Friday 18 July 2008

London Show, 29th of July


We will be having the Graduate Show in London, from the 29th of July until the 2nd of August, at the A&D Gallery (51 Chiltern Street, W1U 6LY, 02074860534). The private view will be the Tuesday 29th of July from 6pm till 9pm. The gallery is located in the city center and it has a nice and familiar atmosphere. Hope to see you there!

Wednesday 16 July 2008

Assisting Peer Lindgreen

I have been pretty busy these last week. But finally I have a day off... These last two days I have been assisting Peer Lindgreen in London. We have been shooting a couple of ads at The Worx Studios. Although it has been very tiring coming up and down, it has been well worthy. What is sure is that advertisement is a very demanding business and you have to be ready for long days... it's been good fun anyway!

Thursday 26 June 2008

How do you get an elephant having a wee on your car?

Following with the post "How do you get a bear in a kitchen?" dated 13th June and featuring animals doing weird things, I am posting this one now, "How do you get an elephant having a wee on your car?". The answer below:

To have a better view, go to Christophe Huet's website, where he shows all the stages in the retouching process. Nice.

http://www.christophehuet.com/

Monday 23 June 2008

End of Year Show and the British Barbecue

We have been busy this weekend. Last Friday we had the End of Year show at College, lots of people and good fun, some images above. The bar is always busy!!!

Also had a lovely barbecue on Saturday 21st of June, which is supposed to be the summer solstice and the longest day in the year... and of course was raining the whooooooole day. British summer.

Tuesday 17 June 2008

Zeitgeist - The Movie

Zeitgeist is a 2007 documentary film produced by Peter Joseph and released free online via Google Video in June of 2007.

The word "Zeitgeist" in German means "spirit of the time." It refers to the moral and intellectual trends of a given era.

Well worth watching it.

Monday 16 June 2008

Mencap in Kirklees display at University of Huddersfield


Mencap in Kirklees had an open day today at University of Huddersfield to show what people with disabilities can do. They have displayed 20 of the photographs I have been taken these past months. In the photo, Linda Reilly, Operations Manager of Mencap in Kirklees, with some of the images. There have been also workshops, performances, music and other activities which made the event very enjoyable.

Saturday 14 June 2008

The coming hearthquake in photography

Another interesting article, this time by Dirck Halstead, editor & publisher at The Digital Journalist.

THE COMING EARTHQUAKE

IN PHOTOGRAPHY

By Dirck Halstead

If the change from film to digital was the equivalent of a magnitude 5 earthquake, the changes to photography in the next 10 years will be equivalent of a magnitude 10.
The Digital Journalist, the monthly online magazine for visual journalism, has been predicting many of these changes for the past eight years. In 1997 we stated that the days of the use of film were coming to an end. We also said that in the future photojournalists would no longer be shooting still pictures, but would be using video as their prime medium of acquisition.
All those things have already happened. Still cameras that shoot film have already been abandoned by most manufacturers. Increasingly, newspaper photographers are being asked to shoot video for Web sites.
These seismic shifts, as we are already witnessing, will literally change the way photographers take pictures and how they are displayed.
Of course, in the next 10 years there could be a third world war, in which cases all bets are off, but certain evolutions are already too far along to make it unlikely they will be stopped.
First, most of the major camera manufacturers that are now associated with still photography will probably be out of business by 2016. Of the majors now selling cameras, I would put my money on only Canon to survive. That is because they have a farsighted video division, which will provide the research and development that will be a key to their survival. Already, Sony is moving to become the number one still-camera company. Their newest top-of-the line digital still cameras are based on designs from Konica, a company they absorbed.
However, it is video that will undoubtedly become the main means of acquisition in photography. Today, almost all the manufacturers of prosumer video cameras have moved to High Definition. These cameras, off the shelf, are capable of delivering a 2-megapixel still image. The Dallas Morning News is now equipping their still photographers with Sony Z1U video cameras, and they have created an algorithm that allows those frame grabs to be boosted to 67 megapixels. The Morning News is regularly running 4- and 5-column front-page pictures from these video grabs. Then, they put the streaming video on their Web site.
The financial imperative to newspapers is clear. Their salvation, in a time of plummeting ad revenues on their broadsheets, lies with their online versions. Online demands video. For this reason, we can comfortably say that in 10 years photojournalists will only be carrying video cameras.
Because video cameras now all feature a 16:9 "wide-screen" aspect ratio, the old 4:3 box that we used to associate with movies will be gone. This has enormous implications for how still photographs will be displayed in print. The standard 8x10 aspect ratio now commonly used will be dropped. Why waste all of that horizontal information in the pictures? Eventually, you can expect to see wide-screen pictures not only on your TV screen, but in print as well. We predict that magazines (those that still exist) in 10 years will be bound on the top or bottom, not on the sides as they now are. That will allow the magazine to be opened to display a horizontal rather than vertical layout. This will accommodate all those "wide-screen" photographs. However, it is more likely that paper printing will be long since gone, and instead newspapers, magazines and books will be delivered on "electronic" paper, in which case the visual presentation would most likely be video in the first place. Today, if you go to The New York Times online, you will notice that right on the front page is a box displaying video, not a still photograph.
Don Winslow, the editor of News Photographer magazine has noted that vertical photographs have almost ceased to exist in the photography lexicon. It used to a maxim of photojournalism that it was important to get as much information as possible into a small space. Verticals were the best way of doing that. However, for a generation of photographers who grew up watching television, and editors who wanted to display a photograph across a double-truck spread, the rules changed.
With video becoming the prime tool of acquisition, audio of course now enters into the picture. In fact, it becomes as important as the video. This means that a whole new set of skills must be developed by the photographer. Every photographer has already become a computer technician, spending more time on the "post" process, such as Photoshop, than on taking the picture. In the future, editing will be done in such programs as Final Cut Pro. All of this means that photographers will have to be smarter.
However, ultimately, the classic need for talent – the "eye of the photographer" – will never change.


Friday 13 June 2008

How do you get a bear in a kitchen?


This is one of John Offenbach's images for an ad for "Travelers". Yes, it is a bear in a kitchen... is it post production or did he really get that bear in the kitchen? Here the answer:

Follow the next link and click on "HAVING FUN" and then on "THE BEAR". It is good fun though!

http://www.johnoffenbach.com/site/pop.html

Wednesday 11 June 2008

Burk Uzzle's Letter

Today I am posting this very interesting letter by Burk Uzzle (the youngest photographer ever hired by Life Magazine, placed under contract at the age of 23, member of Magnum Photos for fifteen years, two of them serving as its president) to Sarah Harbutt at Newsweek magazine, published in the Digital Journalist, issue 104 (http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0104/nutsandbolts.htm). Make your own mind!

3/20/01

Sarah Harbutt
Director of Photography
Newsweek Magazine

Dear Sarah:

Last week you did me the honor of having one of your picture editors call on me for a very important assignment on death row, and I really wanted to do it. First, because it was you.

Secondly, I have already spent a week living in a prison on death row - a long time ago for the old Life Magazine. When that story ran it got so much attention that the governor of Illinois commuted the sentence of my subject to life - proof that photojournalism can really make a difference. I really wanted to have another go at that subject matter for you.

You're in a very important place in our world now, and you must know how proud I am of you.

When I was young Magnum photographer, I had the most wonderful of times living just down the street from one of my best friends, and your father, Magnum photographer Charles Harbutt. He went on to be a president of Magnum, and has had a life of great distinction. Well, Charlie and I have both long since left Magnum, have had our long lives in photography. And now you, that little girl Sarah, who played football with my kids in Brooklyn, is in one of the most important jobs in my world. Please forgive the sentiment, but It's a feeling that gives me great pleasure in getting older.

Even before you were old enough to play ball with us, however, my relationship with Newsweek had already started. Among other things, I had done the Newsweek cover when Martin Luther King was assassinated.

Now this is the funny part - in those days I was making as much from Newsweek as they want to pay me now, in a whole new century.

Trouble is, in those days myself and Charlie and all the other young photographers could more or less get by with a Leica and a loincloth. Now that loincloth (which was never that becoming) has turned into sixty thousand dollars worth of gear and way more overhead. I used to run five miles a day to stay in shape. Now I run five miles a day to stay ahead of the sheriff. (The loincloth still fits, but I don't get it out much anymore.)

It's a strange time. Much of the business is about celebrities and making big deals and eloquent pictures of milk on faces and stuff like that. Now, while all that's fine with me, there are still some really talented photographers around who have wanted to have a different kind of life quite apart from the world of celebrities, to grow as people from their experiences out there in that "other" world, and to turn it all into fine, serious work that will actually make the world a better place.

The group that has not been so much about making deals are the photographers who have historically wound up on your pages; they have brought the world to your readers.

In a way, that brings us to one of photography's dirty little secrets. A lot of photographers are not very good at business. And it's hard, especially when you're young and hungry and need a few bucks and a few credit lines to get started, to stop and think about the business ramifications of it all. But boy, do we photographers need to get better, and fast. We've got to start defending ourselves.

That brings us into the era of downsizing and screwing the help and eliminating the benefits and making the bottom line all that counts.

The paycheck for the talents, which have to be considerable to even get your attention, are not enough to support life. Those day rates need to come up - a lot!

Those pictures that make you and your magazine look good are made with lights and lenses that cost a fortune - used by people with children that need health insurance that costs a fortune, and all for, get this, day rates that are declining at Newsweek.

So, circumstances that really trouble me led to my turning down that Newsweek assignment last week. Over money. Over a grossly unfair day rate. (and Newsweek is not the only culprit)

Personally, it made me feel really terrible, and angry.

Terrible, because it was you, I know you to be an exceptional person and picture editor. We had a great relationship when you were at the New York Sunday Times Magazine. I know how hard you try, and how good you are, and how deeply you care about things. And boy, have you paid your dues. You richly deserve to be where you are.

Angry, because of all the stuff that's going on in our world today that has put me into a position of turning down an important assignment because of money. We're having to lose sight of the stuff that really counts in life, being forced to decline meaningful assignments out of a seething, internal outrage at being treated unfairly.

It's now come to the point where I personally believe I'm being had. It's hard for me to look at what's happening and not conclude that your bosses have decided to systematically screw the photographers. What is the value standard that is at work here? How can this not lead to a progressively more shallow magazine? How can I want to go the extra mile for such people?

I just don't want to go along with it any more. I want to be paid fairly for my work. Just as I bring honor to your pages by investing my talents, and experience, and caring - I feel it is only right that you should fairly honor my abilities and commitment to fine work.

And I really don't like having to conclude that management people, thinking only with their calculators, are taking advantage of the vulnerability of young, naive photographers that have not figured out that they and their careers are being sold down the river.

Let's all get through this bad time, and start growing again.

Hang in there Sarah, you can make a difference in a lot of lives.

Sincerely,

Burk Uzzle

Monday 9 June 2008

Kingsley's Crossing by Olivier Jobard

The story of the trip from Cameroon to France made by Kingsley, looking for a future in Europe. He was accompanied by photojournalist Olivier Jobard in this amazing journey.

Why people do this kind of journeys, risking their life to try to get to Europe? We all want something better, don't we? Pure photojournalism.

http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid604875358/bclid525671331/bctid174314911

Sunday 8 June 2008

Stuck between stations

The Hold Steady, nice!

Another country by Scott Strazzante

Scott Strazzante is a staff photographer for the Chicago Tribune. This is a personal project which lasted thirteen years, and it is a beautiful document.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/magazine/chi-anothercountry-0801,0,5345584.htmlpage

Saturday 7 June 2008

The Royal Photographic Society Journal feature


Some of my work has been featured this month in The Royal Photographic Society Journal. Among the photographs featured there are some panoramic images from the series "Panoramic Visions of Bizcaia", a portrait from the project I have been working in with Mencap in Kirklees and another portrait from the project with Connected Lakes Initiative in Kenya, shot last year. There is also included a brief biography.

Signature Photography Awards 2008 winner



My photograph "The office" has been awarded with the Signature Photography Award 2008 in the "Landscape and Interior" category. The image has been exhibited at The Empire Gallery in London since 21 May until 1 June together with the other finalists.

The panel included Isobel Beauchamp (Director, DegreeArt.com), Elinor Olisa (Director, DegreeArt.com), Harry Hardy (Luxe Magazine, The Times), Lou Siroy (Travel Photo Editor, The Times), Nick Galvin (Archive Director of Magnum), Rachel Rogers (AOP Gallery manager) and Anne-Charlotte Mornington (Chelsea College of Art).

Johnny Cash - "Hurt"

To open this blog, an amazing song and video performed by Johnny Cash... "I hurt myself... today" (it is a cover actually)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmVAWKfJ4Go