorporates digital image capture, electronic image editing, human-computer interface design and hypermedia content development. Bridging Adelaide 2001 incorporates a photographic documentary that was produced by a collaborator and myself and first exhibited in 1981. That earlier work has been supplemented with digital imagery that I have produced as part of this research. In part, the thesis is a commentary comparing my practice as a photographer who has in the past used analogical techniques to produce documentary work for exhibition in public spaces and galleries and, my practice as a contemporary, digital image-maker and designer producing work using HTML for dissemination, in this case, via CD-ROM. I describe my experimental approach and call it ontological design after Winograd and Flores. I propose that Pickering's metaphor of the “dance of agency” arising from observation of scientific experimental practice, that theorises material agency, is also apt. My thesis explores the ontological implications of computer mediation and manipulation. An historical analysis of the development of software tools for graphics and artefacts of mediation in the form of trademarks is presented. A co-determined process, of tools making manifest desire in their capabilities and, of tools conditioning creative output is observed. The role of virtuality in relation to understanding the nature of tools is discussed. Three ontological models - one from Levy, one from Haraway and, one from Hayles - are overlaid with the intention of conveying a contemporary understanding of nature of virtuality, and of mediation and manipulation as a condition is described. The contemporary, networked computer mediation paradigm is contrasted with the mass media paradigm. The latter is associated with a dilution of photography's documentary authority, the former with re-establishing that authority. This differs from the common assumption that the transience of the digital image undermines its representational reliability. Phenomenological argument of Merleau-Ponty is presented in support of my claim that computer-mediation is corporeal. The actor-network theory of Latour and Callon provides means to argue for the social, political and cultural relevance of Bridging Adelaide 2001. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2004.
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The investigation and research into the development of a telescope control system and the compensation for atmospheric degradation of long exposure celestial photography /Somerville, John Stuart. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (MEng(ElectricalEngineering))--University of South Australia, 2004.
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Photography as a method of visual sociology: An investigation of the potential of still photography as a method of visual sociologyCampion, Britta Maree, Art, College of Fine Arts, UNSW January 2008 (has links)
Ever since the camera was invented people have been using it as a tool to reflect and record the world around them. Photographic images have great potential to investigate different social practices and phenomena in the world. Photography, in its own right, is an extremely large area of study. Despite its relatively short history, photography has undergone a broad and complex evolution since it was invented in 1840. This paper does not aim to cover the comprehensive history of the development of photography in its many facets, it aims however to concentrate on a specific area of what has come to be termed visual sociology and the potential of the still photographic image as a primary tool within the field. Visual sociology is a marginal, experimental area of sociology, it is a field which has not been given due consideration by many sociologists due to its unscientific nature and one which remains unfamiliar to many social documentary photographers. This paper traces the history of visual sociology and explores its roots and links with social documentary photography. It explores the established methods of visual data collection that are utilised within the field of visual sociology. It also explores a further sub-discipline, urban sociology and the role of the image in investigation of urban phenomena. The resulting practical component of this research is an extensive urban photographic investigation shot over the period of one month in the city of Tokyo. The resulting series of images exist as a type of photographic visual map of city creatures ubiquitous in the urban environment. The series aims to constitute as a visual, cultural survey about an aspect of social life within the Japanese urban context.
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To the best of my abilities /Kaiser, Barry Warren. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1983. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Voyage to another city /Lima, Michael Robert Alves De. January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (MFA)--Rocheser Institute of Technology, 1987. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 25-26).
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