Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]All, A hundred years ago, back in 1976, I wrote a letter to the photo editor at National Geographic asking what kind of photography training his photogs had. He wrote back that none of them had a degree in photography, but were architects, artists, doctors, yada, yada, yada. With my infinite wisdom, I decided to get a leg up on the staff at National Geo by getting a photography degree, which I did (B.S., RIT, 82). Three months into school, I was told that National Geographic photogs shot to the National Geographic style ONLY and thus abandoned my hopes to do it my way, now that I was duly qualified with a degree, for Gilbert & Co. Subsequently learned more in the field than at school (shocking, eh?), but I do not regret attending RIT. FWIW, later went back to school to learn how to write, after writing for several years, and got an MS in journalism (M.S., Columbia, 86). Today, 94 cents and my degrees gets me a 16 oz. coffee at 7-11 on the way to work every morning. Old news: The greatest variable in this whole picture-making process is the photographer. Fred Ward with a Brownie Box probably could take better pictures than I could with an R8, although I would give him a run for his money. My point: great people produce great photographs. The technical stuff can be learned, in school or in life, and the equipment can be bought, but the eye develops elsewhere, deeper, and more arduously taught. Relax, everyone. There is no sacred path to becoming an exceptional photographer. And that's fine. There's room for many views, at many levels. Kodak's still making lots of film, and they'll make more. Oddly enough, today I hire photographers occasionally. And my office, at 18th & M Streets in downtown Washington, DC, is a mere two blocks from National Geographic's headquarters. I walk by every now and again, and look inside, and wonder. Funny how things turn out. Cheers, David W. Almy Annapolis, Maryland