Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/10/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Please go on. The information is great but the presententation is even better. dick harig - ----- Original Message ----- From: Margaret Jeffcoat <margaret01@excelonline.com> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Friday, October 13, 2000 7:08 PM Subject: Re: [Leica] Portfolios (disquisition alert) > Blow on Mike, Blow on!! > Wilber > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Mike Johnston <michaeljohnston@ameritech.net> > To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> > Sent: Friday, October 13, 2000 10:18 PM > Subject: [Leica] Portfolios (disquisition alert) > > > > > > > > > This is yet another naive question from an amateur. What should a > > > "personal portfolio" look like? > > > > > > Ah, you have stepped into my web, Grasshopper. A topic near and dear to my > > heart. Disquisition alert! (Windbag alert too, maybe. You have been > warned.) > > > > The form a personal portfolio would take would vary with the person, but > its > > function probably wouldn't. The idea is simply this--you're a > photographer. > > Can you show a representative sampling of your best work, in fully > realized > > form? Whatever that is? > > > > And make it so that it actually exists? > > > > This latter point is important. Many photographers have a vague idea in > > their heads of some given subset of their pictures, some of which might > > already exist in viewable form. This is their idea of "their work." But > > that, I would argue, doth not a portfolio make. > > > > The idea is to do the work to have on hand something that shows off what > you > > do, without apologies. The question I used to ask students is, if a museum > > curator knocked on your door tomorrow morning and asked to "see your > work," > > are you READY? Do you have something finished, right now, to show? It's > not > > enough to lead them to a huge pile of workprints, or lead them around the > > house and show them the seventeen pictures you liked enough to have framed > > over the past decade, or to open the slide cabinet to reveal 5,000 slides > in > > cascading piles and say pleadingly, "can you give me a while?" or > (shudder) > > to open your contact book and start flipping through it, every now and > then > > jabbing your finger at the page. > > > > The "work" I'm talking about is what my friend Allen (A. D.) Coleman calls > > "reification"--making it real. The idea is that other people cannot see > your > > visualizations about your finished work in its absence, or from > incompletely > > realized clues. > > > > What the work consists of is going to depend upon what you visualize, but > > generally speaking it can be divided into three main tasks: editing the > > pictures, crafting prints (or whatever), and selecting and assembling and > > method of presentation. > > > > Re editing: most photographers are mediocre to execrable editors of their > > own work. The problem is that they lack a.) objectivity and b.) the > > requisite ruthlessness. What I mean by the first point is that they > consider > > all sort of thoughts, feelings, and factors extraneous to the picture in > the > > selection process--who they were with or what kind of day they were > having, > > how much the subject matter means to them, how hard they worked to > get/make > > the pictures (this happens frequently with amateurs--if they worked hard > to > > get it they somehow think it has to be good), some meaningless technical > > feature (a very saturated blue, or you like the sharpness), or (heaven > > forfend) their fetishistic slavering over whatever nifty piece of gear > they > > happened to make it with (that would never be pertinent to this > > list--Luggers are all too intelligent to get caught in that trap). > > > > Strategies to overcome these impediments to effective editing are > numerous, > > but I'll mention three: work at it; take your time; and, get help. I've > said > > many times and many places that the best editing tool is a large bulletin > > board where you put your pictures up to look at (assuming you make > prints). > > Another good idea is to gather other peoples' opinions and watch for other > > peoples' reactions as they look at your pictures. > > > > Another problem of editing is a false or obsequious objectivity, wherein > we > > pick things we think other people will like rather than the things _we_ > like > > (I've been guilty of this my own self.) > > > > Then, of course, there is the problem of indulgence, wherein photographers > > who are sentimental over their own efforts, or egocentric, admit a lot of > > filler into the final selection becase they don't have the heart to leave > > the almost-good-enough stuff out (or they simply don't have enough work to > > come up with the number of truly strong pictures they think they ought to > > have). > > > > Finally there's the problem of coherence--coming up with a group of > pictures > > that makes some sort of sense together. Variety isn't necessarily bad, but > > it's got to hang together somehow. > > > > So, most amateurs never make it through the editing process. > > > > If you have enough gumption and verve to actually come up with a group of > > pictures that make sense together, things can get fun. Because there's > > nothing like having a clear goal in mind to give energy to the work of > > crafting prints. And, really, the crafting of the presentation method can > be > > almost as much fun as making the pictures. > > > > If you've never done this sort of thing before, I think you'll find: > > --That it's surprisingly difficult; > > --That it's even more satisfying than you imagine it will be when > you're > > done; > > --That you never need return to that work again, because you have > > already done your level best by it; > > --And one more very fortunate and happy result, which is that it helps > > direct your _future_ work. It helps you decide what kind of photography > you > > really like, and what you're best at; it helps you (even if only > > half-consciously) focus your efforts on work that will more easily and > > directly lend itself to reification later. All good. > > > > So as to what form your portfolio should take, I don't really know. > Depends > > what you do and how you want it to look. Traditional box and mounted b&w > > prints? Laminated color prints? Transparencies in mounts? A slide show? I > > personally like print books. It doesn't greatly matter. What matters is > > whether it's PERFECT, perfectly realized, a true representation of the > best > > you've done. No apologies or explanations necessary. > > > > And, unfortunately, most photographers never do all this. Even most of > those > > who may read this very message and become temporarily enthused about the > > idea of reifying a master portfolio of their work will never follow > through. > > Don't ask me why that is, but I know photographers, and I know it to be > the > > case. Sad but true. > > > > --Mike > > > > P.S. If you want some practical tips as to how to actually go about doing > > all this, ask me tomorrow and I'll type another disquisition, presuming > > there is not too vociferous a chorus of complaints about my longwindedness > > tonight. > > > > > > > > > > >