Apr 07 2011

Eye-Opening Insights from Gail Mooney: A Still-Video Hybrid Movie Trailer Goes Viral

Category: Business & Marketing, Creative Process, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 12:07 pm

“Working on this trailer was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done,” Gail Mooney told me yesterday. “The shorter the piece, the harder it is for me to edit, and it probably is for most people. I needed to cut to the essence of the story yet not give away too much. I needed to create interest by what I didn’t tell the viewer.”

One thing this wonderful, interest-grabbing trailer doesn’t tell the viewer is incredible passion, energy and innovation Mooney has put into transforming her personal movie project, “Opening Our Eyes,” from the tiny tickle of an idea into a massive, tangible reality.

Created in partnership with her daughter, Erin Kelly, Mooney shares much of her passion — behind the scenes triumphs, frustrations and the technical and creative nuts and bolts of making a movie  — through her blogging on the “Opening Our Eyes” website, as well as on Journeys of a Hybrid, where for two years Mooney has been dishing up practical advice and motivation for photographers moving into motion.

Thanks to Mooney’s enthusiastic, adept use of social media, as of yesterday, a week after she posted it, Mooney’s trailer has already been viewed by 1,142 people in 62 countries.

“I realize in the YouTube playing field — of babies biting fingers and cats playing pianos — these type of stats are nothing in the viral world,” Mooney observed. “But they are amazing when you consider what it is.”

Indeed. What it is, at least in part, is a passionate visual communicator — who started her career long before the advent of digital imaging and the Web — sharing a personal project with more than a thousand eager viewers in 62 countries.

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Boy with eggs at Camino Abierto, Carlos Keen, Argentina.

The Possibilities in Passion

In a Hybrids blog post last week, Mooney wrote, “When you are convinced that you have the ability to make the impossible possible, then you will put your dreams into action. You will take that chance, and by doing so you are creating your own reality instead of reacting to what others have created for you, which may not be in your best interests.”

There are many people who share this kind of positive sentiment: make your dreams happen with positive thinking. It’s a sentiment that often rubs me the wrong way. It often feels hollow, oversimplifying the immense challenges we all face in life. Regardless of what a Nike ad campaign might say, many of us can’t “Just Do It.” Desire is not enough.

What makes Mooney’s “make the impossible possible” sentiment attractive is that it is grounded in the example of how she lives her life. She struggles, she strives, she overcomes. Yes, she does it. But she never “just” does it.

In her blogging over the past two years Mooney has become increasingly open and honest, sharing her personal struggles. She never complains of simply vents, but she lets us see that a great deal of her making the (seemingly) impossible possible depends on her never given up, even when the (seemingly) possible feels impossible.

In wonderful posts related to her experiences with “Opening Our Eyes,” Mooney shows us how she gets deeply inspired but then has serious doubts but that she still takes big chances anyway. She remains open to learning from diverse sources as she struggles with technical and creative challenges. And although she experiences many moments of sasisfied success, she also  experiences extreme let downs. The common thread — what’s truly important — is that she keeps on going and actively makes things happen.

Viola Majewska with horse at her hippotherapy stable located outside Warsaw, Poland.

Viola Majewska with horse at her hippotherapy stable located outside Warsaw, Poland.

Positive Change From and Beyond Technology

When “Opening our Eyes” is completed, I have no doubt Continue reading “Eye-Opening Insights from Gail Mooney: A Still-Video Hybrid Movie Trailer Goes Viral”

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Mar 05 2011

A Unquie Vision of Capturing Sound: Michael Hersh by Richard Anderson

Category: Multimedia & VideoEthan G. Salwen @ 2:32 pm

Richard Anderson has proved that still photographers can bring a fresh vision to recording sound.

“The style I’m going for is clean, simple, moving,” Richard Anderson says of the videos he is creating for composer Michael Hersh. “I want to trigger the viewer’s emotions, if possible.”

It’s possible. Anderson proves this with his vision of Hersh’s “The Vanishing Pavilions, Book I, Movement 27.”

If I hadn’t been watching this piece with an eye on evaluating Anderson’s movie making skills, I would have never noticed them. And that’s the point: documenting a passionate composer-musician performing should be about the music and the musician, not the videography and editing.

I loved the way Anderson shared the art and philosophy of Christopher Cairns through video. I would have thought that capturing Hersh at the piano would have been much simpler. Not at all, Anderson made clear when we talked about his ongoing work with Hersh. Capturing professional-quality audio of a professional-level composer is no easy task.

Anderson recorded Hersh’s “Book I, Movement 27″ — as well as “Book I, Movement 6″ and “Book II, Movement 38″ — from three different angles using two cameras, with the help of an assistant, as he recorded Hersh playing each piece four or five times.

At least four takes were necessary to give Hersh enough audio tracks from which to select the best. These takes were also required to give Anderson the opportunity to photograph multiple angles, and to have enough footage to weave together in editing — to create a piece that visually helps trigger in us emotions evoked by the drama of the music and the passion of the musician.

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Dec 27 2010

Walking Into a Sharply Intelligent Documentary

Category: Multimedia & VideoEthan G. Salwen @ 1:39 pm

As Jason Nunes suggested I watch it, I would have anyway. But I just had to watch “Running with Scissors” because, as timing would have it, just two days before receiving Nunes’ recommendation I had read “The Memory Addict” by Sam Anderson, a fascinating article published in New York Magazine. (May 5, 2008.) In the piece, Anderson explores the complex intersection of memory and the memoir, focusing in on Augusten Burroughs, author of the bestselling memoir, “Running with Scissors.”

For two reasons, I suggest you watch “Running with Scissors,” the 11-minute documentary by Ricky John Molloy, Thomas Tolstrup and Nancy J. Hawsyou. As Nunes told me, “It’s really beautifully shot, in a style that I think is very influenced by photography, not film making.” In other words, good inspiration for us (mostly) still photographers.

More compelling — and the reason you need to make it to the seven-minute mark — while “Running with Scissors” starts out featuring simple, straightforward storytelling about a sweet, easy-to-digest topic, it takes a well-crafted turn that involves more complex, less obvious storytelling about more profound issues.

With a light and intelligent hand, Molloy, Tolstrup and Hawsyou shift from straight reporting and welcome us to contemplate the relationship between our life experiences (or memories, our personal memoirs) and how these influence how we live our lives in the present. As such, “Running with Scissors” serves as a nice counterpoint to Anderson’s “The Memory Addict.” (An amazing read, Anderson’s article questions whether Burroughs has the uncanny memory he is famous for, or whether he is full of shit, or whether both are true, or neither, and whether it really matters.)

How I Saw “Running With Scissors”

Disclaimer: My viewing experience is less important than yours, and “Running with Scissors” takes advantage of unexpected (but not underhanded) turns of plot. So read the following only if, A) You won’t be watching the film or, B) You already have.

I was encouraged and sucked into the documentary when Continue reading “Walking Into a Sharply Intelligent Documentary”

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Oct 29 2010

Make a Pledge to “Opening Our Eyes” — To Support, Learn, Feel Real Good

Category: Business & Marketing, Photographers, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 1:46 pm

AfterCapture Blog_101029_Kickstarter_1I just pledged $25 to Gail Mooney and Erin Kelly’s “Opening Our Eyes” documentary film project, and here’s three reasons you might want to:

#1. “Opening Our Eyes” is a great, worthy personal project.

#2. You’ll get a copy of the movie on DVD when completed. Sweet!

#3. This will give you a chance to see in action Kickstarter, a really cool site for funding creative projects that you very well might want to put into action one day. (And if you pledge to Mooney and Kelly, don’t you think they’ll pledge to you?)

To pledge $25, go here.

And hey, if you can’t afford the (potential) $25 donation, no worries. Just pledge a dollar! It can really help! As Mooney explains in her latest “Hybrid” blog post:

This past weekend I launched the project on Kickstarter.  Kickstarter is a website that posts creative projects for the purposes of finding funds. It’s a perfect example of crowd funding where one can donate anywhere from $1 to $10,000 to the project of their choice, and in the process make someone’s idea come to life.

I launched Opening Our Eyes on Thursday and within 3 days we reached 30 % of our goal. We still have a long way to go and have another 71 days to get fully funded.  The way Kickstarter works is that if you don’t get funded 100%, then all bets are off and you don’t receive anything.

I love this! This means I’m not just handing over $25 bucks to Mooney and Kelly. It means I’m donating $25 to a super project only if the team can raise $7,500. I’m not sure exactly why this is so attractive, but it is. Perhaps it means that I’m part of something big. Itt also means that Mooney and Kelly might be able to use my little pledge to leverage much bigger donnations, which is really cool.

AfterCapture Blog_101029_Kickstarter_2

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Oct 01 2010

Photojournalist Paula Lerner Wins Emmy Helping Reveal Veiled Suffering in Afghanistan

Category: Multimedia & Video, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 2:48 pm

A major kudos to multimedia-embracing photojournalist Paula Lerner for winning an Emmy this week for her critical contribution to to “Behind The Veil,” a powerful, sobering, in-depth multimedia feature highlighting the struggles facing women in Kandahar, Afghanistan.

“Behind The Veil” highlights the amazing potential of a multimedia reporting. Grounded in the thoughtful reporting Jessica Leeder, of “The Globe and Mail”, and built around ten videos of Afghan women sharing their plights, “Behind The Veil” depends heavily on Lerner’s images. Featured during Leeder’s voice-over, her photographs paint a broad visual picture of the topic in a way that brilliantly compliments the videos and Leeder’s reporting.

I have not yet investigated the story behind the creation of “Behind the Veil” but I’m fairly sure that Lerner made her images independently of this project, and before the project was even conceived. I say this because I heard Lerner speak about her work in Afghanistan last October at PhotoPlus, and I’ve seen a number of the images in her online portfolio. Just as important, many of Lerner’s images document moments before Afghan woman’s rights began to be abused more severely — to levels that Leeder helps illustrate are arguably worse than when the Taliban ruled the country.

Take at least a quick look at “Behind The Veil” to better understand an important story, to see multimedia harnessed to its full potential, and to respect the important photojournalism created by Lerner.

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Sep 08 2010

Christopher Cairns on the Value of Music and Friendship for Visual Artists

Category: Multimedia & Video, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 12:34 pm

Christopher Cairns says his sculpture transmits an impeding sense of disaster that is born out of his attitudes about modern life. Cairns, who relies heavily on music for inspiration, also notes, “The detachment of the contemporary culture from classical music and serious jazz is a disaster.” Regarding the value of friendship, Cairns says, “Part of being an artist is to try to find other people that you can share feelings and ideas with.”

Cairns’ sculpture is powerfully evocative and his sentiments about music and friendship in relationship to the visual artist’s life will be of interest to photographers. Although I can share all this about Cairns, I only know the artist through this five-minute video created by Richard Anderson. This speaks to the incredible storytelling power of documentary shorts. It is also reason to applaud Anderson for taking a great leap forward in his video-making pursuits.

Last month I reported that Anderson was just getting started in video by learning multimedia techniques by experimenting playfully. His latest creation, a personal project, proves that Anderson is getting great results — fast.

Check it out this video for inspiration from both Cairns and Anderson. Take particular note of how Anderson puts his photographer’s eye to excellent use. His framing of Cairns among his sculptures is fantastic and not typical of standard documentary interviews. And Anderson’s still images make wonderful b-roll that clearly reveal Cairns’ vision of impending disaster.

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Sep 02 2010

Opening Our Eyes: They’re Back!

Category: Creative Process, Multimedia & Video, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 3:29 pm

Feels like just a few weeks ago that I was announcing “They’re Off!” — referring to the departure of mother-daughter documentary film-making team Gail Mooney and Erin Kelly. Well, it was actually the end of May, and since then Mooney and Kelly have had one hell of an adventure. Arriving back home only yesterday, Mooney proves her amazing video editing skills and gives us all a great taste of “Opening Our Eyes” with this wonderful behind-the-scenes short.

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Aug 13 2010

Taking Culture, Not Pictures

Category: Creative Process, In-Camera Techniques, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 1:46 pm

It’s been a great week — with my work with Human Rights Watch off the ground and getting some news images in print — and, on this Friday the 13th, I can’t help but think about good luck. I really do feel like good luck has come my way recently, and that my life and work are starting to blend in special, unexpected ways — ways that I have wanted, but ways that did not happen when I was more desperate, more anxious, trying harder to make something happen that I was not yet ready to handle.

What the heck am I talking about?

What I’m talking about is that when I moved to Argentina more than four years ago I had big dreams about learning Spanish and traveling all over South America and making great images and telling even greater stories. But that didn’t happen. For one thing, learning Spanish — I mean really learning to live with the stuff — has proved far more challenging (and rewarding) than I could have have ever imagined. For another thing, I got focused a lot more on the “simple” aspects of daily living that I had never focused on so well in the United States.

BEFORE: Christmas eve in Villa 31 -- a "dangerous slum." This image was easy to make, but

BEFORE: Christmas Eve in Villa 31 -- when being an outsider gave me an in.

In short, you could say I moved to Buenos Aires to escape the more mundane aspects of life that I wasn’t handling too well back in the USA and, very much to my surprise, what has happened is that I have come to cherish the mundane more than anything else. Family. Friends. Living in the moment. Taking care of body and mind.

Then this Human Rights Watch gig seems to fall in my lap, and that’s really exciting. But what’s particularly nice I don’t feel manic excited or super lucky or all revved up, like I’ve won the lottery or something. I just feel mellow lucky and, more than anything, I feel really lucky that it was the circuitous, couldn’t-have-predicted-that route that has brought me here. I did not get here, as so many successful people proclaim, by keeping my eye clearly on the prize. How the hell could I? I didn’t know what the prize was. I was stumbling and I still am, but this week the stumbling feels like it has a bit more grace to it.

I am writing all this by way of sharing that it is not my photography skills nor my desire to work with multimedia nor my great business skills that created this opportunity with Human Rights Watch. What really allowed me to get this job is the fact that I live in Buenos Aires, that I learned the language and that, more than anything, I can see the cultural as both an insider and an outsider. This is not only allows me to get access to Continue reading “Taking Culture, Not Pictures”

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Aug 10 2010

Working for Human Rights Watch – Multimedia Style

Category: Business & Marketing, In-Camera Techniques, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 10:39 am

AC_Blog_100810_Human Rights Watch_1Human Rights Watch held a press conference in Buenos Aires today to drum up interest in their latest report: “Illusions of Care: Lack of Accountability for Reproductive Rights in Argentina.” I’m pleased to announce the cover image of the report was made by yours truly. It was great to put my photography to work for HRW. It’s even greater that it’s a relationship that has just begun. The next phase will involve my making for them a multimedia production, a topic about which I have been writing so much lately. (In fact, my writing led directly to this job, which is very cool and which I will explain below.)

For the “Illusions of Care” cover I was charged with making an image that spoke to the report’s theme — roadblocks to better reproductive health care for women and girls in Argentina. I could not show the identity of anyone I photographed, unless I obtained a model release, and so I focused on a graffiti-filled hallway in the maternity ward at Hospital Alvarez in Buenos Aires. (The graffiti “Aca nacio” features prominently in the image. “Born here” in Spanish.)

Actually, I was able to get model releases from a number of women I photographed. And some of these images show the women with distressed expressions that might have made a more powerful cover image. However, using one of these images for “Illusions of Care” would have been disingenuous, to say the least. The care at Alvarez maternity ward is excellent. The women’s expressions were the result of them being in various stages of labor.

Although many of the images I made at Alvarez were not right for the report cover, I’ll likely be able to use some in the multimedia project I am now working on for HRW.

Building Trust Was Key

A couple months back Marianne Møllman, the author of “Illusions of Care, contacted me to see if I might be able to make a cover image for the report. I told her I was Continue reading “Working for Human Rights Watch – Multimedia Style”

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Jul 28 2010

Love Your Family, Be Wary of Your HD-DSLR

Category: In-Camera Techniques, Multimedia & Video, Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 4:43 pm

Since writing last night about a blog post by Gail Mooney, she’s written two more, and also done some major reporting Down Under for her “Opening Our Eyes” documentary project. Go Mooney!

Here are two key lessons I take away from Mooney’s “The Importance of ‘Family’” and “The Hard Part About Working with DSLRs”, both of which I encourage you to read — gaining insights from both Mooney’s Humane Side as well as her Tech-Nerdy Side:

• Family matters more than anything. So keep on building, loving and appreciating your “family,” even if these people are not related by blood.

As Mooney says of a young homeless man helped by the Oasis project: “His wants are simple – to love and be loved. How very basic and yet so tragic that being part of a family seems so out of reach for so many.”

• HD-DSLR cameras are not the best tools for recording video for making movies. HD-DSLRs are a major pain for capturing video, so (at least for now) for the best, most hassle free video-only shooting we’re better of with HD video cameras.

As Mooney says: “Yes, the visual [of HD-DSLRs] is stunning but I can’t help but think how many moments I may have missed that I probably would have gotten if I had been shooting with a video camera.”

Let’s go to the video. . .

To honor both family and not capturing video on HD-DSLRs — I used my measly Canon G9 — I share a home movie I made a year-and-a-half ago. Back then these wackos were just the wacky family of my girlfriend. But now, with the wedding set for January, these wackos are my family, too. Yes!

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