Konijn

 Heiloo.

Kerstboom

 Heiloo.

Alexey Brodovitch on photography

Once again I flip through The Education of a Photographer, by Charles Traub et al, and read Alexey Brodovitch’s refreshing ideas about photography. Among them:

  • What is good today is a cliché tomorrow.
  • The photographer’s job is to fight boredom.
  • … by surprising.
  • Photos should stimulate thinking and be interesting/intriguing.
  • Avoid clichés.
  • Like established photographers, don’t fall into the trap of “found approval” (sticking with the style you became known for, and not developing).
  • Develop constantly. Constantly develop a new vocabulary.
  • Make progress, don’t get stuck.
  • Any photographic technique is allowed as long as it helps you. Not cropping may have been fine for Cartier-Bresson, but don’t let that stop you from nicely cropping your photos yourself.
  • Instead, crop your photos in different ways as an exercise in improving your images.
  • It is the end result that matters, not how you got there.
  • There are two levels of viewing: at the time of taking the picture, and later while editing the images.
  • Always experiment.

Bass

 Amsterdam.

Hek

 Heiloo.

80

 Heiloo.

Licht

 Heiloo.

Self

 Uitgeest.

Sagrada Família and its diverse crowds

In June, we were in Barcelona and visited the Sagrada Família. An imposing structure, of course. But just as interesting is the diverse crowds in and around the basilica—a madhouse of tourists, guides, and vendors, starting fairly early in the day. The Sagrada Família is a very vertical object; people shuffle around with their heads on their necks.

Dino

 

Heiloo.