I stir the pot, fix the holes, and observe the reality as it is. Propagandist for hire.

The Photobook Craze

Added on by Ridzki.

I developed an affinity to photobooks, the one coming from the famous, the one that interest me and the one coming from the bargain section. Problem is I hardly devour the book, sometimes even it just lying there and when I had the time I would probably just skimming through the pages. Then it struck me.

Am I buying photobook just for the sake of having one? or because the photographer's there and I could get his signature in the book that I bought?

This thought are consuming me and making me thought that this is why I never become a good photographer, because I hardly learn from the examples that is in my possession.

And by that I got one of my new year's resolution.

 

A Quarter of Century

Added on by Ridzki.

I believe I'll die young, I believe in my heart that I won't be there to see the sun rises on my 25th birthday, but yet here I am, living and writing this piece. So how does it feels to turn to a quarter of century as living breathing person? as me?

I felt tired.

As much as I accustomed to birthdays, this is the only one where I felt tired. Tired because I have been tied to my jobs, my life and my commitments. I'm tired because I felt that I haven't achieve anything (in one aspect) but also tired of all the work that I have done (thus have been achieved or yet to achieve, in another aspect). Yet I am still eager to see what's there on the horizon, the unseen and yet to come and brace if not march towards it. This eagerness also one of the reason I still survive to this day.

So what's there for me in the future?

I know, I will soon move back to Malaysia and looking forward for the opportunity to learn something new again. To look with another perspectives and to catch up with what I haven't been doing last time. After that? who knows. Probably the world, probably back to Indonesia or probably stay there.

That said, I would like to say that I am being very grateful for every support that I had, from my families and friends, from Felisia, from others whom I talked and discuss with. From those who leave their marks on me, long lasting impression that will I remember and for those I haven't met but will later on.

God speed to you all.

Photography Links for The Week of 28 October 2011

Added on by Ridzki.

This week we have more content from Indonesian Photography scene! A glimpse of China and concern about the new breed of conflict photographers. We also take how small documentary could make an impact and raging debate on what age are photographers does their most influential works.

Photography Links for The Week of 21 October 2011

Added on by Ridzki.

All right this week we have some animal portrait, books and portfolios. We also still have interview and news (hint: Tim Hetherington on Magnum) and finally an advice from Indonesian NGT Photographer Hafidz Novalsyah. So kick back, relax and enjoy.

Lucki The Magician

Added on by Ridzki.

Met him first when he's performing on the street and his name is Lucki. Making a living by performing and becoming additional player for Steven and The Coconut Tree.

As an artist himself, Lucki also one of those people who turn Jakarta's street into a surrealist metropolis.

Dance to his tunes he'll make you forgot about all the madness and see only the beauty of this city.

----

After my initial encounter with Lucki, I met him several times over the course of my living here in Jakarta. Everytime I come back from my office and passing through the streets, the tunes coming from his sax can magically penetrate the madness that Jakarta produced after office hours and everytime I heard it I smiled. I smiled because there's still an antidote to let me escape from the pollution and noise.

He in this sense was still the same magician I met a year ago.

This is Massive

Added on by Ridzki.

Apparently there will be three photography exhibitions next week in Jakarta and each opening is in the span of three days to make it more interesting one of it is actually "The Biggest Photography Exhibition in Indonesia" ever. First we have Martin Westlake "Eastward" Exhibition in Dia.Lo.Gue Artspace, Kemang.

Then "Indonesia: A Surprise" a parallel exhibition in Galeri Salihara and North Art Space in Ancol.

Finally the biggest of them all "Beyond Photography" in Ciputra Artpreneur Center.

Photography Links for The Week of 14 October 2011

Added on by Ridzki.

So this week we have advice on what to be put on your website, a questions about what can you achieve when you're intimate with your subjects, interview with Matt Weber question whether do we still needs photobooks or not and many more.

Photography Links for the week of 7 October 2011

Added on by Ridzki.

Well this is a new series on the blog, I will post some photography links that interest me and hopefully can be enjoyed by the masses as well. It will be posted hopefully everyday weekly (every Friday) at 17:00 GMT +7 timezone (that's Indonesian Timezone)

In Between Sadness and Happiness

Added on by Ridzki.

The last two weeks I was doing two assignments each on different week. Now, before I start I was doing reading and looking at pictures from Stephen Shore, Bill Eggleston, our homegrown Kurniadi Widodo and looking at books such as Street Photography Now as well as Magnum Magnum. With all these influence on documentary photography, I can only say I viewed my assignment with a new perspective, a documentary perspective in which I can strangely feel that emotions filling the air from the subjects. Now here's a picture from the two events, one is a wedding and one is an event filled with orphans.

Guess which one I felt the sadness in the air and which one where I felt that the long lost happiness is found back.

 

Advice for The Young

Added on by Ridzki.

Forget about the profession of being a photographer. First be a photographer and maybe the profession will come after. ~ Christopher Anderson from Magnum, See his works here,  more advice can be found here and here

Yang Banal Yang Berwarna

Added on by Ridzki.

Yang Banal Yang Berwarna atau YBYB adalah sebuah usaha untuk mendokumentasikan benda-benda atau pemandangan banal di sekitar yang memiliki warna yang ajaib. [portfolio_slideshow]

Kenapa?

Karena yang banal ini biasanya terlewatkan, kita terlalu sibuk dan terkadang memiliki terlalu sedikit waktu untuk stop dan melihat ke sekeliling. Yang banal yang berwarna adalah usaha untuk mengingatkan agar orang mau berhenti sejenak dan mau melihat ke sekelilingnya.

Apakah ini bisa menjadi project foto lanjutan, tampaknya iya dan menjawab pertanyaan saya yang tempo hari itu.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glimpse of Lao

Added on by Ridzki.

One thing which is a fact is that Lao is a hidden gem, it remains as subtle as it can be although being surrounded by countries which tourism already flourishes like Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.

Vientiane the capital of Lao PDR, will take you back where holiday is defined by taking the time to finish the book on the local coffee shop or working on the project you would like to finish. The people are friendly, the Lao food although hard to find are surprisingly good and the best thing you can cover the whole city for only 3 hours or so plenty of time to enjoy the laid back atmosphere.

Still the aura of business is everywhere, much like any country in South East Asia. Expect pollution and traffic jams to be on the main street, but it's nowhere comparable as  Jakarta.

While Vientiane is the developing capital in which modernism slowly creeping in, Luang Prabang in the other hand is a small charming rustic city. So small that you can cover it in one hour.

Daily life would include to see the monks walking up and down the streets, getting alms from the citizen or tourists, cycle around the city, sipping coffee in a bakery and finally enjoying the colours exploded calmly in the night market.

It's a city where the time is lost, it's where you ask for peace and calmness, rare attributes for one of the tourist destination in South East Asia.

More pictures can be seen here and here

Buat Apa Lagi Kita Motret?

Added on by Ridzki.

Jadi gini ceritanya, pertanyaan ini muncul ketika saya membaca artikel tentang konflik antara Jay Maisel dan Andy Baio  lalu berlanjut kepada analisa yg ditulis oleh Jeremy Nicholl, tapi inti dari tulisan ini adalah bukan ngebahas Jay, Andy atau Jeremy tetapi lebih kepada satu statment yang ada di blog si Jeremy yaitu tentang 1 grup di Flickr, tepatnya postingan di grup itu. Saya yakin semua fotografer online pasti tau Flickr, mereka pernah nyoba make atau jadi anggota pro sekarang dari sekian banyak fitur yang ada, ada 1 fitur yg bernama group, fungsinya yah, bikin group sesuai dengan selera kita. Salah satu grup itu bernama DeleteMe, cara kerja di group ini adalah user meng-upload 1 foto dan user-user yang lain bisa voting apakah foto tersebut bisa di save atau di delete. Tersebutlah 1 user bernama André Rabelo yang mengupload 1 foto dengan resolusi kecil, buram, shaky dan tidak tajam sama sekali. Hasilnya bisa dipastikan semua orang pasti bilang delete me, tapi ternyata si uploader bukanlah fotografer aslinya dan foto yg buram, shaky dan tidak tajam itu adalah karya milik Henri Cartier-Bresson.

Ok kembali ke judul, dari pembicaraan di Group itu, mulailah saya menelusuri komentar komentar yang ada, sebagian yang menyebut itu harusnya dihapus mulai sadar mereka salah, beberapa orang mengucapkan "inilah yang terjadi kalau sebagian besar tidak mempelajari sejarah fotografi" tapi yang paling menohok dan membuat saya berpikir adalah komentar dari The Chorizo Warrior yang saya ambil kutipannya:

WHO WILL REMEMBER A PERFECT SHOT SET UP IN A STUDIO OF A F*%^ING TOMATO IN 50 YEARS TIME?!!??

Dan komentar itu adalah inti dari blog posting ini semua.

Beberapa kita membawa kamera ketika travelling, beberapa membawa di jalanan, beberapa bawa untuk gaya biar ada yg digantungin di leher dan beberapa bawa karena mereka penghasilannya untuk memotret. Khusus yang terakhir mungkin postingan yang ini tidak akan berlaku.

Ketika kita travelling apa yg akan kita foto? Sunrise, Sunset, gunung yang berlapis, slow shutter sungai/pantai/awan, orang-orang yg kita temui atau foto narsis mungkin?

Ketika kita di jalan mendokumentasikan hidup, kita membahas atau terinspirasi dari Cartier-Bresson, Gilden, Parr, Stuart atau Moriyama. Atau sebagian besar mungkin masih terjebak bahwa kalau di jalanan ya moto yang paling gampanglah pengemis atau anak-anak jalanan dan diberi caption yang sedikit mengiba.

Ketika kamera menjadi aksesoris, yah kalo ga narsis, ya foto temen-temen atau pacar yang unyu-unyu atau yah keluarga.

Singkatnya tiap kali kita memotret, tiap kali kita memencet shutter semua yang terekam yang di memory card kita pasti gambar gambar yang sudah sering muncul. Cuma di tempat atau dengan subject yang berbeda dengan fotografer yang berbeda pula. Dari sini bisa disimpulkan sebagian besar dari pemilik kamera itu mandeg proses kreatifnya, karena berulang melulu konsep fotonya.

Jadi kalau sudah berulang kali kita potret, berulang kali kita liat dan berulang kali kita lakukan. Buat apa lagi kita motret kalau cuma menuh-menuhin harddisk?

I am glad, I didn't win the IPA contest

Added on by Ridzki.

Invisible Ph t grapher Asia (don't ask where the "o" are, they did write it that way) conducted a Street Photography contest a month back. To make story shorts, I sent three of my street shots hoping that I would win the "Classic Street Kit" which consist of:

  • A great shooter/user condition black repainted LEICA M2 Rangefinder Camera. This is one of our very own cameras we use for street photography.
  • A brand new Nokton 35mm F/1.4 Lens kindly sponsored by Chiif Cameras, Official Voigtlander Dealer.
  • An original IPA SUNNY 16 Dog Tag.
  • 3 rolls of Kodak TRI-X film in a 35mm Ammo Sleeve that we designed ourselves and use.

(or probably that's too much, being a finalist is more than enough for me.)

Then I waited in anticipation as they announced the 20 finalist, literally one by one and as the title implied I did not win. Strangely as the fact come to me, all the tension I had was slowly diminishing. When I got my head through and see the photographs by the finalist, I can say that I am glad I didn't won and I have learn these few things:

  1. Indonesia harbours a lot of Street Photographers, out of 20 there's 6 Indonesians become a finalist. I believe that if only we discovered camera first probably people will cite an Indonesian as a father of street photograph rather than Cartier-Bresson.
  2. In relation to #1 we didn't need to go to Paris or Europe to have good street shots. The subjects, terrains, cultures here in Asia are different but that didn't stop great pictures being made right? I'd say take our camera everyday and take a shot at anything that interest us.
  3. At first I am still confused about the definition of Street Photography. What is it, try to capture the decisive moment? the symmetry? the action? the finalist entries allow me to see a pattern, a pattern so obvious but I couldn't put it into words yet (confused? yes it is also making me more confused). However, to enlighten the people at IPA  said that  "there needs to be more happening within the frame for it to hold its ground as a good street photograph", while that this is what the people there say, we mustn't forget  that photography is a very subjective matter, what they perceive as good, might not be your cup of tea. I'd say rather that contradicting their choices we need to learn from the best (entering competition is one), our mistakes and create our own vision of street photography.

So why did I am glad that I didn't win? simply because the finalits' works have tell me something I didn't know before or something that I oversee. That something (in which I couldn't explain as well) might not be coming to me when I become one of the finalists.

So I believe that's about it, might write a little bit more when I can think of something or figuring out that "something". In the mean time congrats for all the finalists and head over to this page to see the slideshow of their works.

Visions Reloaded: Jogjakarta

Added on by Ridzki.

On the beginning it was an idea, born from reading several articles, watching a few clips and enjoying a lot of photographs. The idea is to ditch zoom lenses in favor for a prime or in my case a manual focus prime.

Then it come to fruition when Vesak Day (Birth of The Buddha) comes closer, so on the 13th to 18 May 2011 I decided to roam the Jogjakarta again, carrying two primes (Soligor 28mm f2.5 and EF 50 mm f1.8) along with my trusty zoom (my girlfriend advice me to carry that as well). Turns out I can't quite ditch the zoom altogether but it does give me a fresh perspective on documenting travel pictures.

So here's what I found out;

  • I love my manual lenses because of its simplicity and tones created. I did not need to over thinking things and all the image produced it is as if I'm right standing in front of it. On the other hand I hate it because I can't focus properly in dim light or when I am using small apertures.
  • I can't ditch my zoom, while advocates of the wide/normal prime says that prime allow you to move and be "creative" and zooms are necessarily evil, etc. I just can quit it yet. This is because zoom allow me to be more creative in its own way; I can use the telephoto end in my landscape, I can capture details which often I can't when I am using prime and I can use technique not available for me when I am using the prime.
  • While traveling I don't need so many lenses in my arsenal, I just need my trusty zoom and one prime which often can be the 28 or 35 mm. While doing several assignment on the other hand I will probably need another lenses.
  • I tried movie making  and I found out that it is hard and good software comes with a price, but I'll be trying to create a multimedia album for my travel in the future.
  • I need to learn to ride a motorbike to simplify movement.

So here is the images from the trip:

 

I actually go to Jogjakarta again last weekend, happily using only my prime and here's the results:

 

 

It really worked out, I suppose but will I ditch the zooms altogether? we'll see about that.

Prime: The Way Forward Is to Take Two Steps Back

Added on by Ridzki.

Yesterday some of the people that I follow on twitter is buzzing about a certain photo-journalistic class, the class is already exceptional because it's conducted in Rwanda, by the VII Photo Agency and conducted by none other that Gary Knight and Marcus Bleasdale, however people aren't buzzing because they are excited about the opportunity. They are excited because one particular sentence which appear on the announcement, which I paste here

This workshop will be conducted using digital cameras only. All students are expected to supply their own cameras and lenses. Marcus and Gary really encourage you to come with one body and a 35mm lens or equivalent and a spare camera and lens. Zoom lenses are not really encouraged.

Can you guess which one make the ruckus?

Hint: it's not the digital part.

Anyway I'll be travelling to Jogjakarta and because of that line in the advertisement, I have decided to carry out an experimentation with my camera and the photographs resulted. It's a call of revolution perhaps or a revival of a long lost idea.