Archive for the 'Photography' Category



москва 1988

im_foto

Newport

David Solomons

Shawn Nee / discarted

Shawn Nee / discarted

Photographer Captures Street With iPhone


Photo by Greg Schmigel/www.justwhatisee.com

Greg Schmigel started shooting street photography with his iPhone 2G about four years ago. When he realized it took pretty decent photos, he decided he wanted to create a project that was simple, interesting and unique, and “Just What I See” was born. (He’s upgraded to the 3GS and 4 since then.) As he told the blog Uglybaby, “I really believe that about 80% of photography is about what the photographer sees. Your choice of camera makes up for the rest.” You can see more of his work here.

These days, some sort of creative endeavor with an Apple product equals instant buzz. Only Oprah has greater popular culture eminence! See Atomic Tom’s iPhone app jam session here or Jesse Rosten’s iPad-lit photo shoot here.  (Atomic Tom’s video has over four million hits since mid-October. Four million!)

Photography Link Roundup


Photo: John Foster

John Foster has been buying photos at garage sales and on eBay for the past decade, but you’d never know they’re just a hodgepodge of random finds when they’re evoking Henri Cartier-Bresson and Sally Mann. [Newsweek]

• Hundreds of never-before-seen photos of Hitler taken by his personal photographer Heinrich Hoffman will be auctioned off in England in January. [Daily Mail]

Steve Schapiro‘s photos from the set of 1975’s Taxi Driver are now compiled in a glossy 328-page Taschen tome. Listen to Schapiro’s thoughts on the film in this Guardian piece here. [Brain Pickings]

• Artist Jon Rafman has collected thousands of screen grabs of Google Street View images, and the result is by turns a banal and creepily voyeuristic look at everyday life. [Cool Hunting]

• “14 Tips to be a Successful Freelance Photographer” [Digital Photography School]

Purdue U. Cop Harasses Student Journalist

He may be at the beginning of his journalism career, but Michael Carney got a crash course in police intimidation tactics this past October. Carney, who is the multimedia editor for the Exponent, Purdue University’s newspaper, was intimidated, harassed and blocked by a campus police officer while trying to film in the student center. Carney was there to cover early voting, but when a woman collapsed he switched gears to film as the emergency medical team arrived.

Officer Jeff Hegg ordered Carney to shut the camera off (reason? “medical emergency”), threw out the “invasion of privacy” card, told him he wasn’t “understanding nothing” and was “disobeying a police officer,” questioned why he was shaking, accused him of “making a scene,” called his ID into the station, picked up and moved his tripod, and finally, threatened to put him “in the backseat of my car for not obeying a police officer’s command.”

And though Officer Hegg claimed he was asking him “to turn it off nicely,” he actually wasn’t. He was using classic intimidation tactics to bully Carney and prevent him from exercising his rights in a public place. His only excuse seems to be that he’s unfortunately so ignorant, he didn’t even know he was enforcing non-existent laws.

“There seemed to be a lack of understanding among both the officer involved and the paramedics or people at the voting booth who were trying to block the reporter’s view,” [Hoosier State Press Association’s Steve] Key said. “They fail to understand the rights of someone to take pictures in a public place or the policy, why you have that ability to have pictures of public official doing their jobs, whether it’s a police officer or someone helping someone with a medical emergency … ”

The Exponent has filed a complaint with the Purdue police department and fire department and are awaiting the outcome of their investigations.

Source: Exponent

Photo by Aleksey Myakishev

Expanding the Circle: The Engaged Photographer

From YouTube:

In this video, photographer and Moving Walls exhibition co-curator Susan Meiselas discusses documentary photography’s potential to connect and move audiences by “expanding the circle of knowledge” about human rights and social justice issues.

The video also features a variety of work by photographers supported by the Open Society Institute Documentary Photography Project. The project funds photographers who go beyond documentation, using images to foster civic engagement, organizing, advocacy, outreach, public awareness education, and media attention.

“No Tolerance” for Invasive Royal-Lusting Paps

The world is in a tizzy over the impending nuptials of Prince William and his fiancée Kate Middleton, and so in an effort to retain some sense of normalcy, and maybe to prolong his life, the prince will enact a “no tolerance” policy for the paparazzi during his engagement, wedding and married life. He will, according to the Telegraph, have a lawyer at the ready to file civil or criminal charges against intrusive tabloid photographer that violate the couple’s privacy. This is undoubtedly a decision driven in large part by his mother’s infamous death. Among the offending behavior that could land the paps in trouble — vehicle pursuits and telephoto lenses that capture private activity from public land.

I know the argument on one hand: he is a public figure, a member of the beloved royal family, and with that title — and privilege — comes the nuisance of constant attention and scrutiny. But, I also believe even when you’re a public figure you don’t sign up for a 100 mph car crash or the world getting to see revealing photos of you sunbathing in your backyard.

Source: The Telegraph


Spam Blocked