I have written about this already, in several contexts. In the hopes that my writing might be useful to others, I append it here.
This is from a letter written to someone who was in a workshop that Paula and I taught in Prague many years ago. It was written in response to his concern over being overly influenced by our photographs.
In response to your concerns about your making photographs that you think might be similar to mine, a word (words, really), about influence and a period of making photographs that appear imitative. As one sees photographs from other photographers or has experience of art in other mediums that touches one deeply and feels "right"in accord with ones own beingthe influence of that work on ones photographs may be strongly in evidence. That is nothing to be worried about or concerned with. As life continues, one will have many experiences of seeing photographs from other photographers, and other artworks from workers in other mediums, as well as having many emotionally charged experiences unmediated by art. All of these experiences will have an influence that will merge with the original strong influence. As time passes, the original strong influence, if it is one that truly did speak to you, may remain in evidence, though in increasingly diluted form, as it merges with everything else that occurs in your life. If this original strong influence was not truly in accord with your being, its traces in your own work will gradually disappear. In neither case are influences anything to worry about or to try to get over with quickly. As part of the fabric of ones life, they come and they go in their own good time. Because many experiences are common to all humanity, influences are to be embraced, for they lead us more quickly to a finding of our true selves. As I said in On Teaching Photography, "A period of imitative work is not to be feared. Everyone is unique. With a broad foundation in the medium and with continued work over a period of time ones uniqueness will emerge."
Of course, there does exist the possibility (witness the many artists and photographers whose whole career consists in doing imitative work) that one will get "stuck" and never grow beyond an early strong influence. That is nothing to fear either. If an early and strong influence enables one to get a far greater pleasure in making ones art, that is also something to be thankful for, is it not, even if ones art does not expand the medium or our understanding of the world. After all, how many artists, of the total of all artists, in any age, truly make a lasting contribution?
Michael A. Smith