Red Skies at Night

January 21, 2012

Opening the Door

Filed under: articles, inspiration, noted, photography, photos, web — Eric Jeschke @ 8:16 pm

Door

Key: R20120102-085212

I’ve been wrestling with the idea of making vs. taking photographs. Of course many photographers would say that even when they discover a “found” image they are making a photograph, due to all the creative things they are doing with the light, composition, etc. and on afterward into post processing. But I am talking about something much different–the difference between being inspired by a found image vs. coming up with an image in your head and then going out and realizing that–making it happen.

I really struggled with trying to figure out why it was so hard for me to make the latter kind of images. It’s something that I want to work on and develop, and I know that part of that is just putting in the time working that way until it is as comfortable as the other. But part of me was just not satisfied with not understanding the source of the difficulty.

Today I read a post by Brooks Jensen that neatly summarized probably the most important aspect of the problem. It is essentially the difference between photography and painting: in (found) photography you find an image and then you pare it down, element by element, subtracting things until you have the image close to what you “saw” in your head when it caught your eye. In painting you are doing the opposite: adding elements, until the scene is built up into something interesting. In short, it is a fundamentally different way of working. In the end you are exercising the same sorts of decisions and skills at the time of pressing the shutter, but the beginning part is so different that I am just not familiar with starting from that end.

I hope that I have articulated this well enough to get the point across. I know Brook’s post helped me understand at least one of the barriers standing in front of me that I could not see, and now seeing and understanding it, I might be able to make some more progress in getting over that barrier. It’s fair to say that painting lessons or other creative forms of art would probably be a huge help here, but my “art time” is limited. At least I can practice my “brush strokes” photographically.

January 15, 2012

Folio Mini Workshop: Wrap Up

Filed under: inspiration, life, photography, process, workshops — Tags: — Eric Jeschke @ 4:40 pm

Folio Mini-Workshop Participants

Key: R20120115-145346

From left: Eric, Jean, Charlene, Ken, Mary, Jim

If you are a regular reader you know that I have been teaching a folio mini-workshop to some other members of our local photography club. These are a really talented group of photographers who were interested in learning how to make a folio. The assignment: a completed, printed and enclosed folio. Today was the wrap up day where we showed our finished product to each other and shared the experiences of their making.

I was very impressed by the results. One of the members has already sold 19 copies of his folio at around $150 each. I have no doubt there will be some more sales by some of the others. They were all very inspiring and impressive pieces of art. I was struck again, looking through them, how the print is still the ultimate performance of a photograph. These folios were all more impressive than the electronic ones we previewed at the last meeting.

Jim's FolioKey: R20120115-131312

Jim

Mary's FolioKey: R20120115-133549

Mary

Ken's FolioKey: R20120115-135423

Ken

Jean's FolioKey: R20120115-140215

Jean

Charlene's FolioKey: R20120115-142239

Charlene

Eric's FolioKey: R20120115-144920

Eric

January 1, 2012

2011 in Reflection

Filed under: competitions, exhibits, inspiration, photography, photos, tools, workshops — Tags: , , — Eric Jeschke @ 4:53 pm

Chicken Little

Key: R20120101-155621-master

In years past I have taken occasion at the end of the year to look back on the year and reflect about what I’ve accomplished on my photographic journey and what goals I have set for the next year.  I am honestly not trying to toot my own horn here.  This is a journal, so it is mostly for me to look back and track my progress.  The thing I like about blogging is being able to read other’s journals and get ideas, be inspired, and take solace that others are struggling with their own creative goals, whatever they may be.

2011 was a good year, at least by most of my past measures of progress.  I entered several local contests and had pieces in all of the resulting shows.  I made a new folio (that is up to a higher standard of quality as far as the finishing), and learned some exciting new mounting techniques.  I didn’t make a book this year, but that was fine.  It was a conscious decision to skip doing so until I had a worthy project.  The making of a book just so I have “been there, done that” I have already done several times over now and is no longer interesting in its own right.  I attended a seminar by Dewitt Jones, and taught a mini-workshop on making folios.

But 2011 was also a year where the increasing feeling of “plateauing” weighed heavily upon me.  Near the middle of the year I was wrestling (mostly offline) with new ideas for getting out of my usual paths and forcing myself into some uncomfortable areas to help spark creativity.  The biggest issue here is trying to get myself out of being strictly a “found image” photographer.  To that I want to add a “create vision” photographer half; a kind of unrealized potential that I see.  To do this I wanted to force myself to create some photographs in a studio setting.  I didn’t want this to be an excuse to buy more gear, but sometimes just having a few new tools can let you experiment more easily with new ideas.  I purchased some inexpensive items to make a DIY mini-studio for shooting still life and macro subjects, bought a couple old manual focus portrait lenses and spent some days experimenting with these things.  I felt so far afield from my normal shooting habits that I made a new prefix for my image database keys: the “X” (for experimental) series–meaning I don’t even feel comfortable enough posting these images publicly that I felt the need to point out explicitly that they are experimental!

Looking forward to 2012, I plan to continue the these experiments and hopefully expand upon them.  I am interested in alternative printing techniques like cyanotypes made from digital negatives and might experiment with something like that a bit as well, if only just to get me out of my normal printing style.  Although I will still enter contests, I plan to put more emphasis on entering contests on the web, not just local ones. I’ll keep looking for reasonable opportunities to take workshops and seminars, but these are not a high priority, unless they look like they might directly assist with my goal of developing my other half (non-”found image” photography).  I continue to be intrigued by video and want to dabble in that a bit more.  There are likely to be more experiments like Menehune Weekend.

These are all lesser goals, however.  My absolute top goals for 2012 are:

  1. to organize my work into a much better online and offline presentation (separate from the blog),
  2. to reflect upon and prepare an artists statement that accurately reflects my work and style,
  3. to establish project-based photography as my main way of working.

I must really put some emphasis on these.  These are really critical to focus my work.  I feel more than ever that my own style becomes ever stronger, and usually it shows in whatever sorts of photographs I take.  I must figure out how to articulate that style and make that accessible to an audience, as well as organizing the work into coherent presentations.  Part of that will culminate in starting to put together solo shows of my work.  Looking at other bloggers I can often see their style coming through strongly, but there is no organization to the work.  It is just a loose collection of whatever they ran across in their day, or week.  This is also Eric, in 2011.  By the end of 2012 I would like to have some progress in organizing the photography so that it is not just a photostream, cool as those are.  This is a long row to hoe, and I expect to make only partial progress, but I am long past the time when I should have started that effort.  To finally tie in with today’s image: I have to stop running around like a chicken!

Lowest priority on the list: buy more gear.  My feeling is that my current kit is absolutely good enough for everything I am doing or want to do.  It is not constraining me in any way.  My gear is aging though.  I have a first-generation u4/3 mirrorless as my main camera.  Like all modern electronics its lifetime is measured in short years.  If the GH2 goes on a fire sale before the introduction of the GH3 I may buy one if I can find one at a good deal.  Or if the GH3 looks fantastic I may wait awhile until it drops in price and then buy one.  But I’ll happily keep chugging along with my GH1 and it’s “measly” 12 megapixel sensor until it gives out and/or I can pick up a new (old) replacement.

I am in need of a new tripod head, though, so I’ll probably be on the lookout for one sometime soon.  I’ll probably be fiddling with the lighting in my DIY studio so I may be making some lighting fixtures.  Also, soon I will have to make a decision about a new printer, because the old one will not last too much longer.  I will either succumb to the temptation to continue to “enjoy” the flexibility (and madness) of printing myself, or I will completely give up running my own printer and outsource all printing.  I am seriously considering the latter.

I could not finish this post without talking about music.  It is my second creative hobby, although it lags far behind photography in the amount of time that I give it.  In this area my goal is simply to play more and record more, and to try to expand my technique a bit beyond what I am doing now.  You will likely see the occasional post about music in 2012 as well.

Here’s hoping you reach your creative goals in 2012!

November 14, 2011

A Trio of Updates

Filed under: inspiration, lenses, photography, photos, process, workshops — Tags: , , , , — Eric Jeschke @ 12:34 am

Brush your Teeth #2

Key: X20111113-214600-master

Some minor updates here to report at Red Skies At Night. A number of things actually, movement on several fronts shall we say, although I’m not sure they are not all related somehow to my feelings of wanting to push the envelope of what I am doing photographically (i.e. getting out of a rut).

I’ve been intrigued for some time about the possibility of using old legacy glass on my micro 4/3′s kit. This is supposed to be one of the really interesting possibilities of the mirrorless design. I’ve liked what I’ve seen on the web of some old Konica Hexanon lenses and how they render on u4/3. Today after a long spell of waiting I finally got busy and found a couple of reasonable deals on ebay for a Konica Hexanon AR 40mm f1.8 and a Hexanon AR 50mm f1.4. The u4/3 adapter for the Konica AR mount is very inexpensive at around $20 from Amazon. It will be fun to play with these and see how they compare to the PanaLeica 45mm Elmarit. These three are all in the mid tele portrait range on 4/3 and I am looking forward to trying to set up some formal portrait sessions and give them a whirl.

In slightly related vein, I’ve been interested in doing some experimental work with the 45mm using a small studio setup. I finally got some materials together for backdrops and reflectors and some inexpensive lighting. I’m going to be playing with some still life, macro, miniatures and maybe abstracts in it. In a future post perhaps, I’ll reveal my klunky DIY setup. I’m pretty excited by it, although I also have a strong sense of going back to basics here. I know next to nothing about lighting set ups, macro photography and the like. Up till now I have strictly been an available light kind of photographer. This is all really new and I know there will be a steep learning curve with lots of experimentation and mistakes. The biggest thing I’m hoping to accomplish is to begin to develop an ability to work from a creative idea to a constructed image. Like many photographers, I have spent years honing the art of seeing images throughout my travels through life–the “found” image. But I feel that there is another kind of creativity that I’m missing out on completely, and that is the constructed image. I’ve made a few, but it has been rare, and I’m hoping that by pushing in that direction I might start getting some inspiration there. I’m going to be marking these images with an “X” designation instead of the usual “R” to indicate that this is highly experimental work.

On a final note, last week my group of fellow photographers who are taking the folio mini-workshop from me met for the second of our three sessions and we went over everyone’s draft electronic version of their folio, then discussed printing options, paper types and enclosure options. This was a really great session and I’m really excited to see the work these folks are putting together. Our third and final session is coming up in January and the assignment for then is to complete the printing and enclosure of the folio. I’ve decided to go with Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Ultra Smooth for my Occupy Seattle 2011 folio and I ordered a box of 50 sheets. I am constructing my own enclosure and I’ll probably have a post here on that pretty soon.

September 11, 2011

Bird on a Wire

Filed under: inspiration, life, photography, photos — Eric Jeschke @ 8:48 pm

Bird on a Wire

Key: R20110904-175435

Bird on a wire outside my motel room
But he ain’t singin’
Girl in white outside a church in June
But the church bells they ain’t ringing
I’m sittin’ here in this bar tonight
But all I’m thinkin’ is
I’m the same old story same old act
One step up and two steps back

From One Step Up.

Sometimes I feel there is no progress in my unpaid projects; too many responsibilities, too many distractions, and other excuses I could name. Then other times there is a small milestone passed that tells me I am making progress, however slight. It is these moments that are so important to keep the creative spirit burning, however low it might go. As long as it doesn’t go out, there is that next little draft to stir it up again. I tell myself it is all about the journey, and yet there is a little voice questioning whether that is all there is. You can’t take it with you, as they say…

August 28, 2011

How to get out of a funk?

Filed under: inspiration, life, photography, photos — Eric Jeschke @ 9:27 pm

One sunny afternoon ... happily ever after

Key: R20110828-171501-master

Upon seeing this good advice yet again, I’ve decided that I need to get off my duff and just put in some hours with the camera instead of waiting for inspiration to strike.  I know that it will, eventually, but I’m conceding that I need to get proactive about it.  I had a really low day today (on a Sunday), feeling generally restless and cynical and cranky.  I know that what I need is to get my artistic muse cranked up and it would take care of a lot of those feelings.  I’ve been getting a decent amount of food and sleep and exercise a week, so I know that isn’t what’s eating at me.

I’m not generally fond of the “picture a day” kind of habits, but I think I will be putting forth some effort into just forcing some things, photographically.  It’s going to be uncomfortable, and I’m going to be posting some work that is pretty experimental for me on the blog.  That in itself will be uncomfortable, because up till now I’ve generally posted work that I like and when I don’t have anything recent that I like, I don’t post.  I’m a little private that way.  But it’s time for a change.  Let’s see whether it makes a difference.

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