THE PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT AND EXPRESSION OF TONE IN BLACK AND WHITE PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY

Authors

  • Jing Hou Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Korea
  • Surng Gahb Jahng Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Korea

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.2023.4148

Keywords:

Black and white; Portrait Photography; Tone; Philosophical concepts; Aesthetic thought

Abstract

In the field of modern photography, aesthetic recreations to varying degrees through the content of the images presented by photography, while forming a certain degree of philosophical aesthetic awareness, can awaken people's emotions and philosophical cognition. As a modeling language, the tone in photography is crucial in embodying the contrasting relationship between light and shade, virtual reality, and the different levels of black and white in black and white portrait photography. It is the most basic factor that constitutes a character's image. Based on the unique performance characteristics of the art of black and white portrait photography, and based on the art of tone in photography and cognitive and aesthetic perspectives in philosophy, this article discusses the role, classification, and influencing factors of tone in black and white portrait photography, and expounds the different philosophical concepts of the East and the West represented by the differences in tone in black and white portrait photography. By analyzing the philosophical concepts and expressions of tone in black and white portrait photography, it can be seen that black and white portrait photography has simple and highly generalized artistic characteristics. It represents the characteristics, connotations, and aesthetic characteristics of black and white portrait photography with a unique art, and at the same time builds a bridge between the photographer and the viewer at the philosophical and aesthetic levels.

Published

2023-06-16

How to Cite

Jing Hou, and Surng Gahb Jahng. 2023. “THE PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT AND EXPRESSION OF TONE IN BLACK AND WHITE PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY”. European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 15 (2):238-58. https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.2023.4148.

Issue

Section

Research Articles