The Inspiration Of Mr. Penn

Paula Gardener

Provocative, intriguing, challenging and compelling are some of the words that come to mind when I think of  portrait photography.  The concept of capturing a moment in time, preserving the subject forever, is the best invention since the light bulb. As a child I loved staring endlessly at fashion catalogs and magazines. Fantasizing about who the individuals were, their lifestyle, their story. I would create a whole new world through the photographs I saw.

That is where the love of portraiture took a hold of me.

Over a number of years I have stumbled across numerous photographers that have inspired me. Through their work I have gained confidence to step out of the box and create a style of my own.

One of those many photographers is the late Irving Penn, his work has become one of the biggest influences in my portrait portfolio. I came across his photography through a Flickr page dedicated to him, obviously another fan like me. As soon as I saw his work it captivated my heart. He has a way of drawing the viewer into a personal space once hidden but now revealed through his eyes. I love the simplicity and dynamics of his studio work, the poise of his subjects. Such subtle drama but not too much that it takes away from the beauty of the image. Each individual portrait replicates the persona of the subject so well you feel you know them personally.

He inspired me to want to capture the hearts of the viewer, draw you in. Revealing just enough to make you imagine the story behind the lens. With this said I wanted to pay tribute to Mr Penn, knowing I could never replicate his beautiful portraits. I figured I would create my own representation of few. So armed with my iPhone 5 and the natural light shining through my bedroom window, I began quest. The limitations of a mobile device, that is not dedicated to photography makes this challenge even harder. However I know that with the countless photography applications available I would hopefully come close.

So without further ado I present to you firstly the beautiful works of Irving Penn’s Miles Davis portraits. Followed by a few of my portraits.

Oh and if you haven’t heard of Mr Penn, please look him up his work is amazing!

 Miles Davis by Irving Penn

 Paula Gardener

 Miles Davis by Irving Penn

 Paula Gardener

Miles Davis by Irving Penn

 Miles Davis by Irving Penn

Paula Gardener

Mobile photography: Built on community

“The mobile photography and arts community is life in Technicolor. I hold all these little frozen moments in time in my hand every day. I get to experience the thrill of discovery, the pain of loss, or the joy on a child’s face as if I was there.  This community of artists pushes me in ways I’ve never been pushed. To create, to capture, to evoke emotion.  But also to tell my story. To share my own victories and defeats, to be open and bare on a regular basis.   Our lives are a beautiful, living creature and because of mobile photography I am intertwined with people I will never meet face to face.”Anna Cox, a mother and an artist from Central Kentucky. You can see her on Instagram and EyeEm as @starklifephoto.

Mobile photography: Built on community by BP

The community of mobile photography has broadened how we communicate with one another.  Our interests are now shared with an increasing amount of people, followers or audience (however you choose to define it).  Our reach to others has been extended on a global scale while our interactions have evolved on an emotional scale.  We are able to build relationships, based on support and our common ground.

We are now part of a world in which mobile technology touches almost every aspect of our lives.  Innovative, connected devices have fostered a community of “creatives” who learn, teach and consume the art of mobile photography.  The idea of connectivity is centered in the here and now, helping us interact with people impulsively and instantaneously.

In June of 1997, Philippe Kahn invented the camera phone as we all know it.  The premise for this invention for him – to document and share with family and friends the birth of his daughter – also marked the beginning of the mobile photography community.

“I think from the beginning, the mobile phone camera was created as a way to share immediate, ‘disposable’ images with close friends. I don’t think anyone really planned for the App Store and for a bunch of stubborn photographers — professional and non — to consistently create these really outstanding pieces of art. It wasn’t that photography was new. I think a big part of iPhoneography’s early success was that it was the first camera of decent to good quality that was always with you. It was the first good camera that could photograph a scene without really affecting the subject much. Above all, the iPhone was and still is a very personal camera.”Marty Yawnick, freelance graphic designer from Dallas/Fort Worth, and the editor for Life in LoFi

This burgeoning community has been enthusiastic about sharing their work from the start, first through small, individual blogs and the innovative (at the time) Flickr share site.  The creativity they exhibited with their camera phones was amazing.  There were many people creating stunning images, curating their art on these accounts and building relationships with like-minded creatives. They began to develop the core functions of the mobile photography community: sharing, engaging and consuming images.  From inception, it was about the art, but more importantly about the camaraderie surrounding the art.

Enter social photo-sharing platforms Instagram and EyeEm, and the doors to this small but growing community were opened to the rest of the world.  Sharing became instantaneous, and the community discovered a new addiction to engaging and consuming photographs. Images were uploaded at an astronomical rate.  What once was a slow process of downloading to a desktop, then posting onto a web-based site, became shoot and share immediately. The community began to broaden. There were a million stories being told.

“Within the rapidly growing community of mobile photography, amateurs and professionals alike, from around the globe, document, share and relate. These communities foster friendships, engender support and facilitate their members to push the boundaries of what mobile photography can be as well as what it can hope to accomplish.” – Matt Coch is a New York-based photographer who goes by the moniker Brooklyn Theory.

Exploring the meaning of ‘community’

Community means a “unified body of individuals,” says Merriam-Webster. It connotes inclusion and similar beliefs within a collective context. We find ourselves identifying as part of the mobile photography/iPhoneography/Droidography/ Windography community.

“The most important thing to me is seeing happiness and emotion in a picture. I have missed a lot of that since my mom died.  When I met my husband, I started to see the happiness again. And then my son and daughter were born.  But when I discovered photography especially with them, I just try to capture moments.  Whether they are happy or sad.  Or mad. Whatever emotion it may be. Nothing means more to me than my family.” – Melanie de Krassel is a mother from Los Angeles, California.  She found photography through her iPhone and her favorite subject matter are her children.

Community is actually individual-specific, with an individual at the center. You, me and everyone else: we each have our own community.

At first blush, this may sound like a modern, individualistic, self-centered definition of community. For one thing, with this understanding comes the new understanding (for me anyway) that every individual I interact with today is the living, breathing center of their own community. This makes everyone significantly more connected, influential and powerful than they appear (and often know) in their individual forms. Every individual is the center of their own community.

“When I became involved with iPhoneography in February 2010, the community was active, smaller and more ‘underground.’ Then, Instagram hit, and then a lot of the activity moved there–away from Flickr, but it’s really hard to say. I know I noticed changes in traffic patterns for where people were spending their time as informally measured by comments, not just image sharing. Also, as Instagram became popular, more people were coming to Facebook to share photos. This was a big shift.” – Star Rush is a documentary and street photographer, writer, and educator from Seattle, WA.

We are living in a time when most of us are so flooded with imagery and information as individuals that we have no idea which end is up many days. This can cause us to over-rely on the published ideas of distant experts and to undervalue those we’re directly connected to as well as our individual selves. Sure there are technical aspects that we can learn from others.  Sure there are new discoveries that can help us hone our craft.  In the context of community, we all have a stake and a contribution to make.

We are so much more than we can know we are or be as individuals. Community wraps us in the surprise and delight we need to laugh, play, relax and to come to know more of our whole, true, beautiful selves. This hasn’t changed since the word community was first spoken, because this doesn’t need to change.

I think that’s why community persists and why it will continue to persist, despite our precarious piles of individual fears.

“The mobile photography community, to me, has become an essential part of my creative process. I don’t know where I’d be as an artist if there wasn’t one, I’ve learned so much from others I’ve met along the way in this game that has helped mold me into the photographer I am. It’s really cool to have found so many people who share the same interest through a cell phone app, kind of crazy when you think about it and how far the technology has come. I’m curious to see where all this will take us in the next few years, we’re already off to a good start and I’m honored and proud to be a part of it.”Mike Hill, mobile photographer originally from New Orleans, Louisana.

Community is who we are. It’s why we last. It’s always with us, like the found, smooth and treasured stones in my jacket pockets that show up to surprise and delight me again and again.

My stones have names. Your stones have names.

These stones provide us friendship, mentorship and inspiration. They provide us a glimpse of humanity through a technological window.

We develop these relationships on behalf of a community that loves to create, learn, share and connect.  We are touched by all these stones on the basic human level.  I hold mine close to me, in my pocket, and get excited when they share with me the joys, the heartache, and the humor of their daily lives.

How can I even quantify how they participate in my definition of community?

That’s just how we roll.

That’s community.

“The community and the sharing are key answers in my idea of being ‘connected’ worldwide. You grow your passion looking at a billion of photographs everyday, and that is the biggest silent, hidden change for me.  More ideas, more interactions, more self-confidence. Your passion grows. Your addiction to the ‘art’ grows. Your ‘eye’ begins to see what was hidden before.” – Alessio Castaldo, late and great photographer amd original Juxter from San Benedetto del Tronto, Italy.  He was an advocate for mobile photography and was co-founder of The Minimals, which seeks the use of fundamentals in the mobile genre.

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*”Mobile photography: Built on community” was originally posted on DPR Connect on November 21, 2012

 

Whatever Is Lovely

Whatever Is Lovely by Rachel S.

Originally published on November 9, 2012 REWIND

Rachel’s Introduction

When you ask someone to describe what inspires her, it seems perfectly natural to me that she would show you a photo album.  What moves us to capture these moments in our lives?  We feel in that moment, some urgency that begs of us “shoot this.”  And for so many reasons, we do.  For love, for beauty, for art, for likes, for distraction, for preservation… whatever the reason, photography happens from within and produces these snapshots in time.  Whether consciously or not, we are sharing a life story.

Jennifer has a special way of preserving her moments.  Never overbearing and often softly, she shares her daily life and loves with us.  On top of her jobs as caregiver, wife and mother, she’s a delightful human, maker of beautiful pictures and a wonderful writer.  I asked her to share some insight into her world, and to speak to us through her pictures.

Thank you, Jennifer!

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MY CITY IS LOVELY

I am a Seattle native, so I know that there’s something about these gray winter mornings in the Pacific Northwest that just flat-out encourages hibernation – convinced that the best place of all is in your robe, in your bed, with a magazine and a big mug of coffee. This was one of those mornings. From where I live, I’m fortunate to have a great view of the shipping lanes. On this particular foggy day, having traded the warm comfort of my house for my cold commute, I passed this ship – quietly anchored – in the center of Elliott Bay. It suddenly struck me that as cold and tired as I felt that morning, the sailors on this boat were almost certainly more so. In addition, I wondered if they might also be lonely – separated from the ones they love by their time at sea. Though in some ways they were so close, the water rendered them unreachable. I felt that this edit, in homogenizing the background, really played to that sense of isolation. Freighters are a recurrent theme in my feed; I love these massive, often brightly colored additions to our landscape. If there’s a way to get a freighter in a shot, I’m there. Their combination of relative silence and power is interesting to me – and very Northwest.

One day, I took my youngest son to a doctor’s appointment in Sand Point and we headed to Magnuson Park afterwards to hit the playground. On our way out, this hangar caught my eye. From within the cavernous space, I could hear voices, but saw no one. I have always found this image magical in that it is entirely mundane, but still yet carries this sense of life, as if all of the characters suddenly disappeared from the scene. I think IGers Seattle called this one “Ghost Volley”, which I liked. A rolling tennis ball, a folding chair askew…there’s nothing unusual about these things – but for some reason, this was the first of my posts I recall people really connecting with. Oh, and it was also the first time that I pulled the car over and parked (with a kid in the back, no less!) to take a picture. Yes, I felt guilty…and yes, the guilt has since passed. 🙂

One of my favorite days is Saturday, because – well, because it’s Saturday – but also because it’s Farmers’ Market day. My husband and I love to entertain – to cook and eat tasty things – and in my mind, there are few things more beautiful than fresh flowers or produce. That one can grow these things from the earth always amazes me. You don’t have to do a lot to these images – the colors and shapes speak for themselves. I recently joked that I’m going to lose followers over my frequent tomato shots – but if so, that’s a risk I’m willing to take.

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MY FAMILY IS LOVE

Music is a big deal in our household. I sing, the boys sing, my husband plays guitar and composes electronic music, so we definitely encourage experimentation with new instruments. Needless to say, not all experiments are immediately successful! 🙂 On this particular day, my oldest son was attempting to play an electric guitar borrowed from a friend. Not surprisingly, he chose the kitchen – center of the action and arguably the most echoey room in the house, without rugs or anything else to dampen the noise. I felt myself getting tense, and then in a second, realized what it was that I was actually seeing and stopped in the noise to capture the moment. What this image showed me: My son, who has Asperger’s, was happy and content – the tones here captured his moment of inner calm. His too-short jeans were immortalized, reminding me how fast he’s growing. I didn’t see the motto on the wall behind him – “WE DO REALLY LOUD” – until I was editing the shot later. I am so blessed to have a home in which music is heard. This image will always be one of my favorites. If I had a style (which those of you who may have seen my feed know I clearly don’t – though I see advantages to both approaches), this image would be a good example. Soft and clean. My edits are pretty simple most of the time – heavy on Snapseed, VSCOcam and PicFx.

The exuberance of childhood is incredibly precious. As far as I’m concerned, you have the rest of your life to be an adult. And to be a child in a city like Seattle? We’ll, that’s just pretty much awesome. We took this shot (or should I say “shots” – there were multiple takes!) after dinner one night in the alley across from the Blue C Sushi in Fremont. Turns out it’s remarkably hard to catch two little people in mid-air without blur – but hey, since when has life ever been tidy?! The mural behind them highlighted for me the color and energy that we see inside of them as their parents and memories of the bemused glances from strangers watching our familial antics still makes me smile. Instagram makes one do crazy things – no doubt. Wouldn’t it be fun to ask the IG community: What’s the weirdest thing you’ve ever done to get the shot? I bet the answers would be both hilarious and mildly disturbing.

This is the first of my images that I might consider an “art photo” – shot in our backyard after a looooong day of frolicking, fort building and tree climbing. My youngest son has a little more patience with my photography than his older brother and I was happy to capture this serious look on his face, as he’s a pretty jolly guy. That expression, coupled with the tendrils of ivy and the intensity of his eyes set the stage for an image through which I truly felt I had transformed reality. I really hope that doesn’t sound weird. What I mean is that in looking at this image, I have to reconcile my reality of my son – his warmth and boyishness – with the final product, in which he appears something like an elf or child denizen of the woods. As I think about it now, perhaps that day he was both. That he managed to appear so clean is perhaps the most remarkable bit of the whole thing. 🙂

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MY WORK IS A LABOR OF LOVE

I’ve worked as a physician at Harborview Medical Center for the past 11 years. It’s the Level One Trauma Center for our five-state region, so the things we see are often big and bad. In that regard, it’s a place people hope they never have to visit. But it’s also a place with an extraordinary sense of social mission – to everyone, but also to immigrants, drug abusers, the incarcerated, the underinsured, the homeless. Incidentally, one of my earliest Instagram memories was a series of images Brad Puet (@bradpuet) posted called “Homeless in Seattle” – a series of beautiful portraits and compelling stories of both disenfranchisement and empowerment from people whose voices aren’t typically heard by most of society. I was mesmerized. I knew then that Instagram was a LOT more than photo sharing and that there were others there who shared my heart around some of these issues.

Harborview is also a place full of remarkable stories. My friend Audrey Young referred to it in her book as “The House of Hope and Fear.” In Seattle there’s this prevailing sense that Harborview is an intimidating place, so one of my original Instagram goals was to highlight some of the beauty I see there every day. But shooting in a hospital is fraught with all sorts of practical and ethical challenges, so although I have access to many powerful images and moments, there are only a few that I feel I can capture and share – images like this hospital bed. Our hospital is always full, so an empty hospital room is something you don’t see very often. This image speaks to me in its possibility, contrast and stillness – the calm before the storm.

One of the reasons I so crave the beauty I see on Instagram is the contrast it provides to the many un-beautiful, often tragic things I see and do on an everyday basis. My faith is the only thing that carries and sustains me every day. Working as a doctor has made me appreciative of each healthy moment for myself and my family and Instagram has helped me better recognize those moments – it’s shifted this awareness for our whole family. And if the moments I share resonate with other users, all the better. It ‘definitely goes both ways.

At its core, medicine is all about people. Multiple times I day, I cross a skybridge connecting a number of intensive care units. I’ve nicknamed it the “Hallway of Tears” – a place where I routinely hear snatches of tearful stories about prognosis, family dynamics and medical uncertainty, always feeling a bit voyeuristic as I pass quickly by. This image was surreptitiously captured outside of yet another ICU. I believe the edit highlights the drama of critical illness which impacts family and friends as much as it does the patient himself, who in a sense often benefits from lack of minute-to-minute awareness. Outside of the hospital, my passion for stories translates to a strong interest in street photography, though I am not sure I yet possess the confidence and patience to be successful in that genre. Someday, perhaps… it’s a goal. When I see street shot well, it makes my soul sing.

I think this is a photo I took for a #JJ (Josh Johnson) Challenge in a slow moment on a day when I had to work a late shift. Balancing my role as a doctor and the sacrifices it requires with other important parts of my life is always challenging. Most days I think I’m doing a reasonable job, but it’s an active process, requiring constant introspection – as suggested by this light – turning over the rocks, peeking into the crevices of motive, carefully monitoring my family’s emotional barometer. I often work long days and weekends, which doesn’t always leave me enough time at any given moment to feel whole. I believe life is a series of seasons. Medicine is a remarkable calling, yet I truly believe that there will also be other exciting and very different chapters in my story.

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Jennifer joined Instagram in December 2011 but didn’t really “get it” until turning “OFF” the privacy switch in March 2012.  She is married and has two sons, a labradoodle and a guinea pig auspiciously named Professor Harold Hill. In an alternate universe, she is an accomplished cheesemaker. All proceeds from her Instacanvas Gallery will be donated to the Harborview Medical Center Charity Care Fund.

IG username: @whateverislovely
Hometown: Seattle, WA. (yep – a native!)
Current location: Seattle, WA
Camera(s): iPhone 4S and Canon T3i

Take Us To Guadalajara

Take Us To Guadalajara

Take Us To… ” is an ongoing travel series around the world which features several photographers in a given location. The goal is to give you an inside look as to what the city is like day by day.

Today we fly non-stop to Guadalajara, aka “The Pearl of the West” and Mexico’s second largest city.

After working with Héctor on several projects, including Dreams Without Borders, I have been curious to see more of the people and places of Guadalajara.  Héctor has graciously led the photography team to ensure that this project would portray the culture and life as seen through their eyes.

Included in this article are Emilio Bracho, Carlos Calles, Edgar Adolfo Espinoza, Johathan Gonzalez, Adriana Guerra, Flor Lopez, Juan José López, Alex Mange,  Héctor Navarro, Paco Navarro, Iszrael Padilla and René Valencia – a selection of the city’s finest and most passionate artists.

Thank you for making this come alive and for taking us to your special place!

Sit back and enjoy the ride…

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“Take Us To …” es una serie de viajes por  el mundo que muestra  varios fotógrafos en un lugar determinado. El objetivo es mostrarles una mirada al interior de la ciudad así como el día a día.

Hoy volamos  sin escalas a Guadalajara, también conocido como “La Perla de Occidente” y la segunda ciudad más grande de México.

Después de trabajar con Héctor en varios proyectos, como “DreamswithoutBorders”, he tenido la curiosidad de ver y conocer más gente y lugares de Guadalajara. Héctor ha llevado amablemente el equipo de fotografía móvil asegurando de que este proyecto retrate la cultura y  vida vista a través de sus ojos.

Los participantes en este artículo son Emilio Bracho, Carlos Calles, Edgar A. Espinoza, Jonathan González, Adriana Guerra, Flor López  , Juan José López, Alex Mange, Paco Navarro, Iszrael Padilla, René Valencia y Héctor Navarro. Una selección de artistas apasionados de esta ciudad.

Gracias por hacer esto posible y poder llevarnos a este lugar especial

Pónganse cómodos y disfruten el viaje.

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TakeUsToGuadalajara @wearejuxt from Luis Gmo Navarro on Vimeo.

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Meet The Photographers

Emilio Bracho 

Currently dedicated to Social Media/Web/Photography, live in GDL, a free soul, enjoy to play guitar and take iPhone photos…

A true Hard Rock/Metal head, proud dad/husband and mobile photographylover.

Instagram + iPhone have allowed me to explore the world of photography in a way that wasn’t possible before, addicted to it since day one…
Share, learn, see, grow, expand…

Like to improvise as I go… love bnw…

Currently active on several projects with Igers Mexico / Igers Guadalajara

Favorite quote is a traditional chinese saying, “Drink Water, Remember Source”
飲水思源 (yin-shui-ssu-yüan)

Website // Instagram  // EyeEm // Facebook // Email

“Hendrix” 

never before I felt so free…

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Carlos Calles

Carlos Calles aka Chasey has been a mobile photographer for two and a half years. He has studied Photography at the Tec de Monterrey and enjoys sharing his pictures through the internet.

He likes to travel around the world and capture different cultures. Chasey is a drummer and has his own Rock band in Guadalajara.

Loves art in general.

Carlos Calles es fotógrafo móvil desde hace dos años y medio. Estudió fotografía en el Tec de Monterrey y disfruta compartiendo sus fotos en Internet. 


Chasey, como es conocido en el ambiente de la fotografía móvil, gusta de viajar por el mundo y capturar con sus fotos las diferentes culturas. Es baterista de Rock en una banda en Guadalajara y le gusta la pintura y el arte en general.

Website // Flickr // Instagram // EyeEm

“Minerva Guadalajara” 

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Edgar Adolfo Espinoza

Mobile Photographer / Member of Igers Mexico and Igers Guadalajara

Fotografo Movil / Miembro de Igers Mexico e Igers Guadalajara

 

Instagram // Facebook // twitter // Email

“my new heaven”

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Jonathan Gonzalez

I am an engineer and mobile and web programmer.  This is something I enjoy doing very much, for hours and as a hobby.

Two and half years ago I met Instagram, one of the social networks that sparked my love for photography. I still remember my first group show with Igers Guadalajara, I screamed like crazy and it was an excellent experience.

I don’t have a preferred style of photography because I always experiment taking photos from pets, sky, architecture, macro, food and anything that is put in front of the lens. I think photography is a great way to express and share details of everyday life and why not? experiment a little of creativity.

Soy ingeniero y programador para móviles y web, es algo que disfruto mucho y lo puedo hacer por horas y por hobby.

Hace dos años y medio conocí Instagram, una de las redes sociales que despertó mi gusto por la fotografía. Aun recuerdo mi primera exposición colectiva con Igers Guadalajara, grite como loco y fue una excelente experiencia.

No tengo un estilo preferido en la fotografía, porque siempre experimento tomando fotos a mascotas, cielo, arquitectura, macros, comida y cualquier cosa que se ponga frente al lente. Creo que la fotografía es una buena forma de expresarnos y compartir detalles del día a día y por qué no experimentar un poco con la creatividad.

Website // Instagram // Flickr // Email

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Adriana Guerra

Adriana Guerra has been a mobile photographer for two and a half years.  She is a member of Gang Family and Gang Family Mexico. Her photographs are recognized frequently with awards and mentions on Instagram. She has participated in collective exhibitions organized by Igers Mexico in Guadalajara, such as Mobility Expo and Bazart Expo. Her photos have been used by Tequila Cuervo in ad campaigns and packaging.

Adriana is a visual artist, mostly oil and acrylic paintings. She enjoys other artistic manifestations, especially travel photography in the United States and Europe.

Adriana Guerra es fotógrafa móvil desde hace dos años y medio, participa como miembro y moderadora de Gang Family México y ha sido reconocida con frecuentes menciones en Instagram. Ha formado parte de exposiciones colectivas organizadas por Igers Mexico en Guadalajara como Expo Movilidad y Expo Bazart. Conocida como @nanawarren_gf, sus fotos han sido parte de campañas de publicidad en espectaculares y empaques de Casa Cuervo, empresa Tequilera.
Adriana es pintora y sus obras principales son óleos y acrílicos. Disfruta otras manifestaciones artísticas y en especial la fotografía de viajes que ha hecho en USA y Europa.

Instagram

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Flor Lopez

Mobile photographer.

Promoting culture and tourism in Guadalajara.

Traveler.

Discovered her passion for photography through the lens of her cell phone and now devotes her time to the study, promotion and practice.

She has exhibited at MUMEDI (Mexican Museum of Design, México City), Yokohama and Nagoya, Japan, and some other places at Guadalajara.
Passionate about vodka, koi fish, rock, Mayan culture, sarcasm, pink elephants, beer, blue, sea, mimes and clowns.

Instagram // EyeEm // Email

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Juan José López

I’m an architect and am 28 years old, I live in Guadalajara
Lover of music and film.
The love of photography began a few months ago thanks to Instagram, where I have been able to create, share and learn about photography.
Inspired by a minimalist style in general, exploiting the color, playing with the architecture and sky.
In three words: Less is More

Soy Arquitecto y tengo 28 años de edad, vivo en Guadalajara 

Amante de la música y el cine.
El gusto por la fotografía comenzó hace algunos meses gracias a Instagram, en donde he podido crear, compartir y aprender sobre fotografía.
Inspirado generalmente por un estilo minimalista, explotando el color, jugando con la arquitectura y el cielo.
En tres palabras: Menos es Más

Instagram // twitter // Email

“Lonely Boy” 

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Alex Mange

I have lived life through my eyes before all other senses.  I always escape reality by creating other worlds with the help of painting and photography.

The first time I took a photo with a mobile device, my sense of reality changed again as it happened some time ago with painting and analog photography.  Now everything has gotten faster and everywhere I stand I feel more awake, because every place and space has a story to tell.

Instagram

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Héctor Navarro

From 2011 to this day, my mobile has expanded the capacity of my eyes. It allows me to capture, classify and share all of the everyday moments and details that grab my attention. I use diverse themes, ideas, techniques, styles and sometimes even experimentation in the attempt to find new expressive languages.

I never thought that this personal means to collect images would turn into instant connected situations. Sometimes, the visual aspect to this activity is relegated to the background for it is the experiences, moments and preferences shared with thousands of people that becomes most important. Thus, creative and professional relations, friendships, and a new starting point towards countless opportunities have emerged for me.

I am passionate about the combination of technology, social networks, photo, arts, friendship, constant learning, and the outcome of something conceived in the virtual world and existing in the real one.

All I can say is that I found a platform for self-expression, growth, sharing, creating and dreaming about new ideas that lead, little by little, to a better place to live in. A platform that makes me feel satisfied about every single detail of life while meeting extraordinary people.

Desde el 2011 mi dispositivo móvil se convirtió en una extensión de mis ojos para capturar los detalles y momentos que llaman mi atención en un día cualquiera, clasificarlas y compartirlas de diversas formas con temas, ideas, técnicas, estilos y en algunos casos con la oportunidad de experimentar con ellas para tratar de encontrar nuevos lenguajes de expresión.

Nunca imaginé cómo se transformaría esta forma personal de recolección visual a situaciones hyper contectadas al instante, donde en algunos casos la importancia de la imagen pasa a un segundo plano para dar relevancia a las experiencias , momentos y gustos entre miles de personas generandose relaciones creativas y profesionales , amistades y un punto de partida nuevo a infinitas posibilidades.

Me emociona la mezcla de tecnología, redes sociales , fotografía, artes, amistades, aprendizaje continuo y lo que el resultado de todo esto puede llegar naciendo de mundos virtuales al mundo real.
Simplemente puedo resumir que encontré una plataforma para expresar, compartir, crecer, construir y seguir soñando con ideas que poco a poco van creando un mejor lugar donde vivir con satisfacción en cada mínimo detalle de nuestras vidas encontrándote en el camino a personas maravillosas.

Website // EyeEm // Instagram // We Are Juxt

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Paco Navarro 

Born in Guadalajara, Mexico, 1976.
Started shooting with an old Minolta camera back in 1989.
In 2005 co-founded Oh!estudio with photographer Jose Luis Hernández.
From 2006 to 2013 was an Executive Producer for an animation and vfx company in Mexico.
In 2013 he got back into the photography business, specializing in portraiture and as a Getty Images editorial collaborator.

Website // about.me // Facebook // twitter // Instagram // EyeEm // Flickr // Email

Iszrael Padilla

Born in Guadalajara, Mexico, 1994.

When I bought the iPhone in 2009, I started to do casual photography.

In 2012, I met a few Instagramers.  That meeting started my addiction to mobile photography.

I constantly try new ways to edit my photos and have found new ideas in making abstract works.

Website // Instagram // twitter // Email

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René Valencia

Occupation: Publisher

I’ve had a great interest in photography since childhood. I was fascinated by the amount of Life magazines collected by my parents, basically for its spectacular images.

When I started working as a journalist and publisher I rediscovered the aesthetic value of photojournalism.

After failed attempts with an SLR in the 90s, my life changed when I bought an iPhone in late 2010. Gradually I discovered Instagram, the usefulness of the filters, labels, groups, other social networks and finally I began to experiment with editing applications and to be interested in the technical aspects of photography as art.

Working in the city center has given me the opportunity to develop a taste for street photography and start, along with others like me, to portray the soul of a city that resides on its habitants.

Ocupación: Editor

He tenido un gran interés en la fotografía desde la infancia. Me fascinaban los ejemplares de la revista Life que coleccionaban mis padres, fundamentalmente por sus imágenes espectaculares. Posteriormente, en mi trabajo como periodista y editor redescubrí el valor estético del fotoperiodismo.  

Después de varios intentos fallidos con una SLR de los años 90, mi vida cambió cuando me compré un iPhone a finales del 2010. Poco a poco fue descubriendo Instagram, la utilidad de los filtros, etiquetas, grupos, otras redes sociales y finalmente comencé a experimentar con aplicaciones de edición y a interesarme en los aspectos técnicos de la fotografía como arte.

Mi trabajo en el centro de la ciudad me dio la oportunidad de desarrollar el gusto por la fotografía de la calle, y empezar junto con otros como yo, a retratar el alma de una ciudad que son sus habitantes.

Instagram // EyeEm // iphoneart // AMPt // Flickr // twitter // Pinterest

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We are so grateful with all the people involved in this project. First we want to thank to Luis Guillermo Navarro as the director and editor of this video , Music Pumcayó group and the Ministry of Culture in Guadalajara, specially to Lic, Ricardo Duarte.

Estamos muy agradecidos con todas las personas involucradas en este proyecto. Primeramente queremos dar las gracias a Luis Guillermo Navarro como director y editor en la realización de eete video, Música por la agrupación Pumcayó  y a la Secreataría de Cultura del Ayuntamiento de Guadalajara, en especial al Secretario de Cultura Lic. Ricardo Duarte.

The Art of Critique (Part 2)

Photo Credit: Rob McGuinness

The Art of Critique (Part 2) by Andre H, Part 1

The greatest threat to freedom is the absence of criticism. ~Wole Soyinka

Critiques can be a little scary. We are essentially asking someone to purposely look at our work and tell us what we’re doing right, and wrong. But how often have you countered your critic with the question, “how do I fix what’s not working? How do I make my work stronger?” The critique is a conversation, a two-way road. A critique isn’t just someone looking at your work and sharing their thoughts. It is an opportunity to pick their brain, learn as much as much as possible. Ask questions. Engage the person. Have those questions answered. Leave so inspired that you want to immediately dive into improving your work. This is why it is so important to carefully choose who reviews your work, making sure you choose photographers who’s work you admire.

We don’t like being told we’re wrong, or that we failed. Yet, we all want to grow and have our decisions reinforced with the positive. Critiques are a necessary pill that must be taken in order to improve our work. It’s up to you to decide just how easy that pill will be to swallow. The sooner you learn how to take and interpret a critique the quicker you will begin to see your work develop, while making some new friends along the way. Keep in mind that giving a critique can be as difficult as receiving one. If you’re asking someone to give their time to critique your work, and they agree to take a look, its safe to say they genuinely want to help you, not hurt you. So keep an open mind.

Photo Credit: Jonas Karlson

The critique is like photography itself, subjective. And should be taken with a grain of salt. You’ve heard the saying, “everyone’s a critic.” Critiques from the ‘right’ people can sometimes be brutally painful to the ego, gnawing at the soul of some. Yet, like an amazing, unforgettable photograph, they can change perspectives on life and creative vision. Yet, a critique from the ‘wrong’ person, i.e., an unsolicited critique, or someone who really doesn’t want to do so, can also fall on the other end of the perspective—confusing, hurtful, and worthless. Whether you’ve experienced one, or all of these, I’m here to help shed some light on the process. In ‘The Art Of The Critique’ (part 1) we discussed how to give a critique. This time I will discuss how to receive a critique, how to find the right person(s) to review your work, and hopefully give you a new perspective on how to get the most out of a critique, with your soul and ego fully intact.

Finding the right people to review your work
I mentioned in ‘The Art Of The Critique’ (part 1) that I have given and received my fair share of critiques in my time, and continue to do so. I have always chosen the people to review my work very carefully, with exception to the few times when I didn’t have a choice in the matter. The people I choose are doing the caliber of work that I would like to be doing myself—my photographer heroes.

Photo Credit: Alexia Stins

I have seen the full spectrum of personalities from students and instructors, and their reactions to giving and receiving critiques. I have had my work critiqued by some of the most amazing photographers, some my heroes of the documentary & photojournalism worlds, Ed Kashi, James Nachtwey, Richard Koci Hernandez, Emilio Morenatti. And, I have experienced putting my work through the portfolio ‘meat grinder’ that is the Eddie Adams Workshop late night portfolio review. Each photographer had his own way of conducting a critique, some spoke kindly focusing only on the positive. Others were jaded, throwing scathing, thoughtless remarks without any care for who was sitting across the table from them. While others gracefully married the positive and negative into a mesmerizing dance that left me striving to engage, pushing my work further. Yet in the end it was up to me to direct the critique to make sure I received exactly what I needed. These people weren’t going to read my mind—ask my questions for me. Nor were they going to assume I understood every comment they made.

Some may say this is the most challenging part of the critique, finding the right person to review your work. Here are a few tips to help you do just that:

  1. Refrain from asking your mom, partner, family members, or circle of friends. Often times these people are only trying to be nice. If you want sunshine blown up your ass ask one of these people. But be prepared to hear nothing constructive, usually. Though there are exceptions.
  2. Ask a variety of photographers from various genres who know nothing of you or your work. This will help produce a broad spectrum of content for you to sift through for consideration.
  3. Look for photographers you admire in your genre, or that are proven masters at what they do, who are at a level you are striving for.
  4. No matter how successful, or popular a photographer, they are accessible, and most are approachable, nice people. All you have to do is ask. It may take a few attempts but be patient. You’ll be surprised at how many pro photographers will give you a few minutes of their time.
  5. If you are meeting in person, or by phone, and ask for 15 minutes of their time, be prepared to finish within 15 minutes, unless they offer more time. Being considerate goes a long way, especially if you want to follow-up with them.
  6. If you are publicly posting your photos to IG, Flickr, etc, be prepared for the unsolicited critique. These can be worthless at times, and even downright hurtful, ignorant. Other times, a diamond in the rough. Be careful of these and take them with a grain of salt. Ask the person to elaborate on their comment. More often than not genuine comments will be followed by genuine discussions.

Photo Credit: Massimo

Preparing for the critique
Entering a critique you need to be prepared to discuss your work and processes intelligently. Think about your work and what you hope to accomplish from this critique.

  1. Put up your best work. Focus on the most critical. Include images you feel most strongly about and those you are questioning the most. For example, when you can’t decide between two or three images. Include all three and ask for an opinion of which is strongest.
  2. Don’t overwhelm the person with more than 10-12 images. Take time to self-edit first. If you must show more than 15 images include a contact sheet of additional images. In my experience, during a critique I have been asked, “did you try this angle, or crop this way?” In which I responded “yes” but did not have the image to show. After that I began carrying contact sheets so the person could see the different variations I had attempted. Not everyone will ask for a contact sheet. Keep it on hand just in case.
  3. Create a series of questions that you want to ask your reviewer. The conversation can and will go off on tangents. You want to make sure you cover all of your bases. It’s easy to forget, especially when you’re sitting across from your photography hero.
  4. Don’t get offensive if you hear something negative. After all, it is only photography. A good practice is to critique your own work beforehand as if it was someone else’s work. What might you say about it? This will help prepare you for anything negative that might be said.
  5. Please leave the attitude at home. Don’t go in thinking your work is perfect. It’s not. Be happy for that. If it was perfect you’d probably get really bored with photography and move on to something else.
  6. Don’t expect only positive feedback. Remember, we need to know what we’re doing wrong in order to get better. Yet we need to hear what we’re also doing right to affirm our current abilities. It’s the photographer’s yin & yang.
  7. If a person says something that you don’t agree with, ask what they would have done differently. This shows that you are eager to learn, and progress.
  8. Don’t shun your reviewer’s opinion, or tell them they’re wrong because you disagree. I have experienced this in the past. This is a quick way to turn people off, and close doors in your face.
  9. Thank your reviewer when finished. Ask if you can come back, or resubmit your work for a second round review after corrections are made.
  10. It’s ok to be disappointed and sometimes feel hurt. Don’t retaliate with a random negative critique of their work. This is very unprofessional and only reflects negatively on you.
  11. Takes notes during, or write like a madman right after in a journal or notebook. You’d be surprised how fast we begin to forget details. Specifically make note of consistent comments that you continue to hear from various people. These are the points that you should really pay attention to.
  12. Once you’re finished receiving all the feedback you want, act on it, shoot, experiment with the newly acquired ideas. Don’t sit on it and do nothing with it. You’ll only find yourself feeling disappointed.
  13. Want, need, strive for comments beyond the ego-stroking techno gibberish that plagues the online communities, “Wow! Nice light! Cool! Amazing!” These do nothing to help you better understand your mistakes, or your work. They are lazy, empty critiques. If you are faced with comments like this ask the person to elaborate.

Photo Credit: Federica Corbelli

Conclusion
Like most people out there I was not born with a thick skin. It took me many years of critiques, hurt feelings, misunderstandings, and hard work in art school experiencing both good and bad critiques to understand myself, and the critique. I’ve made just about every mistake possible you can imagine relating to both giving and receiving a critique.

In the end, hearing negative comments about your work can be a jagged pill—hard to swallow. It can feel like a personal hit against who you are as a person, especially if you put everything into your work. But it really isn’t. Believe me. The point is, the more we explore both the successful and unsuccessful aspects of our work, the more we grow as artists. So ask questions, get feedback and keep shooting. Be honest with yourself about your work and your expectations. Personally review your own work. Be prepared to hear the positive, and the negative. Soon you’ll begin to see your work develop

The Emotion of Jahsharn

The Emotion of Jahsharn by Anna Cox

Fading Slowly 

My soul is overwhelmed by so many emotions.
Yet my eyes have mastered the art of concealment.

My mind relives the pain that consumed me as I heard those words.
Yet my voice is as calm as the sea breeze through your window.

Tears overflow within me, drowning all that should be said, questions that cannot be answered.
Yet I stare clearly into your eyes, revealing my false strength.

You lay there, no longer strong. Your voice is silent, your humour is gone. I hold your hand that cannot hold mine, even my kiss is lost to you.

Yet my arms reach out to embrace the memory of you, while my heart cries out to a reality that is cruel and unforgiving.

Slowly you are fading…….

Anna’s Introduction *Originally posted on August 5, 2012

I came across Paula Gardener (Jahsharn) while working on a showcase and was immediately drawn to her portraits. Each held such depth that they the drew me in to wanting to know more. The raw emotions captured in the eyes of the subject is what was so moving. Portraiture is hard to begin with but Paula seems to capture an array of emotion flawlessly. Paired with her beautiful writing, these portraits are heart wrenching. Grab some coffee and come sit down with Paula and I as we explore her influences and craft more in depth.

Sons

A:  Anna  P:  Paula

A:  Give me a sneak peak into who you are away from the camera.

P: I am a wife, a mother of four and a child of the universe. I own a small photography business by which my preferred specialism is portraiture. Alongside my photography I love to express myself through creative writing, I currently have a blog that fulfils that compelling desire to write. Usually I compose a piece poetic literature to accompany my work.
My foundation is very earthly, I try to give back to the earth as much I take out. So through this consciousness my family and I have embarked on Urban Farming. We have two plots of land where we grow organic vegetables, while teaching our children about the values of sowing and harvesting. I also work a few days with the London Ambulance Service, at their HQ in London.

If I Could Forget

A: How did  you mobile photography journey begin? How has it changed your craft?

P: During the latter part of 2011, I happened upon a blog on iPhone photography apps, I was amazed at the photographic examples given for the applications. Well every creative bone inside me could not wait to buy my first app called Hipstamatic. Like hundreds before me I was hooked! However, I’m a self confessed control freak when it comes to lighting and composition. After awhile the constraints within the Hipstamatic’s filters and square format stifled me. With this said I embarked on finding the apps that would complement my style and help me evolve creatively.  My art is my life! I wrote once before that through mobile photography my interpretation of life has been revolutionized. I am like a child at times, (which is great since I’m forty). I just can’t stop downloading every visual aspect of my surroundings and transposing it into my mental creative log. This is only possible with the iPhone. I can capture my children playing, someone walking, a reflection of myself, nothing I see is ever missed. Life for me is an evolving journey of the choices we make, Art for me is a visual interpretation of those choices, captured in a moment of clarity.

A: Your portraits are amazing. Each one  conveys such raw emotion. I am blown away by the depth of each one of them.

P: Portrait photography for me is a relationship that needs to be nurtured from the soul! Every portrait I have taken whether it be of myself, family or friends, was composed from an emotion so deep it was spiritual. I know to some of you reading this, it might sound a bit far fetched. However I can’t just take a photograph of someone and say look here or smile there. I need to feel that connection that makes me scream Yes! That’s the shot! If I’m experiencing those emotion while capturing the portrait, hopefully the viewer will relive that moment too.
Light and negative space plays a fundamental part in my work, when I photograph someone I’m capturing the semblance of that individual. I’m trying to replicate that spiritual sense I’m feeling from them into an image. So if the light is to harsh or soft, whether there is too much negative space or colour is very important. There has been situations where the light has been less than perfect or the space was inadequate. That’s when apps like Snapseed, ScratchCam and Camera Awesome become invaluable.

The Eldest

A: Tell me about a series that is close to your heart.

P: The series that is closest to my heart is the one I did on the human emotion. During the time of this series a close family member was diagnosed with brain cancer. There was nothing that could be done, all we can do is be there for them until the end. The emotions that ran through my family and I were immense and at times uncontrollable. I suppose doing this series was my way of understanding my own emotions as raw as they were.

The Youngest

A: How does your life influence your art?

P:  The core foundation of my creativity is my life, I’m driven by my wonderful family. My typical evening is spent writing songs with my children as my husband plays the guitar, just watching them is an inspiration overload. I am constantly amazed by my friends on iPhoneArt and Flickr, Wow! They truly inspire me to a new level! Life pushes me everyday to create, I suppose it’s my way of giving back the beauty I’ve been privileged to see.

If you intersted in delving more into Paula’s portaits go here.

Tumblr: Jahsharn 
Twitter: Jahsharn
Eye’em: Jahsharn

Art Critique & Community vol. 7 : Minimalism

This month we are looking at the work of Crystal @faithmichael for the genre of Minimalism. On it’s face, minimalism seems like an easy task to accomplish but it is actually a very exact science. A minimal work needs to be distilled to just show the barest forms and color to allow the viewer to experience the work without distraction. The Minimalist movement became more popular in the 1950’s although minimal works existed as early as the 1700. Minimalism has close ties to pop art and conceptual art.

Critique written by Rose Sherwood

I  will attempt to write about a subject that I know very little about, minimalist photography. I had to do a bit of research on the subject of minimalism.  There is a plethora of information about the subject,  so much time was spent reading, taking notes and actually stripping away unnecessary information to only leave the important essential core of what minimalism is. The three photos that I am critiquing all present different subject matter.  I do not know if they are by the same artist so I will not make the assumption that the three images are shot by the same person.

The first image is of a slatted fence.  The fence is stained with a red-wood color. In the image there are three darker shadowed shapes that are a darker shade of red brown color. Two of the shadows present diagonal direction into the image and the third is vertical and emphasizes the direction of the wooden slats.  There are nails present in the wood and the stain is weathered and enhances the texture of the grain of the wood.  The spaces between the slats is very narrow and what is behind the fence remains a mystery.

The artist describes this fence as being one of the alleys in the neighborhood.  It is photographed head on so that the spacing of the slats provides a rhythm to the piece. The background does not provide any information to this image.  You can see bits of green if you look closely.  Because I photograph detailed compositions, I have the response of wanting to tear this fence down to see what is on the other side or, at least, to punch a hole in the fence to peep through.

The quality of the image is such that it has a low contrast which flattens the total surface of the picture.   I would have liked the artist to play with this aspect a bit more.  More contrast or ambiance in an editing app like Snapseed would have brought both the shape of the shadows and the texture out a bit more.  I do not know, however, the intention of the artist.

As a minimalist image, it fits.  It has a limited palette with limited scale, direction, and texture.  It is simple,  but is it too simple that it is not as engaging a subject as it could be?  In researching minimalism, I encountered  much writing by Steve Johnson.  Mr. Johnson writes a lot about the minimalist photographer.  He writes about its perspective from a graphic design point of view and also from a reductive process point of view.  I really liked the reductive view of working with an image because you, as the artist have complete control over what the end image looks like;  the artist has the ability to  strip away all the distractions and frills demonstrated by the image leaving only its essential characteristics and what you were attracted to originally as the photographer.

The fence photographer has specified that he/she was attracted to the texture and the gentle slow collapse and aging of the boards but the repetition of the wood was also important.   This image is successful for presenting the graphic rhythm of the fence but I wish that the shapes of the shadows and the textures could have been pulled out a bit more.  But, perhaps, in doing that, I would have pushed the image out of the genre of minimalism.

What Crystal had to say about her image: 

The alleys of my neighborhood are my favorite place to practice composing compositions.  The gentle collapse of this fence and it’s delicately weathered texture were just so elegant. I thought there was a chance to describe some of the subtle depth of this detail without losing the graphic quality of the repeating boards.

The second  image of the surface of water presents us with a full swirling color field of gray-blue.  Reminiscent of a Helen Frankenthaler painting. There is the barest amount of color, texture, and detail in this image.  It is minimal in its subject and the little light and shading that break the blue surface are not construed as focal points.  If the artist had pushed the contrast and heightened it to get more darks and lights, and also more texture, would it be a more engaging image?  Well, taking a screen shot, editing through Snapseed and increasing the contrast was what I did and I liked the image more.  I also sent the image into the B&W arena. I was able to better focus on the detail of the submerged rocks.  I liked the image more.  Has this artist gone far enough with the reductive process?  Taking an image and pushing out the elements that are there so that there is something more to be seen?  I am not the artist of either of these images.  My judgement might be disabled by learning more about the artist and what style their body of work contains. In this case knowing more about the photographer would enable me to know if their work is successful in the minimalist world where “… less is more…”!

What Crystal had to say about her image:

For me to feel like an image I’ve produced is truly “minimal” I need to apply those principles to the entire process (the shot and the edit). I have spent most of the summer working on more complex and descriptive compositions with light and shadow in monochrome shooting with hipstamatic, cropping sparingly, and then editing in VSCOcam.  I wanted to utilize a similar process utilizing VSCOcam only for some 3:2 color images. For this photo I wanted to focus on the texture of the water with hints of what lay just beneath the surface.

The artist’s image of the fire escape is the most playful, lyrical image of the trio of pictures received to critique.  This image, for me, is the most engaging of the three pictures.  It has a strong composition based on the lines created by light, shadow and real object.  The textures and lines of the brick wall play well with the solid black lines  horizontally  and vertically set by the banister in front.  But it is the lighter shadow that plays above the banister’s rail that, for me is the most enticing and interesting. I don’t know where it originates from.  The object that is producing this gentle shadow is completely out of the picture. Yet, here it is like a sheet of music appearing, connecting and touching four round black notes, regularly spaced, becoming part of the banister.  The rules of light source, light direction and production of a shadow do not compute in this area of the image.  Why and how this light shadow is in the picture remains a mystery.  This is intriguing.  Is there an extended balcony that is above that is projecting the shadow onto the brick wall?  There are no other shadows except for the shadow present under and at the bottom of the brick wall.  So the light source must be from above.  Perhaps, it is another fire escape but the rhythm of the lines has changed rather than lines that are evenly spaced, these lines travel in triplicate.  This is the most perplexing and engaging image and I keep looking and thinking about it.

If these images are shot by the same person, then I do believe that they fit the genre of minimalism.   The artist has stated that these images were 3:2 and edited through the VSCOcam app.  They all have a similar look but I would not gather them together as a series.  The subject matter separates them from each other.  They must stand on their own merits.  They are minimalist images.  Are they successful as minimalist images?  As stated above, I want to know more about how (in regards to both process and intent) the artist works and see a body of work that encompasses the understanding of minimalism. I have a feeling that there is more to it than photographing “…less is more…”

Minimalism has rules that artists follow.  Some attend to them with rigor and others are looser in their adherence.  Many of the articles that were read mentioned the importance of composition (the rule of thirds and leading lines) ,  simplicity in the subject matter photographed , the use of bold, strong color,  an awareness of the background,  strength to engage the viewer(s) of the work,  paring the photograph down to its’ essential  elements and the ability to tell a story.

What Crystal had to say about his images:

When I first started taking pictures with my phone I would (literally) have dreams about this fire escape shadow at night. I was still pretty shy about standing in the street taking pictures of walls with my phone but eventually managed to grab one. I walk by this building often and decided it was worth revisiting. Particularly since the light on this occasion illuminated this wonderful play of lines between the shadow of the wall and the bannister just in front of it.

Critique written by Stephanie

So much detail. Yet so simple.

An interesting portrait of a fence: color, texture, the hint of what lie behind the fence. Hinges nails shadows….o my!

I found myself having to zoom in so I could peek into the sliver.

It was fun being able to see so clearly the brick wall and items.

It’s not easy to make the ordinary stand out.

The shadow on the hinge and borders adds dimensional. Choosing to capture this with the shadows shows a discerning eye. Gorgeous!

There only one thing that sort of throws me off. The center shadow feels displaced.

I can’t help but wonder how this would look without it claiming attention.

I suppose if it’s a fixed object and  can’t be avoided.

I think in contrast to the lineal aspects of this fine composition it’s an oddity.

Again…that my own personal taste.

You obviously have some good dreams! This is such a spot on composition. Its good to question how something would look if hung on a wall framed.  I learned that early on determining whether or not a photograph was worth keeping.

This has texture and color and patterns. It’s subtle but interesting. A good example of minimal which proves to be more. A modern statement for ones walls.

The subtle flow of colors are very appealing. The overall tonal values work well. I appreciate the various shades of blue. The foreground of rocks are what really bring life to this. It’s very interesting to zoom in closer on them. Doing such creates more depth and texture. The minimal yet strong contrast of the coral and kohl rocks provides an interestingness to the whole composition.

You definitely have accomplished your goal to focus on the waters texture.

Yet for me personally, I found it a challenge to appreciate.

Having to really look see I was able to define what really worked for this.

Again, that is just my POV.

The purity of a solid shot without the fanfare of post processing is the backbone by which one can have license to edit as they see fit.

While it is best to frame ones image straight in camera without having to crop, sometimes a nice crop can work well.

Our Panelists:

Rose Sherwood Rose is a retired art teacher. She  taught art on the elementary level for 22 years.  She also taught on the high school level and in a museum setting too.  She enjoyed teaching and misses the students.  Before teaching she worked in brain research because her first college degrees were in both the fields of Biology and English.   She met and married a great guy and when their son, Matthew,  was born, she went back to school to study art.  She  continued her education at RIT and earned an MFA in painting and photography and then returned and acquired a MsT in art education.Her teaching career was very full but one of the memorable times was being honored to be a recipient of a Fulbright Memorial Fund Fellowship to study in Japan.  It was a pivotal experience that changed her and her teaching practices. Her students benefitted from her experiences. Their daughter, Laura, introduced Rose to IG and returning to all things of photography has occurred.  IG was a way to communicate with family and friends about T., her husband, and his bone marrow transplant.  She has been as active caretaker for him.

// IG // Juxt //

 

Stephanie I am just another person trying to stop time. Photography helps.

Going mobile makes sure I don’t miss a second.

Well…at least it could,  if I see(seize) it.

 //Web// IG // Juxt //
Our Artist:
Crystal  is a creative hailing from Ohio. She works mainly in color showing her audience that less is more on a regular basis. She has an eye for detail and engages the every day objects to create a portfolio of minimalism.Her work is currently available for purchase in the Cincinnati area.
// IG // Juxt //
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As always, We Are Juxt and Anna would like to say thank you to our panelists and submitters for their willingness to take part in this forum.  We couldn’t do this without you. 
Next month we will be looking at architecture if you would like to submit work or be a panelists send an email to juxtcritique@gmail.com

Dan Marker-Moore Flies

Dan Marker-Moore flies.

Check his Instagram account (@danorst) for proof. He pretty much skies over every city he visits and takes out an iPhone like, “That looks good.” He shoots an incredible city skyline or a beautiful landscape and then lands on the ground to edit the images for his followers. Then, he does it again. And again. And again.

When he isn’t flying, he’s hiking to great heights. One day, I saw him drive through the blur of white fog up a winding road towards Mount Wilson, a short drive from Los Angeles, California. We hiked through a tunnel, a rocky, dusty road and saw the fog below us as Moore set up his tripods. It was like his backyard, the way he knew where to turn and where to shoot.

Beyond flying and hiking up mountains for great views, Dan Marker-Moore also has a different identity. @danorst is @payphones.[instapress userid=”payphones” piccount=”10″ size=”90″ effect=”0″]

Through this effort, Moore has documented the nearly forgotten art of #payphoneography. Though many payphones are disappearing from existance, Moore has found a way to keep them alive through photography, shooting the payphones he finds, whether they are still working or simply a payphone carcass of what used to be. The #payphoneography tag has also inspired others to document the relics of the streets and the tag has taken off with close to 8,000 images on Instagram.

Through @payphones or @danorst, Moore has been able to document his life and art with great dexterity. On or off his iPhone, he’s crafted work that inspires the viewer to find the beauty in the ordinary and the magnificence of exploring the unknown. Whether he is flying, hiking or running around a concrete jungle, Moore is a photographer whose talent soars.

 

A.  Everyone seems to have either a defining moment or a series of minor moments where they fell in love with their art form. What was this process like for you? When did you fall in love with photography?

D.  Instagram. I took photos before Instagram, but I didn’t have a place to share my photos. With Instagram I was able to share new photos everyday with people. I got so wrapped up in it I made a second account, @payphones, so I could share even more photos. It was that daily schedule of publishing photos that really taught me a lot about photography and gave me a lot of hours of practice behind the lens.

 

A.  How about mobile photography? When did you realize this was going to be something you focused on?

D.  Mobile photography is awesome! It’s astonishing how advanced these pocket cameras are, and with apps the possibilities are endless. Having a camera in your phone gives you constant access to photo opportunities… and for the first year or so on Instagram I took all of my photos with my iPhone. This January I got the Olympus EM5, a micro 4/3 camera, that is much like a DSLR but much more compact like a rangefinder. This camera is like an iphone on steroids, it has super powers like the ability to see in the dark and optically zoom across town. It lets me take the photos not possible on an iPhone. I feel there is no reason to limit yourself to taking photos on your phone. Most of my newer photos on IG are taken with the EM5.

 

A.  You’ve done a great job of using the filming feature on Instagram. How do you think this feature adds to the app in general?

D.  Video is fun. It opens up another dimension to the visual experience of IG. You are limited to the iPhone camera and IG’s software but you can make the most of it by shooting only in excellent light, like golden hour. I’ve had fun playing around with time-lapse video on IG. I’ve recently purchased a kitchen timer to help me time out intervals.

A.  You also alternate between the mobile photography and add a different camera to your feed. But this is sill instant. Can you explain to readers how you use an SD card to make it instant?

D.  I have the Eye-fi SD memory card which has it’s own ad-hoc wifi network that syncs your photos from your camera with your phone. All the newer cameras have this built in and some of the newer cameras have apps and let you run Instagram right in your camera.

 

A.  Do you edit those images on your phone as well?

D.  When I post a photo on the spot I’ll do some adjustments on my phone. Usually PhotoForge2 and Afterlight. The rest of my photos get sorted and edited in Lightroom on the computer, I also store my archives of iPhone photos here. You definitely have access to another level of control working with a computer.

A.  As a part of the Los Angeles community of Instagram users, what are three of your favorite Los Angeles locations?

D.  I take a ton of pictures of the L.A. skyline, so I’m always looking for new perspectives, but time after time I return to some classic spots.  The Hollywood hills has many vantages, one of the best being the Bowl Overlook. From the top at night you see the US101 traffic as a river of light flowing right into downtown. The bridges downtown are another great view. On the East side of the Whittier bridge there is a low fence with a hill on the other side. From that hill in the Summer you can watch the Sun set right behind downtown. Warning this area can get sketchy. City Hall has the best view of downtown, it’s open to the public, just register with security and ask to visit the Tom Bradley room. At the top you find an amazing 360 view of LA.

 

A.  You’ve done some traveling as well. What have been your favorite places to photograph around the world?

D.  Favorite is a tough call. One time I rode on a helicopter with my girlfriend (@fattymcfattersonmcgee) into the Grand Canyon at sunrise and landed for breakfast…that was pretty fun.

A.  How has photography altered your life?

D.  I definitely catch a lot more sunsets, climb more mountains, and fly around more cities than before.

 

A.  Your Moonrise Time Slice got a lot of attention. How did that project come to fruition?

D.  Lately I’ve found myself tracking the moon and following its path. I’ve taken several time-lapses of the moon rising and setting. This particular rise I managed to line up with downtown and have the moon come from behind the skyline as an orange pumpkin and rise up through light clouds morphing into a glowing white ball. I posted a video of this on my site  HERE  along with a still collage and a looping animated gif. That was my most popular blog post to date with 150k+ re-blogs including the Huffington Post and Gizmodo.

A.  Where did you shoot that from?

D.  I shot that from the roof of a building I was working at in Fairfax village.

 

A.  What apps do you consider to be the golden, most important apps for mobile photographers to use? Why?

D.  My go to app is Sun Surveyor. This app lets me use a map or 3D compass to tack the sun or moon at any time or date. It’s real helpful to plan where you want to be and when. A lot of my moon rise / sun set photos would have been a lot tougher with out it.

Take Us To Johannesburg

Take Us To… ” is an ongoing travel series around the world which features several photographers in a given location. The goal is to give you an inside look as to what the city is like day by day.

Today we fly non-stop to Johannesburg aka Jozi, the largest city in South Africa.

Flight #4 features Alessio, Gareth, Levon, Ofentse, Paula and Roy… 5 of the most phenomenal Jozi photographers!

I’d like to thank Gareth for spearheading this project, without him this would not have been possible.  So, thank you for investing your time and effort in putting this together.  Your vision and talent is beyond AMAZING!

Take us to Jozi with @igersJozi & @wearejuxt from Gareth Pon on Vimeo.

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Meet The Photographers

 

Alessio La Ruffa

Alessio La Ruffa is a freelance social media and WordPress consultant by day.

Born and raised in Pretoria, he has always been on the creative side, but never found a creative outlet that resonated with him. Once he attended his first Instameet, that all changed.

Whenever he has the time, he is off to Johannesburg to discover the inner city with fellow mobile photographers.

Instagram has opened Alessio’s eyes to the world, allowing him to see the ordinary differently, and seeing things that others usually miss.

Instagram // twitter

“JoBurg City Streets” 

—–

Gareth Pon

I shoot things and turn them into pixels.
• Dreamer • Movie Maker • Stills Taker •

Founder of Instagramers South Africa
Goal:  Instagram From Space

My name is Gareth Pon,
I shoot things and turn them into pixels.
I am a dreamer, film maker, photo shooter and instagramer.
I have lived in Johannesburg, South Africa my whole life and I believe that everyone should have at least one ridiculous dream that they believe can become a reality. One of my ridiculous dreams is to go to space.
I love movie making and have a slightly obvious obsession with shooting beautiful footage.
I capture moments in photos, my favourite thing to shoot are portraits.
I also love Instagram, so much that I founded the Official Instagramers South Africa Community in February of 2013.
My favourite colour is yellow and I love cling peaches and mangoes.
I <3 all things creative.

Instagram // twitter // Facebook // Blog

about.me // vimeo // flickr // tumblr

Pinterest // Behance

Website (currently rebranding)

“#Puddlegram Reflections”

—–

Levon Lock

you blink a few million times and you’re dead | manager of instagramers jozi | iPhone 4s only | south africa

I’m Levon Lock. I live in the sweet city of Jozi, and I love everything creative: From taking photos to writing and recording music, and pretty much everything in between. I have always been interested in photography and used to play around on my Dad’s old SLR when I was a child.

It wasn’t until I got an iPhone that I really fell in love with pictures. The ability to capture something and portray it as how I initially saw it is an incredible feeling.

I like to make ordinary things that people see everyday look epic.

Website // Email //  twitter // Instagram

“Jozi From The Bridge”

—–

Ofentse Mwase

I’m Ofentse Mwase from Johannesburg, South Africa and I’m a Filmmaker. I’ve been in love with cameras for over 7 years now and I’ve been loving Cinematography ever since.

It all started for me when my oldest brother bought himself a Sony PD170 to shoot music videos with back on 2003, and passed it down to me in late 2005. I shot so much with that camera but it just wasn’t enough for me.

Decided to go to film school in late 2007 and that’s where my love for images was taken to another level. Went and studied Cinematography at AFDA Johannesburg where I got to learn most Theory about lighting and composition. Since then I’ve grown to know so much about pictures and picture taking.

This love for images grew even more when I joined Instagram, this was something I never knew would be so big in my life. Through Instagram I’ve come to know the world around me so much more as every place I’m at, I try to see the best angle to shoot whatever subject is in front of me. This has now grown into a passion, all this inspired by all the great people of the community which I interact with daily. This is one journey that I’ve truly been enjoying, as it’s a great journey of creativity as well as thinking outside the box.

My most favorite time to shoot is Golden Hour, the world truly comes alive around that time and that’s when I can truly express myself when it comes to imagery. I am completely in love with the way the sun bounces off objects and the intensity and beautiful colour of which it does. Hoping that I’ll always be able to capture great moments during sunset to share with everyone in the world. Here’s to more journeys and awesome adventures in Picture taking and making friends.

Website // Instagram //  500px // twitter 

“Super Ree sitting on a Cloud”

Definitely my most favorite picture ever. How I get to spend time with my 1 year old son and his mother who always help me out with my pictures.

—–

PaulaRoo

Hi, I’m Paula, and I’m a mobile photography addict! Haha!!!

Born and bred in Durban, SA; currently residing in Jozi with my beautiful hubby and two gorgeous step daughters and grateful for this newfound photography passion!

I would love to say that I have a particular style of photography but I can’t! All I do know is that I love playing with different subjects; creating moods by editing with graphics, apps and filters and generally meandering where ever my mind journeys….

This could range anywhere from the ordinary to the quirky; sometimes serious, but mostly playful!

Being part of the IG community is awesome! I have connected with incredibly real, raw, talented people from all over the world and continue to be in awe of the talent out there.

I am honoured to be a guest contributor with Mobile Artistry  and love finding unique and interesting talent that need to be seen!!!

My background and achievements to date cry creative – being involved with the advertising industry for the most part and now currently as a makeup artist.

I have also been made an Ambassador for SA on EyeEm and can’t wait to show the community more about our beautiful country.

I love living in Jozi! It inspires. It is energizing. It is hectic and soulful all at once. Besides, we have Madiba as a historical icon…. say no more!!!

So…. back to that beautiful hubby of mine…. he inspired my photographic historical perspective of buildings in the inner city. His company develops and restores heritage buildings like Stuttafords and Atkinson into affordable rental housing, keeping the facade of history as true as possible and at the same time creating a lifestyle for those less fortunate.

Hope you enjoy! And looking forward to meeting you! PaulaRoo

Email // Instagram // twitter // EyeEm // Kik: paularoo

“Dreaming on the Cliffs of Moher”
I chose this image as my favourite just because it’s most current and because I have not played with editing for a while.

We have also just returned from a magical trip to Ireland and this was a moment of our holiday I never want to forget….. dreaming of returning soon!!!

—–

Roy Potterill

Man about town. Making it happen since 1982. Johannesburg. 1/2 of Mobile Media Mob

A longtime fixture of the Joburg creative community, Roy has always had an eye for opportunity and a talent for making things happen.

Having got his hands dirty in everything from textiles to tattoo shops, his current passions for photography, technology and emerging markets have seen him rise to fame as an Mobile Photographer, bringing both international exhibition and critical acclaim.

Currently the co-founder and creative wizz at Mobile Media Mob – a visual based mobile content agency, Roy spends his days giving brands a piece of his ever-resourceful mind.

Instagram // Email // Website // tumblr // Mobile Media Mob // twitter

“Wild In The Streets”

—–

The Evolving Style

The Evolving Style with Mark T Simmons by Andy Butler

I first came across the work of Mark T Simmons earlier this year when setting up the Mobiography project. At the time he was producing a steady stream of stunning images based on the London Underground. It was the tonal quality of these images, the striking lines of perspective and the feeling of isolation which struck a chord with me and set his work apart from other photographers who I was following at the time.

The fact that his photographs attract a long list of comments on Flickr and that his work is a regular feature on mobile photography websites is testament to the connection people have with his work. I felt the need to find out more about Mark T Simmons and this is how we first met.

What I love about Mark’s photography is that it is continually evolving. He focuses on a theme and explores every aspect of that theme before moving on. His aim is to post images of quality rather than quantity and his photography is based on a basic foundation of composition and light rather than relying on the heavy use of post-production apping to pull something out of the bag. Consequently Mark’s work links together into tightly grouped themes which have evolved and developed into a series of photographs which document life in London.

My aim here is to dig deeper and find out more about the thought process behind his photography, his surroundings and how these have influenced the evolution of his work.

AB: Andy Butler MS: Mark T Simmons

AB: Could you start by telling us a bit more about yourself, your background and how you discovered mobile photography?

MTS: I was born in London and have lived between here and Australia for most of my life. Even though I have always been interested in photography, it was only when I purchased my first iPhone last year that I realized that I could shoot images, constantly, of everything happening around me.

This opened up so many possibilities to me.

Tuned to a Dead Channel

AB:  You mainly shoot street photography and urban locations. How would you describe your style and approach to this form of photography?

MTS: I have always believed that when it comes to street photography you need to get in, get close, take the shot and then get out again; but never try to hide what you are trying to do.

In London, people move quickly with very little care for others around them and in a city with such a large number of cctv surveillance cameras, most people do not like being caught on film (or the digital equivalent). As someone aiming to capture a scene or a specific moment, you need to be quick but still show the necessary amount of confidence.

For me, a street image HAS to have something going on in it; a dynamic or a story unfolding between people and nothing added after the actual shot, especially birds or umbrellas. I HATE birds and umbrellas added to images, as everyone does them.

There Are Moments When We Are Ultimately Alone

AB: When we first met you were shooting a series based on the London Underground. How did this series come about and what was the aim of it?

MTS: I only started using my mobile as my camera after I bought the iPhone at the end of 2012. Around the same time I had also started a new job in the centre of London and began travelling regularly on the underground system. The only time I had to take photos was during my commute to and from work. After a little while I saw a pattern emerge in my work. It was like a motif and I was intrigued to see how this could develop and the direction it would take and that is how the “Live From The Underground” series evolved.

I do not try to capture the underground as Transport for London would like, but as I wished to see it; symmetrical lines leading the viewer into the image and toward the vanishing point with a single solitary figure adding to the sense of loneliness and alienation.

I am fiercely proud of those images and even though I have seen other mobile photographers shoot down there now, I have never seen anything that I felt bettered my work.

Return Of The Shadow Men

AB: Could you describe your transition from the underground to your next series titled ‘Killers, Thieves and Lawyers’?

MTS: It might seem obvious but you cannot keep shooting on the underground forever. It had actually started to affect me as I was starting to search out remote parts of the network to shoot on. I needed to try something different.

Many photographers have said that you should try and shoot what is around you in your life.  As I work in the Wall Street equivalent of London, I decided to see if I could capture the inhabitants of this strange place when they drop their guard, show candid moments of people who are usually very guarded in their business lives.

What I found most surprising about this project was just how lonely everyone looked. Not what you think of when you are surrounded by some of the biggest corporations on the planet.

Mental Intrusion Of The Graphs Of Gloom

AB: You have just completed another series which documents life on the streets of Shoreditch in London. Why Shoreditch in particular?

MTS: For me, Shoreditch is both the most inspiring and depressing area in the whole of London.  Even though I am a South Londoner, I have always loved visiting Shoreditch, especially for its local traders, its killer street art and fantastic Indian food. I loved it because it was unique. You could buy an opened tin of paint, a black and white television or a gas mask on a Sunday from the markets there. The place just had a great vibe.

However, it is disheartening to view how much it has changed. There is now an awful lot of money moving into the area. Real estate is changing; with massive new apartment developments taking place, even the street art is becoming predictable. I knew I wanted to capture the area in a series of images right now before it totally loses its identity and becomes just another London suburb of boutique clothing retailers, craft beer emporiums and cupcake sellers.

By now, it probably already is.

End Of Season Sale

AB: Do you have any plans for future photographic projects?

MTS: I am taking a break from mobile photography and social media at the moment to think about the next direction I want to take my work in. I get quite bored after a while of working in one genre of photography and I think sometimes moving into another, even for a short period of time, can improve your skills.

I have only ever taken one portrait with my iPhone and was really pleased how it came out, considering it was off the cuff and very quick but it’s definitely one direction I would like move in.

A Place We Can Go

AB: How do you manage to keep inspired and motivated so you can continually evolve your photography?

MTS: Becoming a better photographer is all about looking at other photographers work, for me. If there is a photographic exhibition on in London then I make sure I get to it and if I am travelling I seek out photography shows in those places as well as taking as many photos as I can while I am there.

I am also always looking at the work of a number of very inspiring people on Flickr. People like Shel Serkin, Brendan Ó Sé, Giovanni Savino and especially Albion Harrison-Naish who post, constantly, brilliant images of what is happening around them.

The X Factor

AB: You have a feature on Mobiography.net where you ask a mobile photographer about the photo they are most proud of. Could you tell us about this and what have you learnt from speaking to other mobile photographers about their work?

MTS: When I was fortunate to be asked to contribute a weekly feature for Mobiography.net, I knew I didn’t want to do a showcase or an interview but actually allow a fellow mobile photographer I admire, rather than a reviewer, to choose the image they are most proud of and talk about it. What makes that one image special to them and why they rate it above anything else they have done?

I can honestly say that I have learnt something from every artist who has provided an image for that week. It’s not just from the image itself but what they have written to accompany it. I suddenly gain a greater understanding of what they tried and succeeded in achieving with their shot and can view it in a much more personal way.

Chance Street

AB: Do you have any favourite photos and stories that have come out of this feature?

MTS: That’s a difficult one. Although it has only been running for a couple of months, the feature has already had some amazing images and stories provided by the likes of Paula Gardener, Ryan Vaarsi, and Shel Sherkin, but for me the one that that really stands out is Janine Graf.

Everyone knows Janine Graf for her amazing series of images involving a rhino, a giraffe, balloons and a backdrop of some of the most amazing places in the world, however, the image she was most proud of was a Hipstamatic shot called “She Played Pretty Music”. It was a picture she took of a busker in Seattle that set of a chain of events involving the local newspaper, the family and a wonderful email she received from the mother.

For me, it was everything I had hoped for with the feature. You can never second guess the image an artist loves the most. I have been constantly but pleasantly surprised by every image that has been selected so far.

Priorities

AB: Let’s turn the tables on you for a moment. Of all the photos you have taken which is the one you are most proud of and why?

MTS: Easy. “The Blue Pill”.  I had seen an exhibition of the work of William Klein and Daido Moriyama in London and watched a documentary there on Klein. How he would get in really close to people, to capture the moments that only close proximity can accomplish. He was fearless. The following day after work, I walked on to London Bridge, got down on my knees in front of the on-rushing commuters and just started firing off shots on my phone.

The subject in the image was clearly in a stressed state and appeared as one does in that moment when you have gambled everything in your life and then it suddenly starts to unravel, while all around him life continues and his fellow commuters just keep coming.

It’s emotive, it’s in your face and it’s the closest I have ever got to a perfect street image.

The Blue Pill

AB: You are very active on Flickr. How has this community helped you connect with and meet new people or develop new ideas?

MTS: I love Flickr because the community on there is very special. Not only do you receive encouragement from followers of your work but also suggested improvements and tweaks.  It’s not so much about promoting my work; it’s more about the connection with this amazing community. I just don’t think you find that anywhere else.

Seeing the constantly high standard of photographers on there just makes you realize how fortunate we are to be living at this time when with just a phone, a person can capture, produce and share amazing images with others.

Reclaim The Street

AB: Finally, how can people connect with you?

Flickr // Twitter// Oggl: @marktsimmons

HeyGate

The Art of Self

The Art of Self  by Joel A

“I share, therefore I am.” – Sherry Turkle, psychologist and MIT professor of Social Studies of Science and Technology

A decade ago if a friend randomly emailed me shots of his/her face each week, I would probably consider them slightly narcissistic, but today thanks to the forward facing cellphone camera, shots of self or “selfies” are the most common images on most online social platforms. So common, that the word selfie was just added to the Oxford English Dictionary.  With smartphone users ranging from toddlers to senior citizens, it’s not just preteens or twentysomethings that are taking and sharing shots of themselves in their bathroom mirror.  Recently news anchor, Geraldo Rivera, New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner, and Boston bombing suspect, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, have all created controversies regarding the appropriateness of their selfies.

It’s not just the act of taking a shot of yourself that makes it a selfie; it’s the follow-up of sharing that photo with your online social circle.  Though critics have labeled selfies as vanity shots or examples of the type of destructive oversharing that has become common in this digital age, I believe that the motivation behind and eventual outcome of taking and posting a self-shot can be positive.

Sure in the beginning when selfies were carefully posed and photoshopped shots taken with your arm extended up to ensure the angle showed your best side, the motivation was vanity, but the selfie has evolved to become much more.  Now shots are more off the cuff taken to share your goofy personality with the hopes of making a personal connection with others.  A selfie can scream, “This is who I really am, the real face behind the phone or computer screen”.  In the age of catfishing, it can reassure others of your legitimacy.  Sure, any image can be stolen or doctored, but when selfies are shared repeatedly in casual settings, it usually decreases the likelihood of deception. A new trend in selfies is to post early morning shots without taking the time to put on makeup or style your hair. These shots are meant to convey a lack of caring how you are thought of by others, though anytime we share shots of ourselves online we are attempting to connect and trying to create an image or persona of how we want to be perceived no matter how little we style our hair.

Selfies can be a way to document and share your daily activities without taking the time to write a long post or blog.  In the age of short attention spans, most people would prefer to look at the pictures of your face as you express disappointment in your day than read a post about it.  Posting a selfie also ensures that you have control of how you appear online to others.  No need to wait and be tagged in an awful picture by your best friend, just post your own shot and know you look the way you want to look online.

For mobile artists, we can be our best subject.  Using our bodies or faces to communicate and our camera to capture just the right mood or expression that we wish to convey.   A self image is cathartic, emotional and intense. With a well composed selfie, you can liberate yourself of emotional baggage, or share feelings of joy, love, delight, sadness or frustration.  Like many other mobile artists, this is an avenue of artistic expression I often find myself stumbling down.  On that note, I have asked some great mobile artists to post their selfies and any intimate thoughts or feelings they wish to share regarding their own self portraits.

Crystal F SpellmanNorthern Kentucky, US
“self portrait (the one with the super8)”
Eye’Em

It’s been cost prohibitive for me to shoot much film with my super8, but it is by far the nicest camera I own. I think this image for me is really about the fantasies I used to have about filmmaking, and also a way to still spend some quality time with one of my favorite objects.

Lene Basma, Drammen, Norway
Life Lessons I: The Fool”
IPA

My images always have an element of therapy. That is also one of the reasons why I more often than not use myself as a model (another reason being that I just don’t have access to any other models…).

This image is part of a series I have called life-lessons. I am in a transition period of my life right now; new job, new house and redefining some of my closest relationships to better suit being a chronically ill, out-of-the-house working single mother. So I do a lot of thinking, about what there is to learn from this process, hence this series of images. This one was the first – and started out angry, where I felt like a fool, someone everyone takes advantage of, and ended up in a different place, a bit proud, proud that I have the courage to take on and rush in where angels do not dare to tread…

Michelle Robinson, Adelaide, South Australia
“Part 3: At 6 years old, she knew things she shouldn’t and didn’t understand. (The Secret Story)”

Facebook

This is a project that I have started to tell my story. It is not a unique story, unfortunately. It happens to millions of children around the world. It was once suggested to me that I should write my life story but it is with clarity that I realise that my story will be a visual one. It is not merely a story of survival and hope. Hopefully, one day the story will reach a wider audience and touch those who are suffering in secret and silence to seek help, to empower themselves and to let them know they are not alone. Worse is if they are still  trapped in the secrecy or perpetuating the cycle of abuse on themselves or their own children.

Paula Gardener, London, UK
“We are Queens”

EyeEm // Twitter // Flickr

The Queens of our past, birthed from the lands of this earth.

Brave, defiant, demanding equality in a mans world. They were the first true feminist. Standing strong, they fought against the oppression of their people. Empowered by the wisdom of their mothers, embracing the perfection of womanhood.

They knew no boundaries, legends of our history.
They stood for the Queen in each of us, that we may be proud of the heritage given to all women.
We are Queens.

Cédric Blanchon, Troyes, France
“Give Me Your Dream”

Selfies reflect my mood of the day . I am part of a group of artists who just create it , mobagparis.  I’m very honored to be part of this association with many amazing artist, I’m in EyeEm, Instagram, Flickr, Iphoneart, Starmatic, with my real name, we can follow me!

Jennifer Bracewell, San Francisco Bay Area
“the midnight zone”

This is a self-portrait I shot today. Sometimes I edit my images nearly unrecognizable. I decided to do a minimal edit for this one, using just Mextures. (I posted a different version edited with vsco) I often use self portraits to help me through tough times. I’ve recently gone through some major changes in my life that have made me feel weak and scared. I wanted to feel the power I know I have inside me and show that through this portrait. I’m a tough one, don’t fuck with me. Sometimes I need reminding of that. My IG is _jenbeezy_. There’s a monochrome version there.

Mike Hill, New Orleans, LA
“That’s Dr. Frankensinatra, To You”

One day I came across a doctors mask I had, don’t ask me why I had one, and that got the gears in my brain turning, I figured a mad scientist/doctor type weirdo would be cool… yea, I can definitely pull that off. I went to my girls work and lifted a pair of embalming gloves and used my backyard barbecuing apron. Set ProCamera on a timer and vogued for a few minutes. I edited the whole thing in Photo Wizard after. I’m a big fan of old mad scientist characters in movies and shows like The Twilight Zone from the 60’s. This is directly influenced from those and a character I would watch on public access tv in New Orleans growing up, his name was Morgus The Magnificent. Professor Morgus used to have a show where he would play old B rated science fiction and horror movies and during breaks he would do experiments and stuff like measure the speed of dark, anyway, this just comes from being a weird kid growing up I guess is what I’m sayin’.

Ade Santora, Jakarta, Indonesia
“Scatter”
Flickr

Ginger Lucero, Albuquerque, New Mexico
“Degenerate”
Flickr

Pronunciation: di-ˈje-nə-ˌrāt, dē-
Function: verb
Date: 1545
intransitive verb
1 : to pass from a higher to a lower type or condition : deteriorate 2 : to sink into a low intellectual or moral state 3 : to decline in quality <the poetry gradually degenerates into jingles> 4 : to decline from a condition or from the standards of a species, race, or breed 5 : to evolve or develop into a less autonomous or less functionally active form <degenerated into dependent parasites>
transitive verb
: to cause to degenerate

We all get stuck in a rut from time to time. We get that feeling of uselessness, a feeling that makes the thought of change unbearable.   We are, after all, creatures of habit. We become bored of routine, but don’t know a way out. We have the want, but the will isn’t there. We start to feel like it will be this way for what seems eternity. We then start to look down upon ourselves and think so low, that it’s almost impossible to be picked back up again. We start to rot from the inside out. Even words of encouragement become words of fear. We start to seek validation for our actions, as if someone else’s promises and words make us better.

But who are we kidding, it’s no ones job to change us. It is our place to take those first steps, to walk forward and not look back. No one can change who we are, it’s not their job to. All the words in the world can’t take away our feelings, our loss of desire. We must make those changes ourselves.


Joel A. , Louisiana
“psycha”
IPA

The product of an extreme headache.  The words are from the song “Satellite” by Pigface.  Seem to fit the vibe at the time.

As demonstrated by the excellent pieces shown, selfies can be one of the most creative and boldest ways to emotionally and honestly connect.  Critics may continue to label selfies as narcissistic or cries for attention, but with the increased use of inventions such as Google glass, selfies may be our last defense in creating the online image we desire. The years of being able to hide online seem to be fading fast; it’s good to know mobile photographers seize the opportunity to reveal the self they want others to know while they still can.

There are skills to this, its not luck.

Ed Kashi: There Are Skills To This, Its Not Luck by Andre H

Andre’s Introduction
Late one morning at a lesser-known tea lounge in San Francisco I was lucky enough to catch up with a long time friend and mentor, Ed Kashi of the photo collective VII while he was in town for a brief visit. Since becoming a part of the wearejuxt family I’ve had the thought of interviewing Ed to discuss his thoughts and opinions on mobile phone photography for quite some time. What I was really curious to know was how a 30-year veteran to the photojournalism & documentary world, and owner/member of a prominent photo collective is exploiting this now not-so-new photographic tool to help make the world a better, well-informed place, and at the same time continue to make a living. After our tea was served and we finished discussing apps and techniques, among other things, we began. The interview was originally recorded with an audio recorder. It has been transcribed, and is here in it’s entirety. So, lets get down to business, everyone, Ed Kashi.

A: Tell us who you are, what you do, and how long have you been doing it?
E: My name is Ed Kashi I am a photojournalist and documentary photographer and I’ve been working for over 30 years now.

Scenes in and around Aspen, Colorado with my photo workshop from Anderson Ranch Arts Center, during the annual Colorado Bike Race on Aug. 22, 2012. (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: When did you first hear about and pick-up the iPhone? What were some of the first things you shot with the iPhone?
E: I started using an iPhone when it first came out. Whatever that was, 2007 or 8. But I really didn’t think of it as a camera for the first couple of years. It was only after I started to see how other people were using it, ok, of course I used the phone originally, the camera part of it, for family snaps and, you know, hey, look were in Nevada or hey look we’re in wherever. But I never used it as a serious photographic device until about I would say, 2011, maybe even 2012. So its pretty recent and it was at that point where then, I went through my Hipstamatic period and then I think that was in 2010, 2011, and then in 2012 is when I really got serious about it, and a large part influences from folks like yourself and then kind of seeing what other colleagues, like Ron Haviv, Balazs Gardi, Ben Lowey, Michael Christopher Brown, younger photographers who were using it in very intense conflict situations and so-forth. And then it was in the summer of 2012 when I was just following my son around in his summer quest for a baseball scholarship to college that I thought, instead of bringing my 5D or my point and shoot let me just use my iPhone because I have it with me all of the time anyway. And that was really where things turned. And then The NewYorker gave me the one-week gig for their feed and then for the first time I was actually getting paid, it wasn’t much, but I was getting paid something. And more than the money I was having a chance to create, post-produce and disseminate in real time and that’s when the “likes” neuroses began. This new psychological phenomenon of the pursuit of likes, or the monitoring of likes. Its intoxicating when you think you can put something out in the world you just created and let people immediately, not only see it, but they approve of it, or they like it. That is awesome. I mean, obviously for me, I take it with a certain grain of salt because at this point I’ve been published a lot so I have a sense of, a very strong sense of having my work out in the world and having it be appreciated, but there’s still, there’s something about this that’s so direct. It’s almost visceral. It must be connected directly to our endorphins. You know, I can often say that I can have the cover of National Geographic Magazine and when it actually, physically comes out it almost feels like it past already. It’s a weird feeling, which is to take nothing away from the honor of having that happen, but on some visceral level its like it doesn’t arrive with a blare of excitement it almost arrives with a dull thud. I think that’s partly because of the way we are over stimulated, we’re also deluged with too much information and too much imagery, so unless there’s something specifically in the print publication you’re looking for it kind of comes and goes. Its weird how that is but on the other hand it stays, actually I should say it comes but it stays, where as the Instagram (IG) pictures, or the iPhone pictures they truly do come and go. I don’t see yet that they have a staying power that a cover story for national geographic has and it doesn’t radiate out in quite the same way in terms of the meaning of it. You can have 40K likes with an image you put up on lets say the National Geographic feed, which is pretty insane, but its still nothing like having your pictures in the magazine. So I’m talking about two different things here. I’m talking about the feeling I have as opposed to the actual impact.

A: Explain a little bit more about that feeling you have, the difference between the satisfaction, or lack of, seeing it online, literally how its here and then its gone as soon as the next image takes its place and actually being published in a print magazine.
E: Well, again print is much more permanent. Whatever permanence is, but print is more permanent. There is something about having it online, particularly having it on the IG feed because there’s such a volume of imagery that passes through IG that it quickly becomes something old. I also worry about how we might be devaluing images. It’s a very exciting time where there’s never been more interest in creating and absorbing imagery as there is today. But I worry that its becoming part of this steady diet of, its like candy, it comes and goes, we get a little rush, and it goes. And there’s something about, I don’t know about you, but you might show me some old family photographs, gorgeous black and white pictures that, you know, our grand parents had gotten, and there’s something so luscious about them and so tangible and tactile and they feel permanent and you want to preserve them and I don’t feel that yet with the iPhone pictures, but as I said, I’ve only been at this for a year, seriously, I think what tends to happen, is partly human nature, partly how we, how humanity absorbs and makes use of new technology. That maybe there’ll be a time in the near future where, obviously I archive my pictures whether they’re with an iPhone or with my canon camera, with equal importance, but, maybe there’ll be a time where there’s a way we can print out iPhone pictures, I mean I know you can already do that, there be some other way of archiving iPhone pictures that make them feel more permanent but right now it just feels like we’re just creating, creating, creating, this tsunami of imagery and then what’s going to happen is that each individual image by themselves might not have the same value.

Scenes in and around Aspen, Colorada with my photo workshop from Anderson Ranch Arts Center, during the annual Colorado Bike Race on Aug. 22, 2012. (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: Describe to us your first assignment shot with the iPhone. Who was it for, what was it of, and did you get paid?
E: The first time I got paid for shooting with my iPhone was with The New Yorker and that was the summer of 2012. They asked me to take on their IG feed for one week. And I was going to Aspen, Colorado to teach a workshop at the Anderson Ranch Art Center and so it was pictures of, kind of the daily life of that week, out with my students in Colorado photographing a bike race, a rodeo, my students on the art center grounds, you know, just anything that caught my eye. What was so exciting is that I could put these up immediately and there was this sense of engagement in real time with my audience. But the real first assignment to me where it was on a whole other level of meaning was when TIME magazine assigned me to cover Super Storm Sandy for two days. And that was just a whole other level of meaning. Not only were they paying me a very good day rate, like significantly better than I have gotten for their print publication, and I’ve been working for TIME magazine for almost 30 years, on-and-off, but also, the idea that I am covering something of incredible importance in real time similar to The New Yorker thing, but its in real time. I’m shooting it. I’m doing post-production on it. I’m spitting it out into the world, and beyond how many likes it might have gotten, which then because it was through the TIME feed, we’d be in the thousands, it was the idea that I was supplying information of something that was happening in real time, that was exhilarating. I mean, I think TIME‘s Patrick Witty and Kira Pollack (editors) the photo editors at TIME, they really pushed things with that assignment. I was one of five photographers, Andrew Quilty, Stephen Wilkes, Michael Christopher Brown, myself, and Ben Lowy, five photographers that received that assignment. It also turned the paradigm of my profession upside down, literally on its head, where the first use was social media and IG, then it filtered out within a day to TIME’s Lightbox blog, online presence and then the following week it was used in print.

Scenes in Montclair, NJ during and after Hurricane Sandy hit the eastern seaboard with a fury, leaving many dead and billions of dollars in damage, on October 29, 2012. (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: So tell me, even though it wasn’t your image that was chosen, what were your thoughts when you saw an iPhone image on the cover of TIME?
E: Well, you know, perspective is a funny thing. It really shapes how we interpret things, so the fact that I was a part of that endeavor I thought, “oh, that’s great. That’s cool.” I thought great. Now maybe if I had not been one of the five photographers I would have looked at it and gone “what are they doing putting an iPhone picture” or I might have been a little more judgmental about it but because I was a part of it my perspective is somewhat clouded by the act that I was part of that initiative and I was excited about it and it was meaningful to me. But in general, look, we’re living in a time of tremendous change, and I know that goes without saying, but what you have to constantly keep that in mind when these sorts of things that have never happen before, happen. And so, yes, we should step back and look at it and go is this a good thing or this not a good thing, but on some level its also just is. It just is. And we have to deal with that. So I thought this is great that they tried something different. It worked out, multiple mediums, the pictures look good in print, I’m very open-minded about these things, where I am in the profession, I have all the right in the world to be completely knocked off my feet by these changes. I worked my butt off for 30 years to reach the top of this profession and the last thing I want to see is all of the standards and thee structures in which I worked my way up through, I don’t want them to be destroyed because then it reduces all I have done to nothing, and its just not me, I have a family, there’s a greater responsibility I have now in life, its not just about me and my little career, its about much more than that its about my family, its about my kids, its about my studio, employees, you know there’s a lot riding on my work and so on one level I resent, and I am very angry about how convulsive the changes have been and forms of income and certain standards I became accustomed to, are, if not destroyed, they’re disintegrating or going away, but on the other hand, there’s nothing I can do about it, so instead of complaining about it, I’m going to put my energy into creating and trying to take advantage of these new tools and these new opportunities because that’s not only fun, because I have fun making pictures, beyond the money part I-love-making-pictures I love the way photography allows me to interface with the world, I love the way it enriches my life, the way it makes me see things. Not only do I love the creation of it but it also problem solving, so while something is going away, instead of sitting in a corner crying about it “I want it back the way it was,” no, I’m going to say “cool. What’s this new thing? How can I use in a way that is good or comfortable for me?” so I’m not only enjoying the creative process like I always have but I’m also able to survive and continue to make a living. And again, I always feel like every few years I’m repeating this, but, we have to always remember that photography is absolutely the offspring of the industrial revolution and technology so its only fitting, I really feel like I say this every few years, its only fitting that as technology advances and changes and morphs photography will do the same thing so while you can still shoot with a pinhole camera, literally, not the app pinhole [laugh] or you can use film or you can shoot with a 4×5 or an 8×10 camera or an iPhone, whatever device its all part of this continuum of  what photography is which is truly a reflection of  they industrial technological age, so its only fitting that now we would have these incredible little devices called smart phones that make beautiful photographs, its all part of the natural evolution of things. And so, I guess, if you look down the road, and if we ever, and I don’t want this to happen, if we ever become robots, or bionic, its only natural to think that we’ll cameras implanted in our heads or something. I’m not saying I want that to happen, but I mean, I guess we didn’t need to go there, but… I did go there.

A: So you’ve covered a lot over the last 30 years. Are there any events in your history where you wish you had what you have now, in regards to the capability of the iPhone?
E: That’s a great question. I guess no because I don’t tend to think of what could have been. That’s not my nature. I accept that the devices I had at those times were the one’s I used, what I would say is: I would have loved to have had a digital capture device in many situations. Whether it was a phone, or one of the great new canon DSLRs because then it would have allowed me to shoot in lower light, use less artificial light, have a higher ISO with image quality. All those things we now take for granted.

A: Tell me your thoughts about IG, and more importantly share your thoughts on the image you posted of your son in the hotel room on the National Geographic feed, and your reaction to the firestorm of comments and critiques that erupted from it.
E: There are aspects of IG, and the whole phenomenon it represents that I absolutely love, and its almost like a narcotic. I’m sure I’m not a lone waking up and going to sleep with it possibly being the first and last thing I do in the day, not everyday, its become quickly another touchstone of a kind of communal reality that we can live with this digital revolution and social media so as a photographer IG, at this point, reaches a height of what social media can be, as a photographer. But what’s so exciting is that there’s apparently 90 million other people who 99.9 % of them are not photographers that feel the same way, like my kids. Like so many other people that love to take pictures and use them to share with their friends and family and the public. Its interesting, this phenomena, IG in many ways captures the moment of social media, were living through no other form of social media, and again, as a photographer there’s obviously a particular importance and meaning to me. On the kind legal, professional implications side of it, I’m very concerned. I’m concerned as I said early how its devaluing the individual images both monetarily and almost in a, not a spiritual sense but, uh, the gluttony of it. Each morsel doesn’t mean as much, so that’s a concern, and of course the copyright issues are a concern and the issues of compensation and what IG and FB might decide to do, but as they learned, they’re not going to get away with it. And I might add, it wasn’t just the professional photo public who was part of that backlash, it was civilians as I call them who said no, no, no. I just ran into someone yesterday at Palo Alto high, a student, a high school kid who basically shared the same reaction as national geographic magazine, and professional photographers like me shared when IG announced the rights grab, they cancelled their IG account, a high school kid so I mean they have to listen to this people are not stupid.

Ed Kashi photographs his son, Eli, in Chapel Hill, NC during Eli Kashi's summer baseball trip in July 2012 (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: so please share with us your reaction about that [picture] did it change your perspective on what IG is, or, the people who use it?
E: through a series of communications between myself and a photo editor at National Geographic last summer when I was photographing my son as I went with him around the country to baseball tournaments or showcases um I had made a picture of him on the bed in a hotel room on his phone and I was reflected in the mirror taking the picture and I was just in my bathing suit, basically, or boxer shorts, um, the photo editor at the geographic said oh post that one on our new IG feed and it was literally one of the first images to be posted IG Geographic feed and I didn’t think about it. I wrote a caption, on the road with my son following his baseball dreams, or something like that, and within an hour there hundreds of comments a lot of them very nasty like “oh, what’s that man doing with that boy” or “this isn’t the sort of thing that I’d come to the National Geographic for” or like “eewww” things like that, and the final straw for me was “ I don’t want to look at that man’s ugly body” and so I then took it down and because I, you know the thing about the digital domain is its very easy, this is the bad part of it, its easy for people to be incredibly abusive. It’s basically cyber-bullying. I mean really, in its essence is what cyber-bullying is. You don’t know me and I can say whatever the hell I want no matter how painful or hurtful it may be no matter how much I misrepresent you or the image you’re looking at. And so thee impact, the comments to that picture reflected that sort of negative aspect of that sort of social media, that people feel like they can say whatever they want and I wasn’t prepared for that emotionally, and also showed me that people on IG don’t read the captions so I made the decision to take the picture down because it was too hurtful and I had shared something very personal. Since then I have also come to not only witness some work my colleagues have done particularly John Stanmeyer of VII but also I’ve recently done where you use IG as a form of raising awareness for an issue to fundraising and taking a very serious issue that I’m reporting on and photographing using this as an additional platform to communicate to a broader range of people I might not otherwise reach, and, but that endeavor is predicated on a very rich caption with strong meta data and hash tags so the reaction to those have shown me for all the people who don’t read the captions there are people who do. And so, in a sense we get back to the essence of doing this photojournalism or documentary work or any kind of informed reporting is that if you have a powerful image and you contextualize it with strong relevant data you will reach people. So for all the idiots who don’t look at a caption, not that they’re idiots, who just don’t care about that because they’re just into the pictures, there are those who will read it all, who will respond and comment and not comment with stupidity but comment with “wow I didn’t know about that” or “where can I, how can I get involved?” “How can I help?” So lets build on that positive stuff.

A: Do you still use IG especially after the TOS debacle?
E: Well, I still use IG. I did pause for a few days there after that, as you say, debacle of theirs, basically trying to make a rights grab. Which was also illegal for them to do because they didn’t have model releases so how could they use a picture of someone recognizable for commercial purposes, you know it was like a triple stumble on their part. You know, legally, ethically, and morally.

Car accident scene in lower east side of New York City on 10/8/12. (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: How has the mobile phone changed the way you shoot and or see life?
E: well, what’s so exciting about mobile phone photography is that I can now take pictures, I can have this visual diary of my life in a way that’s so much easier and less cumbersome than when I had to bring the camera with me. And then also, its allowing me to shoot in square format, well at least that’s how I’m choosing to deal with it because I’m generally working towards, shooting towards my IG feed, and I’m loving that, again you know what I love, you know, really, this gets back to the essence of when I was 18 years old and I was 3 months into learning photography, and I was in the dark and I had just learned about Imogen Cunningham, this is 1977, and so she was in her 90s living out in California, and I was like oh my god, you mean if I could live into my 90s I could still be taking pictures, like I could be taking pictures of nude women in redwood forests of California after having done 4×5 portraits and square format still lives and photojournalism or whatever you know, or fashion that photography is a series of endless opportunities to create in so many different directions now I have chosen a very focused direction and I have no plans to change that but this model photography is such a perfect manifestation what originally got me hooked on photography which was if I get to live a big long life that I’ll never run out of creative ways of utilizing photography so in a sense, in my rudimentary knowledge when I was 18 years old and I had just learned about black and white film processing and I thought “well I want to be like a photojournalist, but wow, I could take  4×5 nudes of people or 2.25 square pictures of people when I get older or do landscapes, this in a sense is, in a mid career now, so here it is I have a new thing. It’s not just a 35mm camera it’s a square format, it’s a different approach to things. Its also much more haphazard, for instance, were out in a sunny day, when I had to shoot in these situations I could barely see what I was getting on my screen unless I get all these accoutrements to outfit my phone which would destroy the purpose of what I love about this which is this little thing in my pocket and I just pull out and start shooting, but on the other hand its part of the magic of photography is that unknowing of what you’re getting its all great man and then I’ve since then shot my third sort of paid gig with the phone was in Burma in December for Global Post where I had been working on a project about income disparity and I shot in Connecticut and Bangkok, but the Burma piece I shot on the iPhone. And that was sort of interesting because I had to shoot in a sort of a shanty town area that was adjacent to a super fancy golf resort and on the golf resort we basically had to sneak in and shoot on the sly and that was a case where having, shooting with my iPhone didn’t telegraph immediately to security people and all that, what I was doing.

A: As a member/owner of VII, how do the iphone images play into overall scheme of the collective?
E: Ok. That’s an interesting question. The spirit of VII is such that while there is a very cohesive vision of how we want to look at the world in terms of looking at the world in a serious manner, and a meaningful manner there’s also the very strong edge of activism in many of the member’s photography and purpose that we’re not just there to make photography just to make photography we’re there to improve the world and advocate for certain issues and all that. So in that sense the iPhone has become yet another tool of expression and an effective tool of communication and again I go back to John Stanmeyer over the summer he did this big project for MSF in South Sudan on neglected diseases he maintains that through social media while he was there he reached an additional 500K people and so that’s powerful. So that not only raises the awareness about the issue he’s reporting on but it also raises money for the organization, you know, its all good. So that’s great. And I just experienced a much smaller version of that in Nicaragua. I’m working on a project about the epidemic of kidney disease among sugar cane workers in Central America. I decided to post a couple of portraits of sick sugar cane workers on my IG feed and within 24-hours the organization I’m working with started to receive some donations and people saying “how can I help? This is terrible.” Even like another photographer saying “I’m working on the same thing in Burma.” Its amazing the way we can get connected with each other. So to me, going back VII, its all a part of our purpose, and one of the main purposes of the agency, the cooperative is to do documentary photography and photojournalism that is not only meaningful but has an impact on the world. And then more over, we have a current group show called, iSee, that is touring its been in Boston, its been in New York, I don’t know where its going next. It may be in Italy, Stefano de Luigi, who’s based in Italy, he had a New Yorker piece called “Idyssey” where he followed along the Mediterranean Odysseus’ journey with the iPhone, Davide Monteleone another Italian photographer has done some beautiful work with the iPhone, Ron Haviv and Gary Knight two of the founders, you know, so, we’re totally into this, we’ve embraced it. Not everybody, we’re not autocratic in that way either, we’re not uniform. So VII is very well positioned in how its using the iPhone, or mobile photography both in artistic self-expressive sense but also in one of our main missions which is in a journalistic advocacy sense.

Hassidic man at the beach during the Polar Bear Club annual swim in Coney Island on New Year's Day, Jan 1, 2013. (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: What does the future look like for Ed, the collective (VII) and does it include mobile phone photography?
E: The future for myself and for VII the agency is extremely exciting and I prefer to look at it as very bright in an optimistic way. But make no mistake about it we are going forward through a lot of booby-traps and mine fields. It is not easy. It’s not straightforward, and there’s no assured success. Specifically, the twin pillars that were the underpinnings of our profession that held up the profession of photojournalism were editorial assignments and archival resale. That’s a photojournalist survived. Ok? And they’re both under threat. Those pies are getting smaller. Particularly archival sales, and that’s across the board. What its forcing us to do both individually and collectively as a company is to find new sources of support to commission, to help produce the field work, and then finding more innovative, new ways to disseminate our work. Disseminating the work isn’t the problem. There’s lots of ways to get our work out there all over the world like there never were before what’s difficult is how do we get renumerated for it because how we are able to survive. So that in a sense is the minefield, or lets just say, the challenges. The challenges are how do we remake the economic structure of our profession? Any iPhone can be part of that.

A: How has or is mobile photography changing the industry for photojournalists and conflict photographers?
E: For photojournalists and conflict photographers the iPhone, or mobile photography is presenting new opportunities to actually work more safely and more covertly and then on the other hand, its becoming more accepted as a form of image capture that magazines are willing to publish it. I just recently won a couple of awards and it was not an iPhone competition. So my iPhone pictures were along side Paulo Peligreen’s 35mm classic black-and-white pictures. So there’s an acceptance increasingly among picture editors and art directors and photo buyers. And as with everything, as the march of technology goes forward the image quality will improve, everything will improve, you know, like, the whole quality issue will not be an issue anymore. I see it as a meaningful and productive part of our future, and absolutely exciting too.

With the super storm Hurricane Sandy bearing down on the New Jersey, New York harbor, the scene at the Hudson River waterfront is ominous in Jersey City, New Jersey on October 29, 2012. (Ed Kashi/VII)

A: Any final thoughts or anything burning on your brain right now that I didn’t ask?
E: Well it’s just that, photographers have to be able to grab opportunities. And mobile photography is just another opportunity that is being presented to us. That doesn’t mean you have to do it. But think about that this is a cool new way to make pictures and potentially make some money. And I wanted to add, one of the aspects of monetizing this, and its still untested except in isolated cases, is if you can increase your following, then that’s something you can bring to the table to a client so you’re not just saying “hey, I’m Ed Kashi and I have all this wealth of experience under my belt, I’ve also got X number of thousands of followers.” So you know if you work with me I now can bring this audience along with me. And that’s something that I think we’re talking about at VII and other places. This is a moment that is insanely exciting for creativity, bringing worlds together that we could never have imagined doing in the print analog world, but damn its tough. And there are going to be a lot of photographers who don’t make it, there are all ready who have not made it. There are going to be individuals and organizations and institutions that are part of our world that won’t make it, and that’s sad.

A: So in the end a lot of working photographers, semi-pros, pros all worry about how the iPhone has eliminated the professional market of photography, yet in a sense what you just said, would you agree then, that actually, its actually helped to separate even more? And that really, as a professional photographer do we really have anything to worry about in regards to the moms-and-pops, soccer moms and your 12-year old son having a camera?
E: Citizen journalists and the casual photographer might on occasion make images or be in the right place at the right time where their work ends up being the work that show that situation but in the long run, in the aggregate, the larger picture citizen journalists cannot replace the professional photographer, they just can’t. They’re not going to go spend weeks or months with a homeless person or in a conflict zone or telling the story of a child with a genetic disease. They’re not going to do that. So only the professionals, and the really dedicated journalists and documentarians will do that. So that alone separates us, besides the fact that, you know, ya, I went for TIME magazine to cover Hurricane Sandy for two days, sure you could have handed a smart phone to somebody who’s a mom or a pop and said go cover it, and sure they may have taken a picture here or there that was good. Maybe even better than what I did, who knows, in the grand scheme of things they may not have been able to fulfill the assignment that the desk at TIME magazine could not have necessarily relied on them to know where to go, to know how to get there, to get the information to know the right place to be to show what’s going on to contextualize what they’re seeing in a proper manner so that’s its good reporting and then to get back and send it off all in time and all that. There are skills to this, its not luck.

A: So in the end can we agree that the iPhone is not a magic key for everyone to become a photographer over night with just because they have it, that in the end its still just a tool?
E: Absolutely

Contact Information:
ED KASHI PHOTO LIBRARY / 110 Montclair Ave. Montclair, NJ 07042 USA /  tel: 973.746.9096 fax: 973.746.9612 / email: studio@edkashi.com
Ed is represented by VII AGENCY
For queries about assignments or licensing images, please contact Alina Grosman at VII. / email: alina@viiphoto.com or call: 212.337.3130

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Originally published on 02/18/2013