May 11 2010

The Best Photographers Are People, Too

Category: Books, Creative Process, Photographers, The Industry, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 7:57 pm

AfterCapture Blog_100511_Identity_1“The thing I walked away with from this project is that people are people are people,” Stewart Cohen told me today of his “Identity” project. An excellent and accomplished commercial photographer, Cohen has been working on this personal project for ten years, recently reaching a major milestone by publishing “Identity: A Photographic Meditation from the Inside Out” — an elegant, labor-of-love book that includes 50 portraits of famous people who caught Cohen’s interest. Next to each full-frame portrait are words by each subject, in their own handwriting, commenting on their identity.

For “Identity” Cohen made 130 portraits, editing them tightly for the book. Although all his subjects can be labeled “famous,” they do fall into the any one, easily definable category, such as “musicians,” “scientists,” “Nobel Prize winners,” “activists” or “politicians.” Six of Cohen’s subjects point to the breath of his coverage: Bobby McFerrin, Erin Brockovich, Oscar Niemeyer, Jane Goodall, Stephen Hawking and Jack Kilby. (Jack who? He’s the Nobel prize winner.)

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“Whether your a drifter or bad-ass scientist, the human experience is the human experience,” Cohen told me. “There’s no magic. People become what they want to become.”

Continue reading “The Best Photographers Are People, Too”

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Feb 12 2010

Fear: A Critical Topic Impossible to Discuss?

Category: Creative ProcessEthan G. Salwen @ 3:38 pm

AfterCapture_Blog_100210_Fear_1_RF1108_Fear_Salwen.pdf (page 1 of 4)How we address our fears is critical to our creative and business success. I clearly see this trait of dealing in all successful photographers, and I have questioned many of them on the topic. I have wanted to say something insightful on this fear theme, but I am not sure I have gotten beyond clichés.

In “Triumph Over Fear,” an article I wrote for Rangefinder, I did my best to explore some of the implications of fear as part of success in photography. My strategy was to share the stories of four photographers. This seemed the only honest, valuable way to explore the topic.

However, I admit, it was hard not to try to write the article in such a way that it suggested: “Embrace your fears, even appreciate them. What you are afraid of makes you stronger.”

See how lame that sounds? It’s not like I’m Franklin D. Roosevelt inspiring a nation. What the hell do I know? It scares the shit out of me just to learn new keyboard shortcuts — and I’m not kidding. Continue reading “Fear: A Critical Topic Impossible to Discuss?”

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