4.29.2008

Art

Go check this guy out. http://russellkaye.blogspot.com/ He does a thing called the "Friday Give Back" where he gives away an origional print. I've just submitted for his print called Utah and was only the 6th e-mail. I'm about to e-mail from a couple different e-mail adresses to see if I can still snag it. Maybe that's not the right thing to do. Anyway, check him out. I really dig his work.

4.21.2008

State of my Sanity

So I wrote a blog the other day complaining about my job. I was really whining. I got a comment reminding me that employers dont like to be badmouthed. At first I wasnt going to take down that post, but the more I thought about it, the more I thought it might be a good idea to take it down. Not for my job security sake, but for future job prospects (and the fact that I sounded like a bratty punk teenager). Dont get me wrong, I still dont like the situation I've been put in on this specific project, but this too shall pass, and at the end of it all, I love my job. I really do.

My previous job had much more to complain about, like not showering for a month at a time:

Iraq2

Now I shower regularly

Chuck Official Portrat

4.16.2008

Where does YOUR photography come from?

I thought I'd make my first blog not the "About Me" thing, although I definatley need to get that in here sometime. I wanted to give a taste of how I'd try to have this thing go. So with that, I'm off to my first attempt at blogging!

I try to keep up with some major photography blogs everyday. Alot of them are good reads and I've got some saved in an RSS feed so they're easy to find. I read one from Chase Jarvis' blog ( http://www.chasejarvis.com/blog/2008/02/kader-attia-it-comes-from-within.html) the other day that was really inspiring. He goes on about a person in particular, but it's not the person that's so inspiring, it's on little thing that he describes about the conversation:

" We're swapping stories and nuggets of fun information, when suddenly he pauses, looks me straight in the eyes, taps his fingers on his chest and drops this bomb on me in his cool French accent:
'You know, Chase, we’ve got to find our art from within.'
Pause.
It’s so simple, yet so easily glossed over in our day to day lives as creative professionals.

Later the same day, I read this on the PopPhoto website:

"...Rodney Lough Jr. -- also an eminent large-format landscape photographer and teacher (www.theloughroad.com) -- asks his students to reveal the worst thing that's ever happened to them: Step One in unleashing their inner 9-year-old.

Welcome to the Zen side of photography. Butcher, Lough, and others believe that nontechnical -- even nonvisual -- approaches lead to better pictures. The idea: to tap your creativity through intuition and self-contemplation, to forget your preoccupations, and to enjoy the moment of shooting."

Very profound. I bring this up because my best friend has accused me of having a very "generic" style. He once said to me: "You know Chuck, you're a brilliant photographer, but, I dont know... I feel like I've seen all your pictures before." I steped back and thought about it, and he's right. Not much of my work is truly inspired by ME. It's inspired by some other photographer or picture that I've seen. I've struggled since then to try to find more photography from within myself instead of within the camera. Tell me if you share my plight or if you have insight into this subject.

Here's MY inspiration:

JJ Tshirt