Photography, Photo Education, For Teachers and Learners.

More than thirty years of teaching photography and art should have taught me a few things.

A good teacher is also a good student. I may have interesting images and thoughts to share

Sunday, April 24, 2011



Be True To The Media

According to Webster's New World Dictionary, photo, (meaning light or produced by light), graphics,(meaning capable of painting drawing or writing). I tend to take a literal interpretation of this definition and apply it to the work I produce. How I use light is an essential element in my work. One of the key elements in how I plan a picture in my minds eye is to pre-conceive the light. What direction will it come from. Will the light be hard edged from a spot light or bare bulb, or soft edged from a reflector or light box. Will I fill the shadows with a reflector  or another light, what will be the light ratio between light and dark areas. I think of the surface characteristics of the subject, will it show texture and drama if the light skims across it, will the light pass through it if it is translucent. Will the light be consistent with the context of the subject or abstract. You can take the simplest subject and light it in a manner that will render it dramatic. Often you can take the light that exist and  alter it with reflectors and gobo's or added artificial light  to achieve your desired end. There are also times when you find light as it exist  to have qualities that are interesting or support your subject, and that may be enough.

Graphics is drawing or painting or writing. I want my pictures to be as graphic as possible, hence the use of black and white. Color can often get in the way of a strong image, or be a crutch for a week one. I love the challenge of producing a simple image that gain visual power from its graphic nature.

Saturday, April 16, 2011



Where Do My Images Come From

We all have a third eye, our minds eye. We see with it in dreams,  our imagination, how we want things to be or not to be. We have all heard some one say picture this, they are calling on us to use our third eye. The visual artist literally pictures it. It becomes a process. We often change the original visualization in process because different ways of seeing our original concept come to mind. As creative people we are open to change and accept variations which may be visually stronger than our original concept.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Where Do My Images Come From

You are the sum of your experiences. As an artist your life experiences are often reflected in your work. Those experiences can be general, as in things that happen in society that are historical or social. Experiences can also be personal. The experiences can be direct and have an impact on you, or vicarious, something you observe read about or are told about. How you react to these experiences to bring them to visual fruition makes your art unique to you.

The picture of the gloves on the back of a chair remind me of my grandmother returning from church on a sunday afternoon. She would take off those white gloves and put them on the chair. We always made jam as a family affaire in the summer. The Mason jars were a part of that activities.  The baby shoes were my daughters. When she was small I had a baby carrier that allowed me to carrier her on my chest as she faced me. I can still remember her beating hart. The shoes always remind me of that experience.

Some pictures can be very personal based on your life experiences, others may reflect a place in time or a feeling.