Thursday, July 16, 2020

Minimalism



Minimalism....

...is about separating something out to increase the attention paid to it. In many cases our photographs can get swamped by too much detail or colour and the reason we originally spendt time taking it gets lost.

When we look at things as a photographer it is easy to see the object you are photographing and concentrate on that. Why else so many holiday snaps where a pole sticks out of someone's head? Because we fail to consider the object as a part of the wider scene.....and that wider scene can easily distract from our intention.

There are several ways to create a minimal effect. One is to have a strong contrast of colour as in the pink flower above against the brown and khaki of the wall and tree. The khaki of the wall on the right of the picture is known as negative space. This really means that not much is happening in it but it gives the picture scale and allows our eye to be drawn to the part we would like people to see...

One is to use colour to define the difference in a space, as in the cone which looks totally out of place against the architectural stillness of the corner of this building.

A third is to use a lack of colour to emphasis the subject.  The overhead branch below encourages us to consider the branch as pretty much the only thing in the picture, apart from the clouds. We do not need the colour to explain this to us as our brain tells us that without our thinking about it. This is often used in street photography where light fills the space we want people to look at and darkness provides a contrast of emphasis.

Minimalism has a mindfulness to it which concentrates the eye on single area or object and help us to consider that without any major distractions. It is a meditation and for some the pictures may seem frivalous or bizarre. But it has its place and I like a good minimalist photograph that makes me think.

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Michael Kenna - landscape photographs


Black and White landscapes

Michael Kenna was born in the North of England in 1953.

From an Irish Catholic family with five siblings he ditched his original intention of becoming a priest and graduated as a commercial photographer from the London College of Printing in 1976. He honed his craft commercially and sold prints of Cartier-Bresson, Lartigue and Riboud through John Hillelson Agency in London. 

Moving to San Francisco because of an upsurge in photogrpahic galleries he met Ruth Bernhard who hired him as her printer. Over the next eight years he learned and practiced how to creatively manipulate and translate a negative.

Since 1986 he has mainly used a Hasselblad or Holger camera and his square format pictures are accounted for by this. Shooting in early light or at night he can make 10 hour exposures which give his pictures a unique and ethereal look.

He has shot around the world but says that his favourite country is France due to the variety of landscapes. Nonetheless he was strongly influenced by visits to the Far East and especially Japan where he describes learning how to par pictures down "like a haiku". 

He has photographs in galleries around the world and has more than twenty books in print.

You can see an interview about his work and influences here :- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z66z6u3LZBc 

This second link is to a series of "minimal photography" tips learned from Michael Kenna's work :- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuK0yrRulkU


Tuesday, July 14, 2020

A Photographer's Playbook - book review



A Photographer's Playbook

Edited by Jason Fulford and Gregory Halpern
Published by Aperture (2014)

As the cover says this is a book of ideas - 307 of them from photographers worldwide. The editors, having had some involvement in teaching, wondered how others gained inspiration, had fun or tested limits, so thought they would ask. This book is the result. It is what I sometimes use when I feel in need of a challenge or inspiration. It doesn't work all the time but there is good advice available.

The page below by Sasha Rudensky uses a quote by novelist Anthony Burgess as the starting point for her challenge.

You can even download as a pdf and try it for free (well for 30 days anyway) here :-



Monday, July 13, 2020

Classic Ribblehead Viaduct shot



On a week's break in the Dales last year we had already driven past Ribblehead and admired the view. I was not especially expecting to get a classic shot at any point in the holiday but when we met some rail enthusiasts the next day they were excited about this train passing through. We noted their comments and the time and day of the visitation and the fact that this train was known to put out steam as it crossed the viaduct.

On the day the weather was pretty perfect and so we arrived early and walked to what we imagined would be a good vantage point and prepared the cameras with a few introductory shots of, well, nothing really apart from the surrounding country.

In the picture it looks empty but the reality was that many people where about but mainly in the same spot as us!

We heard the train before we saw it and then, there is was. Billowing steam and fluffy clouds with that wonderful engineering feat of brick and steel gave me the perfect picture at first attempt. An hour later we were at the Ingleton water falls. Who needs to go very far in this country for some spectacular photo opportunities :-)

So if you want a shot like this find some experts to talk to and follow their advice. They know what they are talking about!

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Joel Meyerowitz podcast






Today a link to the recent FRAMES Magazine interview with Joel Meyerowitz.

Joel Meyerowitz (born in New York in 1938) is an award-winning photographer whose work has appeared in over 350 exhibitions in museums and galleries around the world. Celebrated as a pioneer of color photography, he is a two-time Guggenheim Fellow, a recipient of both National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities awards, and a recipient of The Royal Photographic Society’s Centenary Medal. He has published over 30 books. Meyerowitz lives and works in New York and in Italy.
W Scott Olsen interviews Joel Meyerowitz for FRAMES Magazine : 
This is one of several podcasts that FRAMES has online. You can also explore from this link.

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Brimham Rocks





When I woke up yesterday I realised that if I didn't make it to Brimham Rocks before the weekend  then the school holidays would probably make it a challenge to find space. I had meant to go for some time but the weather had been awful and the skies leaden so I had put it off. In fact the weather wasn't that great yesterday either but in the spirit of adventure I set off. As I drove down the motorway and up the A1 into North Yorkshire the clouds shifted into manageable cottonwool balls and the rain disappeared. Arriving shortly after the car park opened I was pleased to see few cars.

Underfoot was damp but with my super waterproof boots it didn't matter. Two and a bit hours later I was back in the car and heading south and home for an afternoon of editing as it started to rain again. Perfect timing as it happened.

Somehow the moodiness of this 184 hectare site calls for mono treatment in my eye. The rock formations, left behind when the ice melted 18,000 years ago, are striking and have been weathered by wind, rain and ice ever since. A bit of scrambling around by children and (largely) dads wanting to show off has helped as well. Now a site of Special Scientific Interest as well as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty I was lucky to have it largely to myself for a while.

Friday, July 10, 2020

A weekend sale by Taschen




A quick blog today. Taschen, the art book printers, have a sale on over the weekend. They have many books on photography as well as art and the production values are high. 

Sebastiao Selgado's "Genesis" (see above) is just £30. 

First published in 2013 this massive coffee table book of black and white photographs from across the globe is described as "A love letter to the planet". Eight years in the making it is a beautiful set of pictures as well as making us consider our place in it and our responsibilities to it.

Of course there are other books but this is the one I focussed on. A big bargain. A link below - 



and an interview about the project here - 

Helen Levitt - fifty years of New York street photography

  Helen Levitt was a native New Yorker, born in Brooklyn in 1913, and remained in the city until her death aged 95 in 2009. A quiet and intr...