Wednesday, March 26, 2008

brandenburg

so after seeing part of the video about this artist, there was one thing that he said that really stood out in my mind. He did his one photo a day book in order to get back to the roots of why he loved nature. It was his way of detoxing his craft. This is a very important lesson that many people don't realize is needed. You start a craft early, mine is music, because you love it. Everything you do with it is purely because you love it and it makes you happy. Then, more than likely, you start to get influenced by other aspects such as money, fame, etc. You lose site of the root, the love. Your craft has become a job. Its just what you do and not what you love to do. I really respect his view of getting back to the root and that he challenged himself so much in order to get back to that point.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Richard Misrach

I really enjoy the night shots that Misrach is able to capture. Its hard to try and capture things at night, especially capturing the world of colors during a sunset which he does beautifully. Trying to shoot a sunset is difficult because it is constantly changing so you have to just constantly shoot and hope you come out with one you like. I also like that all of his photos seem to cover so much space. Even though it may be a picture of a small object in the middle of the shot, there is so much captured around it that seems equally as important.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

book works




so far my book is starting to really take shape as an inspirations of music idea. here are some works in progress

collier schorr

So there were a couple of things that she said in her video that i found to be quite interesting. The first was during the wrestling shooting where she said that this project came from the larger idea of photography a body of work that looked the same without actually being the same. The pictures provided the same expressions and same body language without being the same people constantly. I also could really appreciate her idea that she stated in the end about her wanting her work to unveil desire and repression and removing the myth and making it into something human which I think is harder than people imagine. This is kind of a hit or miss idea where most mainstream ideas about it, mostly advertisements and such, really miss it. Showing such a thing as desire is easy, its the humanizing of it that is missed most of the time. It just makes you think about how your work speaks. Is it really saying what you are? Interesting.