Photography podcasts that deal with the why of photography over the how and discuss the essential qualities of the medium from the point of view of the creative photographer.
How do you consider yourself as a photographer in terms of the work you do? Is it important to tell your viewers how you define your work as being a particular kind or made with a particular camera, or does the work you make define you instead?
If I make more images, like the one in this post, am I a #lunarphotographer or a #GreatLakesPhotographer? If I shoot it wit...
I can't think of a time in my life that has been more disconcerting than this last year. The pandemic and the disruption to our daily routine. We don't work the same, we don't socialize in the same way, we don't go out or see friends or family. We are certainly in strange and uncertain times, a situation that brings anxiety to many.
I’ve discovered that for me the d...
During this pandemic time, we have been forced to trade in the allure of travel for the allure of the backyard. As I return to the podcast after a long absence, I explore the idea that you don’t need to go somewhere special to make special photographs. Instead, you need to go deeper wherever you are.
By slowing down as we look at photographs - ours or someone else's - we can more easily bring ourselves to the photograph, and by doing that, learn more about the medium and ourselves.
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Musicians warm up before they make music, but what about visual artists? Do photographers need to warm up before they create photographs? I think yes, and with the help of a podcast listener, we posit some ideas for getting warmed up visually.
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Some thoughts on living an artful life, led off by poet Mary Oliver's "Instructions on Living a Life"
Pay attention
Be Astonished
Tell about it.
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Rather than trying to make art your life, work instead on trying to make every day of your life into art.
"You just have to live and life will give you pictures."
-Henri Cartier Bresson
Birch & Sun, K...
The act of making photographs connects me to the world, to my medium and to myself. When I make photographs, there is always a reward.
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Places you can find and listen to Camera Position:
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Many people think of a wide lens as a way to get farther away from a subject, but I think of a wide lens as a way for us to get closer... a wide lens is really a close-up lens, allowing us to create a dominant subject in the frame by emphasizing the difference in distance from near to far.
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Evidence of Hands on Stone - Jeff's Italian architectural photographs
The Curtometer - An Aid To Seeing - a deceptively ...
Podcast listener Tracy wrote:
"Photography comes from the depths of who we are. It is not only an exploration of our world, it is also an exploration of ourselves."
This episode is a "part 2" of self-exploration and its relationship to our photography, utilizing a worksheet that you can download called "Passion and Mission" to help you think through not only what you care about, but how you can take those things and transform them ...
What is your story? What are you curious about? What do you care about? How can your photographs express those interests? Making stronger photographs often depends on digging deep to determine your passion and then translating those passions into images.
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Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes and art is knowing which mistakes to keep. Instead of living in fear of "getting it wrong," a better, more useful strategy is to keep moving - plowing through the things that don't work and slowly refining the process to get to the things that resonate for you and with viewers of your work.
“Go and make interesting mistakes, make amazing mistakes, make glorious and fantastic mistake...
"Sometimes you have to play a long time to be able to play like yourself." -Miles Davis
One of the most consistent questions I get from students is this one: "how do I develop my own style?" Miles Davis helps with an answer.
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“Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time.” - Thomas Merton
How can we use the art we make with the camera to grow, learn and provide ourselves with a way of saying new things... to, as Merton says, “find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time"?
I’m asking listeners to help steer the future direction of Camera Position by letting me know what you’d like to hear.
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When the subject takes precedence - when you point your camera at things that are the most interesting thing to you, you are on your way to developing a personal style - the sense that these subjects are the most important things and can only be pointed out in this way by you.
“To be a good writer, you not only have to write a great deal but you have to care.” Anne Lamott - Bird by Bird
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How do we go beyond a record of a place and begin to make photographs that convey a real sense of place? The objective is not just to show what your destination looks like, but rather to convey, in photographs, what it felt like to be there.
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This episode is a little meditation on the importance of aligning ourselves with the messages around us, using Anne Lamott's book Bird by Bird as inspiration.
“The Gulf Stream will flow through a straw provided the straw is aligned to the Gulf Stream, and not at cross purposes with it.”
-Anne Lamott
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[powerpress]
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“But the art in an artwork might not be located precisely where you thought it was. Perhaps it was just as much in the damage and decay as it was in the intact original. Perhaps it was in the gaps - in contemplating and rending those insults and injuries - that we find ourselves, by compassion; by bandaging, however imperfectly, those wounds. Art may be a species of faith, the assurance of things hoped for. It contains nothing so m...
As photographers, we know that there is a fairly wide range of options available to us that change what *was* to what we show the world in our images. Every photograph is a composite of the choices we make as the person who eventually presents the image. Every photograph is an interpretation of the way the world really looks.
I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!
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