Insightful human portraits made from data

Insightful human portraits made from data

 

Vogue at 100: A Century of Style | British Journal of Photography

Vogue at 100: A Century of Style | British Journal of Photography

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How to Make a Killer Multiple Exposure Portrait Using Photoshop

How to Make a Killer Multiple Exposure Portrait Using Photoshop

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Queens Hit ‘Top To Bottom’ By New Mural Project In L.I.C.

Queens Hit ‘Top To Bottom’ By New Mural Project In L.I.C.

“The spirit of New Yorks’ 5 Pointz graffiti/street art holy place has popped up in the same Queens neighborhood where it was demolished in 2014, and since last summer more than 50 local and international aerosol artists have been hitting a new project “Top to Bottom“.”

Interview: The Directors Behind a Mapplethorpe Documentary

Interview: The Directors Behind a Mapplethorpe Documentary – NYTimes.com

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After 5 Years Away from the Public Eye, Gregory Crewdson Releases Breathtaking New Body of Work

After 5 Years Away from the Public Eye, Gregory Crewdson Releases Breathtaking New Body of Work – Feature Shoot

 

 

 

Kirsty Mitchell’s ‘Wonderland’ Finished After 6.5 Years and 74 Photographs

Kirsty Mitchell’s ‘Wonderland’ Finished After 6.5 Years and 74 Photographs

Amazing work and story.

Kirsty Mitchell’s Web Site

Video Book Overview

Notes From The Field

Notes From The Field is a new Q&A series in which students can post questions to an expert related to the craft, language and art of photography.

Our current expert is New York City based photographer David Neff.

Below are the top ten questions from students and photographer David Neff’s candid answers.

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  1. How long have you been making images?

I’ll have to break this down into phases, first real camera acquired was at 16, so that would be 32 years. First photo class at 18, first big time job at 30. I’m now 48.

  1. How would you describe the type, or style, of photography you produce?

I shoot environmental portrait which tends to be fun happy pictures with bold colors of people. In reality, most of my work is now corporate, people look happy but the fun whacky part has become less of my paid work and remaining is happy people who usually make a whole lot of money. I still have leanings toward silly, bold and conceptual, just less time to do it personally lately.

  1. How important is understanding composition to your image making process?

Composition was more important when I was learning or working with marker comps or layouts. It has become internalized over the years and now I spend more time looking for a booger gone astray and rely on a part of my brain to do composition without having to take up bandwidth reserved for conversation, balance or temperature regulation.

  1. Can you describe three top compositional techniques a new photographer must know at the start of his/her career.

Don’t let lines intersect heads, never leave a head in the center of the frame after you focus (I still don’t use autofocus) Once you know what you are doing, make lines intersect heads and put people in the center.

  1. Are their specific industries that interest you?

I love science and technology. I’m pretty gadget happy and would be as happy taking my strobes apart as lighting with them.

  1. Do you use social media or other technologies to market your images?

Sure, I have a blog, twitter, Facebook, Ello, Pinterest and Instagram. I should use them, maybe this will prompt me to do it.

  1. How do you find new potential business prospects?

I have one of those phone numbers that people accidentally call on occasion when they mean to call someone else. If someone calls asking for Richard Avedon, I just say hello, how can I help you. Aside from that, I used to drop off portfolios, send out promos, blog, e-blast  and call people. Stuff that I might start doing again in the fall.

  1. What steps do you take to cultivate ongoing professional relationships?

I smile at people, do good work and occasionally send out an email saying hello.

  1. What inspires you to create?

Lately, the most inspiring thing I photograph is my son, nothing makes you see things differently than trying to understand a child.

  1. Do you work on personal projects? If yes, how much time do you work on it  before you feel it is complete? If no, why?

I have several projects on the bench, lately I have been dabbling in electronics. Sure, it’s nice to eat, live, sleep and $h*t your work but eventually if you don’t dabble somewhere else, there is a good chance you’ll get bored. This fall though I have two new projects I’m hoping to start shooting though I’m thinking I’ll be doing some writing first so I have some backbone for the two series and they don’t just end up another pile of pictures loosely related. When is it complete? Likely never, but then some concepts expire as well unless you keep them beefy over generational changes. It’s better to have chapters than a sequel.

5 Pointz Turns Troubled High School Into NYC’s Unlikeliest Graffiti Mecca

5 Pointz Turns Troubled High School Into NYC’s Unlikeliest Graffiti Mecca

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Photographer Shaves Off Half His Beard for a Series of Surreal Self-Portraits

Photographer Shaves Off Half His Beard for a Series of Surreal Self-Portraits

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