Fine art
photography is not necessarily capturing a specific technique
or style, it is an issue of self expression. If you want to
emulate a certain style that you are aware of, study it and
try to recreate it, eventually you will be able to produce
beautiful images in the likes of an Ansel Adams or a Diane
Arbus. Seriously, it’s generally possible to achieve. Why?
Because by doing so you aren’t creating anything more than
what’s done before.
But copying
someone else’s style is not what fine art photography is
about. It’s about creating your own style, having your own
voice. In most cases, the person creating their work early in
their artistic careers does even understand who or what their
voice is. Also in most cases, that understanding of self
evolves over your entire lifetime and transitions with you.
Look up any artist and view their work throughout their lives
and you will begin to understand that process.
If you want to
create fine art imagery, you have to move beyond the technical
aspects of the camera, as technology will not get your there.
Buying the ‘best’ camera, or the latest gadget, will do
nothing to make you a good photographer. In fact, many
photographers fall in love with inferior cameras, such as the
Holga, old Polaroids, and pinhole cameras. It is your eye
that is ultimately the only important tool, everything else is
just a means of bringing that vision into being.
Of course,
understanding your equipment is very important. If you don’t
understand the basics, you will never be able to use them to
your advantage. Read your camera’s manual and learn as much
as you can about how it works and what features it has. All
of them will be useful to you at one point or another.
Fine art
photography is the process of seeing and recording that vision
into something that can be shared, preserved. One of the best
exercises for this is the single-subject assignment.
Take one object.
It can be anything – a toy, a book, your home, car, or a tree
– anything that is stationary. Do not chose an animal or
another person, chose something that cannot move on its own.
For an entire month spend a portion of every day photographing
that same object. Each time, try to find something new about
it. Try photographing it from a new different angle, or using
a different technique.
Each day will get
a bit harder, but each day will also fore you to think
differently, especially armed with the knowledge that some
things have been done before, and by you. Take time to reflect
on every image you’ve taken. Review them, study your work and
see what you like, and what you didn’t like. Use that
information to try something new. Experiment as much as you
can. There are endless ways of looking at an object, if you
think you’ve run out of ideas, think harder. Or try recreating
a composition you’ve already created and see if you can
re-create that same image (it’s actually quite hard to do so).
This will help you
being your process of seeing. It will only happen if you open
your mind and be receptive to what you are telling yourself in
a realistic and practical way.
Once you develop
the understanding of seeing, you can apply this to virtually
every area of your work. You will be able to literally walk
around and see images. With so many possible opportunities,
you can then begin the process of matching the right angle,
composition and style to your own voice and vision. Between
the two, you will create images that will be unforgettable to
you and to anyone who you share your work with.
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Terry Michael
started working with a photojournalist while in high school,
and over the years has worked for a variety of national media
clients, including AOL and NBC. He currently operates a studio
in New York that specializes in wedding and fine art
photography. His work
has been shown in galleries throughout the northeast, and he
has also been featured on the television series "Whose Wedding
is it Anyway?" which airs on the Style Network.
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