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

Filtering by Category: Photography

Post Foundry Notes: South East Asian Photographers, Our Countries as Working Grounds and The Future.

Added on by Ridzki.

This notes are to explore the questions that I had developed during the Foundry Photojournalism Workshop in Chiang Mai, August 2012. This is not an attempt to criticise or making an fuss rather this is my personal opinion and rants as based on the conversation that I had with certain people and the observation during and after the workshop. First thing that I noticed when I arrived to meet my fellow students in Chiang Mai is, where the hell are the South East Asian Photographers?

Fotografer.net (Indonesia) may boast that they are the biggest photography forum in South East Asia (SEA) however, there are only three photographers from Indonesia joining in, myself, Arif Setiawan (the scholarship recipient from Bandung) and Dilla Djalil-Daniel (Foundry alumni), Bea Wiharta (Reuters Photographer) is supposed to join us but he had a sudden assignment . Given the fact that Foundry was being announced at the end of 2011 the number of people who showed up is dissapointing, for other SEA countries it was slightly better although the names that showed up are established photographers that has previously exposed to similar workshop namely the Angkor Photo Workshop or others.

Malaysia had around 5 people on board, Singapore had 3(?), Brunei none, East Timor none, Cambodia none, Vietnam had 3, Burma had 3-4, Lao PDR none.

This is dissapointing for me .

"Oh it is expensive". Not really though, Foundry was announced at the end of 2011 and only conducted in August 2012. That means 6 months period of saving your money and given the fact that a lot of photographers nowadays are the growing middle classes, I don't see why is this the reason.

The low turnout can be argued that documentary photography and photojournalism was quite a niche in the genre, it has even see decline even in the western world as spoken by Alison Morley (ICP). But isn't the possibilties of getting mentored by the biggest names of photojournalism, meeting like minded people in an exotic place and building connection is enough to excite people?

South East Asian Photographers and Our Countries as Developed Market.

Read up David Alan Harvey; (Magnum) conversation with James Estrin; (NYT Lens Blog), on BURN Magazine, they are stating that how becoming a photographer today is one of the best days of becoming one because never was in history that we have unlimited access to almost every people in the planet through internet and how this opens up to new possibilities that was never imagine before. Below is the excerpt of the interview.

JE: And I love that kind of photography, and working for a newspaper. I happen to really like working for a newspaper, but what I am saying is that it has never been an easy profession; it’s a myth that it was easy twenty-five years ago.

DAH: Yeah, that’s bullshit.

JE: I don’t know about forty-five years ago, but I know about thirty years ago and it was not easy!

DAH: No, it was not easy and it seems easy to the young because they see us a certain way and they forget that it wasn’t like that really. Every generation has to build their own thing.

JE: And so for all the challenges which young photographers face, and they do face serious challenges, I am not making them smaller than they are, there are also tremendous opportunities that didn’t exist then that do now.

The similar sentiment was mentioned as well by Henrik Kastenkov (Bombay Flying Club) in his seminar session during Foundry albeit in a more confusing manner to some. He was stating in the age of the Internet, one only need to make a great work, promoting it and make a business model out of it to survive. Everything else is already there; the audience, and the manners of which you reach your audience.

That is the general condition of the photography world, now let's dig up what are the other conditions that we have as a SEA Photographers:

  • All the big names (publishers, contests, workshops, etc) are still very western oriented and viewed in a western perspective, only a handful are SEA native.
  • Established and up and coming western photographers are existing in the SEA market as well and they are being assigned and commissioned to go to the SEA.
  • SEA photographers have more limited resources as opposed to the rest of the Asia or Western world (funding, knowledge).
  • "SEA is no longer a developing market, it is a developed market" ~ Ashley Gilbertson (VII). A statement that I have found to be somewhat true.
  • The number of people who owns camera are increasing exponentially, to the point where photography is a more democratic process than general election.
  • Crowdfunding method existed, however it was not popular among the SEA native, as far as I can remember one filmmaker is using the method to fund her works and my friend is using one as well to fund his. I don't know whether SEA photographers are comfortable on using this as a platform to fund their projects.

Let's relate this to the writing that I had earlier; we had the people, we living in an age where information is achieveable in a few clicks, it was never been easier to publish work than ever, our region is a developed market and many more. However somehow, we can't realize that we live in this golden age of photography. People are rather stuck with trivial matters, what aperture, what shutter speeds, what lens, rather than discussing in depth where is my photography going and how can you make yourself better.

So there, my observation, would this condition are going to be improved in the future? I don't know, but if people are still staying in the bubble, thinking that photography are only about gears, bikini clad girls, HDR landscape and human interest without going in depth and creating quality work, I can guarantee that we are not going to move much from where we are now.

Notes on Editing & Sequencing Photographs

Added on by Ridzki.

This will be a very quick note on editing and sequencing photograph by Alison Morley, Chair of Photojournalism and Documentary Photography International Center of Photography. I pick as my mentor Alison because she's the only photo editor on the roster of mentors. I can learn about photography from other people or from my portfolio reviews but how to edit and sequence should be coming from a photo editor.

Basically here's a point of photo editing as based from the material that Alison give us:

a. Shoot at least one of the each type:

  • Overall: A wide-angle or aerial shot to establish the scene.
  • Medium: Focuses on one activity or group.
  • Close-up: One element, like a person's hands or an intricate detail of a building.
  • PortraitL Either a dramatic, tight headshot or a person in his or her environmental setting.
  • Interaction: People conversing or in action.
  • Signature: A summary of the situation with all the key story-telling elements- often called the decisive moments.
  • Sequence: a how-to, before and after or a series with a beginning middle and end (give the story a sense of action)
  • Clincher: A closer that would end the story.

As usual, rules are meant to be broken, the ones above are no exceptions. As I see how the process goes in my class we can see two or three different stories were made over the same set of photographs (imagine this being done on a long term projects)

b. Always keep a photo for yourself. During your travel, your assignment or whatever you photograph on, always take a photograph of yourself. It will be useful later on.

c. Getting more technical: organize your raw pictures into groups (I divide mine into overall, portraits, detail, food, hands, family, activity, etc.). Print it, put it on your wall and live with them, then you'll grow a senses of how the story is going to be.

d. The last one I might one to say, is perhaps be ready if your favourite pictures didn't make it into the cut. It may be good, but in a story perhaps it is not working good enough. Work with someone you believe and trust as an editor and then let them have their opinion for the stories.

With Regards to Occupation and Passion

Added on by Ridzki.

When I start my job as a monitor, I didn't only like it but also thought this is the best job that I could have landed; I get enough salary to save some money, travel in a frequent basis, meeting new people, good learning program, career ladder and opportunity and the best thing is I believe that I took part in enhancing the better life of mankind. In short it was a work worth doing. Several years after I  joined the company, I kinda get the idea how certain things works and from time to time I get bumped or stuck by the bureaucracy (in which I personally think that it is necessary). These are the things that finally wears thin of my passion in working and this happens right when I am in the middle of the process of moving to another country. On the other hand, when I was first started with my work, I bought a camera. Mind you I'm not that artistic person (can't sing, dance,paints or play musical instrument) and my encounters with this light capturing devices is for the sole sake of documenting purposes (for the records I shoot film back in the days but I'm fully a digital person now). My relationship with the camera and my work then began, I've begun to take photography lesson on my own, reading the resources off the net, applying everything that I could get my hands on to the extend that I begin to work in my spare time as a freelancer.

Over the years my relationship with photography have evolved, I've not only respected this instrument on my hand as my the extension of my eyes but also as a medium to express myself. This evolving relationship if I may say, have made my work evolved at some level as well, however I still keep my jobs at the utmost level, thinking that I still do a work worth doing.

Then it struck me, through a series of events. I felt that the job that I've given so much attention is merely a work, nothing else. At the same time I need to go outside of town to monitor in a site, I take an earlier flight a day before to explore the city because I've never actually went to this place. I bring my camera with me, exploring the city and just taking pictures. The next two days I was busy with my monitoring and I can only check my pictures when I was back at my place, after I check the pictures I was intrigued by what I get (not all, but you get the point right?). The pictures that I took that day led to another conclusion in my life and another evolution to my work.

I've concluded that I would move to this another country for photography's sake. To shoot more, to attend workshop more, to get my hands on photography books more in which in the end to evolve my (photography) works more. That doesn't mean that I will clumsily do my day to day job from now on, no of course not, I will still have high regards of my professionalism. It's just that my priority is different and because of that I am happy now.

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.

 

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.