I shot these a few years ago with my holga. i've been digging in my photo boxes to see past projects. These shots were scanned from the print. I'll have the negatives scanned in so they can be printable and possibly be gallery/portfolio worthy. They will have the same color correction as well.
I went to a real awesome ice cream place on Charlotte Ave. with my sister, but I completely forgot my camera. DO'H. I almost never do that. Lesson learned - It would be hard to a "photo of a day" without my camera.
I found this flower in my backyard. I'll photograph it in a few days. Or whenever I forget my camera again and need a quick shot something nearby.
So this guy got a Polaroid camera in 1979 and from that date until his death in 1997 he took one picture a day with it. Then so his efforts wouldn't be in vain, two of his friends digitized all of them and posted them online.
I like to thank my friend ruth for this link.
There is so much you can say about these photographs - how some are great photos and some are just fun snapshots. Some are very personal and some I can relate. One of the friends in the 1979 series looks like my friend Chuckles. (click the hyperlinks to compare) Also i love the instant film format. The unedited rawness.
I have been basically doing this with my D300 when I first bought it. I think I'll starting doing this myself, while also including my normal posts of whatever I have been posting about. This is also similar to my friends (Vanessa, Lauren and Pang) recent commitment of taking a self portrait everyday for one year. Peep them out as well.
This is an article from an excellent WNYC radio show called On The Media. They do a great job covering the media and asking questions about media coverage and it's roles in society.
In this episode, they interview three controversial photographers: Platon, Jill Greenburg and Martin Schoeller.
This podcast probably may cause some political arguments, but what I get from this article was the artistic interpretations of these contemporary photographers. The three photographers mentioned all have very different styles and each have an editor to stand behind their work. Risky/ provocative art doesn't exist if we don't have curators and editors willing to show and defend these artist's work.
I do not considered these photos as "gotcha" journalism. Photographing people within 15-20 minutes can be frustrating, especially the hours of work you put in before and after the shoot. Making them relax or express a natural emotion is essentially what everyone want, including the photographer. Avedon and Platon would talk to their subjects, but others would like to go to other lengths to get the proper photograph that is ascetically pleasing and, in this case, would coincide with the featured article.
I really have great respect/ admiration for platon's work. I'll do a blog post on him soon.