Monday, 7 May 2012

The Five Year Plan


Over the next five years i hope to acheive a number of things as an aspiring and then practicing photographer in the world of Photography. Understandably Photograpy is a competitive business so to me it's all about doing something different,if i can grasp a concept or style that wows an audience then I will stick with it for as long it gets focus.To try something different it my goal.


Over the next five years:

>I want to have some of my work published,whether that be in a collected book with others or a newspaper. Anything to that degree.

>I'd like a print or more of mine to be exhibited professionally in a gallery where there's a chance someone may want to purchase it.

>I want to sell some of my work

>I plan to begin a business that will first start online before branching out,hopefully.

>I would also like to personally meet one of the greats in the photographic community and have them comment on my work,this would be a great honour for me.

>Among a great deal of personal projects I would like to photograph members of the Armed Forces,not specifically overseas but through bootcamp and training as well.


 The main goal is simply to improve my photography to a better level. 




Robert Wilson

The interview

Robert Wilson


After sending off a great deal of emails to a number of photographers I was eventually fortunate to get a reply from a photographer that I now deeply admire after seeing his work.
  Robert Wilson among photographing high listing stars,royalty and large sporting events has also travelled overseas with fighting servicemen and photographed them after they have returned from patrols and extended moments of fighting. With his unique style of pushing the clarity of an image to it's limit's, Robert Wilson has managed to have a large catalogue of striking images.

Here are the questions and answer that he so thankfully gave.


Q1) What convinced you to become a photographer?

I just got interested around 14,then wnet to College after my A levels. It was a toss up between furtniture college and Photography College.

Q2) What do you enjoy most about photography?

You travel the world meeting new people and doing what you love doing.

Q3) Was it hard to get your work published?

It always takes time to get your work published. To begin with there's always a lot of knocking on doors seeing people. I was farily lucky as i was shooting a personal project that a pricture editor got to see. He then published it in his magazine and started commissioning me to shoot for them.

Q4) Did you face any challenges overseas while photographing?

There are always challenges overseas or not. When abroard there are other logistical problems that you face....language,power supply etc but photography is all about the challenges you come across and adapting to them. If you shoot somewhere where it's dusty you have to adapt to these conditions,similarly if you're on a boat getting covered by spray it's a different challenge.

Q5) Did the servicemen that you photographed  respond well to the images?

Yes,i think they all liked them very much.  Many of them have been in touch asking for prints.

Q6) Was it hard to get involved with the Armed Forces in terms of photographing them?

Not for me. I had a chance meeting with someone who worked for the Brigadier at the time, and so they invited me to go out to Afghanistan as their war artist.

Q7)  Were you escorted to certain areas or allowed to pick the areas to photograph  freely?

I always had the Brigadiers ADC (aide-de-camp) with me, and in some cases also had the help of the Brigadiers close protection officer. We could pretty much go where we wanted in terms of which FOB  (Forward operating base) we visited but obviously weren't allowed to venture out of them on our own....that would be unwise!

Q8) Is there a photographer of event that directly inspired you to go overseas and photograph?

Although known much more in a commercial field i've always loved conflict photography.....the work of don McCullen, Larry Burrows. I was also fascinated by the Bang Bang club photographers in South Africa.

Q9) What motivates you to do what you do?

I love photographing people. I just love shooting portraits of people. I enjoy landscapes from many other photographers but ultimately it's pictures of people i love. The variety of people that make up this world fasciantes me.

Q10) You've photographed a number of celebrities/stars including Prince Harry, Were you pressured to do a certain image because of their fame?

No, I always think of what image i want before i shoot someone. I've never had any pressure to shoot something i don't want. Part of what i like doing is showing people in their best light. I don't really go out to make someone look silly or quirky, so i think there's always an element of trust from subjects.


Robert Wilson's website can be found just below,please visit it and look at his fantastic work of servicemen among other amazifn pieces.
Robert Wilson photography

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

RIBA Photography Competition 2012


Photo Competition details

After seeing the competition through the college email's I Decided to enter and though my image may not be the strongest I think it fits well for what the theme of the competition,Plymouth in 2012.


Through the Looking Glass,taken 2011,Devil's Point,Plymouth



The image was taken At Devil's Point near the Royal William Yard as part of my current Project called the Client Brief. The main focus of the image is the isolated Drakes Island and a public telescope pointing at the island. A obvious indication that to get a better look you need to look through the telescope.
     I wanted to show Plymuth from a Toruist aspect and the theme was to have the viewer of the photograph feel like they themselves were the tourist.
    The idea originally came from an image take at Plymouth Hoe during my Second year of Photography A levels,it's jsut a reworking.


Heavens Feather,taken 2009,Plymouth Hoe


Tuesday, 17 April 2012

Some Great Advice

I was met with a reply by a photographer who I had hoped to interview and though he didn't have time for an interview he did have some spare time to share some good tips on how to be successful when it came to photography.

A direct quote from the email sent by Daniel Allan,commercial and still life photographer.

" Everything is so subjective , but three bits advice I will give you .

 Just take pictures all the time. (most important)

Try and work with someone half decent, in the field that you want to pursue.

Lean ALL the camera softwares."

Be Personable and  persistent

Please visit Daniel's website and look at his work,it's great if you want to be a still life photographer.
http://www.danielallan.com/

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Robert Capa

 "If your photo's aren't good enough,you're not close enough"
                                                                    
                                                                          -   Robert Capa


Robert Capa is a photographer I have always admired since seeing his work in an old and tatty photography book hidden behind a stack of artwork at my school.
         The book which focused on his images of the Second World War has falling apart but the images were as clear as day and as I picked them off from the floor I couldn't help but study them.
         Interested in the history of the Second World War I decided to do some research and was led to Magnum Photography where there was much more of Capa's work. I discovered about Capa's history and the conflict's he had been a part of and documented,I also learnt about his death and the quotation he is so famous for saying. 
       Seemingly drawn to conflict Robert Capa never seemed to let anything stand in his way,no matter how hard the fighting or the danger he threw himself in with the soldiers and was respected for it. This is one of the reasons why Capa is such an inspiration to me.
     He was afraid,this he has admitted time and time again in his books but still he went for it. On the Front lines,in the trenches,parachuting over France. Capa did it all and more and while doing it all he managed to capture some amazing images along the way.

 (On The Road to Messina,1943)

One such image is this one,the German prisoner of War. His face can tell you more than any history book. The strain around his eyes, the detached look,the stubble and dirt mixed together,the tatty uniform. All draw you to one conclusion,that whatever that one man has witnessed he never wants to experience it again. His facial features show that war is the worst creation of man.
       What i also find so intriguing about this image is not the questions it answers but the ones that it does not. I have looked and never have I found what happened to the prisoner, I want to know and yet feel i should draw my own conclusion. He has no name to me,just the prisoner. His life,it could be over now,it could have ended moments after the image was taken. Perhaps he escaped, it's something I will likely never know but it is an excellent image nontheless..


                                                                           

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

The Ghost



Photography at A level was a great experience for me,it was a time where i could relate my interests in photography with those who felt the same way and with those who of course did not.
       The two years I spent studying photography at A level were not about the technicalities but rather the image itself,i grew to understand the importance of composition and subject. This placed me down a road which I have never derailed from.

       For my A Level exam we were tasked with basing an entire project around one word and the word that i chose was illusion, an idea quickly came to me. The greatest illusion is the one not seen and how better to be unseen than to hide behind a mask.
       Yes, I based my entire project around masks,masks ranging from old military gas masks to carnival props. It was a project that let me explore the strange and unusual, I pushed myself to see what i could with a simple bland mask and with the use of some lights and a novice skill of photoshop i managed to create the image above.
      It's nothing special now that I look back at it but then......it meant a lot. I had managed to take what I thought was a striking image,something that caught the eye. It made me want to do more,it was the final decision to pursue a career in photography,to always strive to create that perfect image. Two years later and nothing's changed.....

Monday, 26 March 2012

Why Photography?

As I turned 17 I was faced with the situation of what to do with my life. One year of A Levels had shown me what to expect of the next stage of education and it worried me. I never believed myself to be creative so picked the more written based courses such as history and Psychology and after a year of these i needed something else....something fun.


I was faced with theater studies or Photography and the popularity of theater studies meant i was placed in photography, a choice ultimately made for me. Placed in a class filled with people i had never met i wondered what would happen. My teacher i had met years ago and doubted he would remember the quiet child who sat at the back and listened in silence,i was wrong. He did indeed remember me and it was a boost to my confidence.

Our first photography lesson was something of an eye opener,five minutes in we were asked "What is photography to you?". I looked at those around me and listened at their ideas,some had experience with photography many like myself were as green as they came. All the answers were different and when it finally came to my turn all i could say was that photography was a way of remembering,a way to show the world to others.

 The lessons seemed to pass quickly after that and over the course of the first year i found myself growing to like the course more and more and then one day everything seemed to fall into place. I made the decision to buy a professional camera and for a full two weeks I went and photographed whatever caught my eyes. It was an amazing experience and put me on the tracks of what i hope to be a long and prosperous career in photography.

Since my first official year studying Photography my skills have increased ten fold,i know things now that i never knew existed or believed i could ever know. I realize now that i am creative,Photography is something I enjoy, it's a challenge and it is always rewarding. I hope to learn much more in the coming years.