davetravis
Member
Dave- I absolutely agree that what first and foremost makes you a better photographer is the same thing that gets you to Carnegie Hall- practice practice practice.
I would disagree however that viewing images by other photographers in books is radically different from viewing images by other photographers in a camera club slide competition. It is only by viewing the work of others that we come to know what is possible, to attempt it ourselves. Certainly, it is easier to get an answer about "how did you do THAT?" from the live person across the table than it is from the book if the book doesn't have the exact question you want to ask written out with the answer beside it. Books aren't as interactive as people are.
I think you're somewhat missing the spirit of the original question though - If I'm not mistaken, the purpose of the original question was to ask if you have ever done academic work relating to photography, and how does that academic work influence the photos you take. Personally, having a background in art history and pre-modern literature has had a big influence on my photography, because it has inspired the kinds of images I like to create. I draw on image and textual referents from antiquity to the Renaissance, just as the painters and poets and playwrights of the Renaissance did, and artists have continued to do up until nearly the modern period. With the arrival of the post-modern, abstract expressionist movements, the interest in relating to those humanist ideas has gone away, to be replaced by a de-humanization and abstraction to the point that art is now only about art, and not about the people who make it. I want my artwork to bring back the human element in art, and to keep it relevant to the audiences who view it.
That's how my academic background influences my photography.
Hi FC,
I really liked your Hercules portfolio.
The OP also asked about non-academics.
I think we're on the same page, just saying it in different words.
I lost myself in the published, academic world.
Those who came before, did, and continue, to inspire me.
But I reached the point where it became cold, and indifferent, almost other-worldly.
I needed the real and satient contact of other photogs
to keep me going.
To confirm that what I was trying, either in sucess or failure, was worth the effort.
For me, that's what it's all about.
DT