Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/01/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Why do I get the feeling that this going to wind up as some sort of research material with the usual turgid academic excretions adhered to it. Slobodan Dimitrov Henry Ambrose wrote: > > I wrote: > >> For an experiment try turning off all that you "know" about taking > >> pictures then go out and do it. Shoot a roll of only things that interest > >> you. Walk around until you see something interesting. Don't "dress them > >> up" shoot EXACTLY what piqued your interest. Don't use any of the rules > >> you know, reject them. Come back and look really hard at the film. What's > >> happening? > Martin replied: > >Yeah, the two schools. I'm of the other one: First you learn the rules, > >then you break them, but in interesting ways. I don't believe that you can > >turn off what you know. You carry it with you at all times. You cannot > >switch it off. The trick is to know it so well that you use it in more > >abstract ways, that you break free of the lowest level of knowing it. I > >believe that with my way of doing things, the ability to analyse (the "look > >really hard at the film" part) is enhanced and rather than doing and "seeing > >what happened" you can conciously do. Which, ultimately, allows you to > >express more. > > > >M. > and Martin also wrote: > >I like both of these -- and they go back to photographic clichés. Know for > >a given situation what the photographic cliché is and then don't to it: do > >something different. At the moment, I'm very much exploring photographic > >clichés, conciously taking the unexpected, mundane, unsurprising photograph > >so that I get to know it, get to feel it in my gut when I'm confronted with > >it. Then I can start finding ways to break out of the mold. Like music, > >where people practice scales and variations until they can use one structure > >to create others. > > No, I am suggesting an exercise that is close to what you are saying. > Reject what you know (the cliche that you already learned). > You know cliches whether you know it or not. Make any stupid picture you > want but NOT the cliche one. You already know the rules. And you can't go > out and say "I'm not making cliches" you go out and say "I'm > photographing that which is interesting just as I find it - first > thought." > > Put your brain and intellect on vacation and photograph what you see. > Sure they're still with you and you can't completely send them away for a > day. Just listen to the other part that sees without thinking. > > It is hard to shoot a roll of film this way. Very hard. Lots of "why are > you making a picture of this?' and "no walk over there it looks better" > Then just ignoring all that and photographing only what I found > immediately interesting. > > Henry