This thread ties in nicely with the thread asking "Is there anything you wouldn't photograph?"
Since I was 12, I shot more or less the same old, same old - school stuff, university stuff, general street scenes, landscapes, buildings, etc... I always shot 35mm film. Then a couple of years ago, I bought a Hassey. That square shape made me think about composition more. The 'slowness' of capturing a scene with a MF made think even more about the picture. Then I started into shooting 'purdy girls' when A friend of mine asked to shoot pics for her modelling portfolio and that ballooned. Fashion/glamour photography has so many 'rules', and so since I wasn't a professional, I broke every one - on purpose.
Then I got into a discussion about photography, ethics, what to shoot, out-of-the-box stuff, rules, etc... Now, I want to shoot stuff that would make most uncomfortable. Why? I don't know why. Maybe I want to ask myself, why does it make me uncomfortable in the first place? Was it socialization? Was it an inherent mechanism to divide doing good from doing bad? I don't know.
Talk about stepping out of the box. I'd pay to be a photographer in Iraq, Ivory Coast, first at the scene of a blood bath, or part of a forensic investigation. I'd love to document a person's life for a week - sort of reality TV in print. I like the idea of shooting street scenes using only a 28mm lens or wider - you have to get into strangers faces and how would I do that? I have captured my friends and family in their moments of joy, happiness, pride - weddings, births, graduations, etc... - I want to capture them in their moments of grief, despair and sorrow. I'd like to capture moments of extreme privacy and intimacy - not faked - but real.
Lastly, I'd like to photograph myself. I think this is the biggest step outside a box for a photographer. I dont know how I'm going to do this without it being somewhat staged, but I'll figure that out as I go.
This is my project for 2005. Really, REALLY stepping out of the box.
Regards, Art.