When I asked for suggestions for topics yesterday, Todd Scholten wrote: "Get out. Go take some photos. Come back and write about them and why and how you took them. Inspire us to do the same." Several other people similarly suggested I should write more about my own work.
Perhaps I should, and perhaps I will, but this is actually a traditional issue, and there's a long history to it, as I shall 'splain. But a few ancillary points first:
Long ago I was invited to give a lecture on photography to a high school. I spoke about the photo scene in Washington D.C. in that era and drew three circles on the chalkboard, of different sizes, partially overlapping to the degree I thought was vaguely accurate, and labeled the circles "professional photography," "photojournalism," and "art photography," representing the three main kinds of photography in that town at that time. I had intimate connections to all three of those separate worlds at the time, as I was an assistant at a professional advertising studio, a recent graduate of art school, and was doing dribs and drabs of work for newspapers and acting as a custom printer for local photojournalists. In my lecture, the three circles served as a window for explaining what those three groups did, and how they practiced, and what markets they served.
A hand went up from the back of the room. "What kind of photographer are you?"
I thought for a minute and answered, "I'm a writer."
So there's that. If somebody wants to pay me to be a photographer, that would be nice, but, like most photographers, I've tried and failed to make a living doing exactly what I please, and my present employment (writer) seems to be about the best I can manage as a compromise. There is actually surprisingly little actual photographing involved in the great majority of photography-related jobs, including for a lot of people who are nominally full-time photographers.
Secondly, I actually publish a lot of my work here. You just don't notice because it's not presented...densely. For example: This post includes a casual illustration taken with my iPhone. Then, here's a portrait I did of a doctor friend for her professional use with my Fuji X-T1. I wrote several posts about that. And then here and here you can find examples of the work I do with my B&W camera. There have been lots and lots of my pictures posted here over the years; just not, as I say, densely.
Furthermore, I didn't do a lot of B&W photography in 2023, for two reasons. First, the cost of gas (petrol) was rather alarming. Going out for a drive three to five times a week to find a picture was effective, but it was sucking down even more gas money than life here usually requires—and it already requires a lot, because almost everything in this sparsely populated rural region is far away from almost everything else. I admit I also had a slight but non-trivial amount of guilt about polluting the atmosphere merely to add varying amounts of electrical signal to millions of photosites, mostly to no purpose. (This would be an absolutely perfect use of an electric vehicle as a second car, come to think. I could sign up to get my electricity from solar fields, and toodle about the countryside to my heart's content, guilt-free. Of course the car would cost way more than the gas money I'd save, but I'm never going to get to do it anyway so it's a moot point). Also, you have to bear in mind I was basically in heart failure last Fall, and doubtless suffering some effects of heart disease before that, culminating in my getting a pacemaker implant on January 23rd of this year. So although I had high hopes for the coming year when the calendar clicked over to 2023, I wasn't in the finest fettle during that year, the way things turned out.
I also have a Flickr site of some of that work. It sort of morphed from test pictures to real work, so there's a bit of both; it's not very well "curated" if you will. Despite which, lots of those photos got lots of views: for instance this one, which has 68,013 views as of today, and this one, which got an improbable 77,813 views (why, I have no idea. Perhaps some larger forum somewhere was discussing the resolution of converted sensors and was using those two shots as examples?). But unfortunately all those views didn't do the blog any good at all, so I've kinda slacked off on that. I sure enjoyed doing it, though. (Remind me to write another post on what I'd need to keep that project going. And another on how to bestir one's sludgey self and get up and get out and get cracking.)
The history
There's a not-so-grand tradition in photography, going almost all the way back, of using nuts-and-bolts instructional writing as a sneaky way of getting your own work published. I hasten to add that many people who wrote in an instructional way were also top-flight photographers and it was, and is, perfectly natural for them to use their own work to illustrate their points. For example, P.H. (Peter Henry) Emerson's Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art (1889); or Ansel Adams's Making a Photograph: An Introduction to Photography (1935), which was later expanded into the Basic Photo Series which then went through several editions and adaptations (I still recommend The Negative as a book every photo enthusiast should have, even film virgins); or Paul Outerbridge's Photographing in Color (1940) which had tipped-in plates of some of his more inoffensive work. Outerbridge was a master carbro printer and primarily a fetish photographer. His execrable middlebrow wife, one of the villains of the history of photography if you ask me, destroyed most of his work after his death "to protect his reputation," thereby dealing a grievous blow to his reputation. And I say that as one to whom sexual fetishism is foreign and inscrutable. More recently and blog-relatedly, our friends Kirk Tuck's Minimalist Lighting and Gordon Lewis's Street Photography come to mind.
But apart from such positive examples, there's also a longstanding pattern of people publishing "instructional books" merely as a pretext for publishing their own work. Or submitting articles to magazines for the same reason. As most people reading probably know already, I was chief editor of a photography magazine for a while. One of the things I always had to be on the lookout for were people whose motives in submitting manuscripts were not earnest or pure. I recall one wealthy gentleman who hired a public relations firm to write a plausible article which could then be illustrated with many examples of the gentleman's own work. Of course the text was peppered with lavish praise for the pictures, and that was a bit of a tip-off, on account of I'm so canny and not entirely immune to the obvious. Another such gentleman actually paid to create a bricks-and-mortar art gallery to feature other photographers but most prominently himself. I received not only a torrent of press releases about his shows, written as though the gallery were independent, but also articles reviewing his shows at his gallery. I forbore from publishing any of that, reasoning that he already had provided for his work a more generous amount of exposure than most amateur snappers are privileged to receive.
When the rain comes
Another aspect of this is the issue of editors publishing their own work. Howard Moss, who was the poetry editor of The New Yorker for a short eternity, published his own poems sometimes. I don't know how often he did so, and I don't know the circumstances under which he did so, but, when I attended a lecture of his at Dartmouth College, there were a couple of students who brought umbrellas to the lecture. When Mr. Moss spoke about this issue, they deployed the umbrellas in silent protest. I talked to one of them later. In animated fashion he communicated his displeasure at the editor for taking up space in a magazine that already allotted very little space to poetry. (The New Yorker at the time supposedly paid far and away the most for poetry of any publication; I have a bad memory for numbers, but I think it was $5 a word, when the next-best publication paid $2 per word.)
The Editor of small magazines also holds the purse strings, and one editor I once worked for would publish one of his own photographs in every issue along with a brief paragraph about it, and pay himself a sum for the contribution that was many times what he paid for much longer and more substantive content. The Group Editor was evidently a chum of the publisher and owner of the company, and my boss's little scam evidently flew under the radar of their oversight.
Bob Shell, the longtime editor of Shutterbug magazine, was notorious for publishing in his magazine copious numbers of his humdrum and inexpert "glamour photographs" of amateur models. These were usually unknown young local women of average appearance in whom Shell was widely suspected of taking a prurient interest. My memory is that some or most of them were pictured in their underwear in the woods. Shell was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the death of one of those models, and has been in prison for it ever since. The details of the crime were extremely lurid. One of the "true crime" television programs was reportedly scheduled to do an episode about it, or so it was said, but ended up passing on it because the details were too shocking for broadcast television.
I seldom published myself at the magazine I edited—just the occasional picture here and there—but I did have a portfolio published by a different magazine that I wrote for.
Elbowing to the front
Meanwhile, there's a concomitant tradition, long settled in print media at least, for editors and writers of integrity to be appropriately restrained about putting their own work forward. This might not even apply to the online world, but then, my values were not formed by the online world.
I took as my model my onetime mentor Phil Davis, the author of Beyond the Zone System and Photography, an excellent general textbook which has fallen into obscurity because it hasn't been updated since Phil's death from prostate cancer in 2007. Phil actually came in for some contentious criticism online because he refused to set himself up as a know-it-all guru. He wouldn't promote his own photography like he thought some other such gurus did. I tried to talk him into accepting the title of Technical Editor of Photo Techniques, but he resisted because, even though we were the most scrupulous magazine in print at the time about technical matters, he didn't want to be held accountable for what he saw as other authors' lack of rigor. He was actually a prolific and skilled photographer, and an accomplished one, and had retired from a lucrative professional career as an advertising photographer for the Detroit automakers. I saw some dye transfer prints of car ads he made in the 1950s that were stunning.
When my article "Your Camera Roll Contains a Masterpiece" was published on the New Yorker's website in 2022 (the pinnacle of my life as a writer toiling in the trenches, by the way), a goodly segment of the text discussed a single picture, and I thought it would have been appropriate to publish the picture itself. The magazine, however, first proposed to provide a drawn illustration of the picture, and then decided that the written description was enough. I accepted that decision without complaint—and without any private resentment, either. Editors know best.
So I'll try to post more of my own work if the discussion about it seems like it would be interesting. But I'll close here with one more observation: despite my increasingly self-centered blats in recent years (because a blog is voracious and relentless and everything has to become fodder), the "online photographer" in this site's title is you, not me.
Mike
Original contents copyright 2024 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved. Links in this post may be to our affiliates; sales through affiliate links may benefit this site. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. (To see all the comments, click on the "Comments" link below or on the title of this post.)
Featured Comments from:
Have you considered an electric bike? One can be had for about $1500, and amortizing it from saved gas can be rather fast, given what you're saying.
Here's an example: A Rad Runner 2. You can also get a trike version if a bike worries you, though I think an electric trike is probably more dangerous.
There are other companies that sell bikes around that price point.
Where you live, I bet drivers are already used to going around Amish buggies, so why can't they go around an electric bike (which takes up less room on the road anyway).
Will it replace your car for most things? Maybe not. But 30%? It doesn't even have to take you on your photo errands, as long it displaces enough of your car miles to make up for buying the bike and free up the cost of gas (in dollar and emissions terms). It's probably a good trade even in the country, where you live.
Posted by: James | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 06:07 PM
Wow. That was an epic post.
Okay then. Enough excuses. Go out and make some photographs.
And as for a suggestion?
Pick a day and time. Have readers submit a single best photo taken strictly within 24 hours before that day and time.
And just post the lot. Just for fun.
Comment should be fascinating and the premise at least vaguely interesting to all.
Posted by: Kye Wood | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 06:17 PM
I hear you about gas but I have to drive to work every night at about 10:00 pm and home every morning at around 7:00 am anyway as I work over nights as a hotel front desk clerk. These days the bag with the Leica M 240 is always with me and 9 days out of 10 I "take the long way home" and that is when my photography gets done.
I currently am using a 1937 Zeiss Sonnar 50/2 lens. It is uncoated and is one of the collapsible style originally made for the Contax II rangefinder system and I have an Amedeo adapter to use it. It makes very vintage looking black and white images.
I have 3 to 5 routes home that take me past about a half dozen "usual suspects" and about a dozen more less usual ones. Those are what I concentrate on most mornings.
On my days off, if the light is good, then I'll go for a longer drive in the local region trying to find things I haven't already seen alongside the the things I'm revisiting yet again.
Posted by: William Lewis | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 06:49 PM
"But unfortunately all those views didn't do the blog any good at all" Well of course not! You need to advertise the blog on those posts! You need a call to action to visit it! Something along the lines of:
If you enlarge this you can see the distant boat outlined quite nicely.
Shot with my monochrome-converted (debayered) SIGMA fp, which you can read about here (insert link to blog post)
Posted by: Stephen S. | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 07:09 PM
Stories. We love stories.
Ones from the history of photography. I am just researching Paul Outerbridge because you just mentioned him. The story of his wife destroying his work. I’d love to know more.
Your recommendations re photographers I haven’t heard of is always fascinating.
Posted by: Len Metcalf | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 07:53 PM
OMG Mike, great stuff. I think you’ve tapped a vein here - The Photo Insider. Do tell. More of the inside behind the scenes would be appreciated.
Posted by: Tim McGowan | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 08:43 PM
In reference to the subject, "Online Photography", perhaps there should be more about photography and the Internet. Given the quality of most computer monitors, almost any camera is suitable for 'online photos'.
Posted by: Herman Krieger | Sunday, 12 May 2024 at 10:05 PM
Maybe us readers are the ones that should contribute more photos for the blog. We could all send one picture, say once a month, and you could select some to include.
Posted by: Bob Johnston | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 02:17 AM
So writing about writing about photography turns out to have been a very good idea.
Posted by: Patrick Dodds | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 03:06 AM
In the online world, it seems that it is always bout “ME”!
Posted by: ChrisC | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 03:47 AM
Mike (about his Flickr content):
> unfortunately all those views didn't do the blog any good at all
I have occasionally put some links back to my blog on Flickr, in the usual "a href=" and ending with "/a" style (I guess I can't use the real thing here as it would probably be considered a real link then, so substitute my parentheses with brackets).
I don't know if that brought more visitors onto my blog, but that wasn't my intention - if I posted a picture for a blog post, then sometimes I linked back, that simple...
Posted by: Wolfgang Lonien | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 03:58 AM
Wonderful post filled with interesting topics.
After reading your comments on Phil Davis I went out to the 'net to re-acquaint myself with his work. I'd read through his "Beyond the Zone System" many years ago when I worked as a B&W print tech in Hollywood (Samy's Cameras lab on Sunset Blvd). Thinking that the 'net remembers everything I was expecting to see links to his other works. All I found were a very few pointers to the book.
That's where I realize many photographers seem to be pushed into the dark recesses of history. Makes me wish a good photographer/photography-historian would bring these kinds of folks back into public view.
Posted by: Christopher Perez | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 04:11 AM
You were temporarily stuck for ideas for content. You appealed to your readership, you got a suggestion: write about your own work. You ignored it completely and wrote a massive post about just about anything else. Yep, you are most definitely a writer, and you got what you needed from your appeal, albeit in a circumlocutory way.
Good post.
Posted by: Dave Millier | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 05:21 AM
Whatever path you choose for your blog’s future I think it’s essential that you reconcile “The Online Photographer” title, Mike. TOP has become very distant from its origins and promise. Still, you seem to have an audience that likes to read whatever you write. So perhaps a new title that will better enable, and inspire, you to whimsically whiff on your mood (like so many podcasts, etc. these days) would maintain your success and enjoyment. But given the diversity and density of so many other online photography venues today I think you need to be realistic about your competitive prospects in that arena.
Posted by: Kenneth Tanaka | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 09:57 AM
I think your "I'm a writer" statement sums it up nicely. But you are a writer who likes to think about photography, and write about it. Plus, in common with all of us, you like to take photos. You have your own pace for that. It's not a profession, it's a hobby. Perhaps as much as a calling, but not a life-consuming calling.
I used to be very dismissive of the photography "scene" as presented in photography magazines I paged through at the bookstore back in the 90's. It seemed like there were too many older men taking photos of women in bikinis (or cars, or other objects) and not enough people practicing photography as an interesting, original art form. But that was just cursory glance, and I was unaware of many of the masters.
I still wonder where the contemporary masters are (not our elder masters who are still hanging in, but new ones). It seems like we have loads and loads of master technicians, and few artists that stand above the crowd in big ways. Maybe that's inevitable with a democratic field like photography, that it eventually turns into a "pretty good" average without the master standouts.
Posted by: John Krumm | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 11:06 AM
Mike: Interesting to read. In my own case, I live at a similar latitude as you, but the images that most move me are quintessentially urban. So I ramble around a country farm house full of cameras and lenses, waiting for an opportunity to get to my "subject" -- the gloriously polyglot heterogeneity that is urban life.
I realize that the solution is to learn to find my images in what presents itself to me in my everyday life. And I do take a good selection of happy snaps along those lines. But other than test pictures where I am trying to figure out something specific about my process (so that I can be ready when the "real" images present themselves), it mostly seems quiet, beautiful, bucolic, cow-friendly . . . heaven for those inclined to landscape photography, but effectively a creative desert for me.
I guess the best way to express my bias is that I have never seen a photograph of a sunset -- or a tree -- that I wouldn't have preferred to see in person. Each and every sunset I have ever seen has been ineffably beautiful. And each photograph of a sunset has been. . . lesser by comparison. It is as if we lack the media to convey the majesty of it all. (Maybe if you could combine an image with music, you might get there.) But that, as they say, is me.
When all seems lost, I turn to still life. One photographer I interviewed with in the 90's for a studio assistant position told me, "If you can make an egg interesting with your composition, you'll know all you need to about setting up a scene." And hey, it worked for Edward Weston. In his case, I am convinced he was bored when he made his now iconic pictures of peppers. Bored and, eventually, hungry. When you think of his images of Charis, you'll see what I mean. But his peppers are pretty good, regardless.
Posted by: Benjamin Marks | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 12:05 PM
'the "online photographer" in this site's title is you, not me'
Mind. Blown.
But that comment clarifies for me what I'd like to see more of here--something that's always been a mainstay: pondering what it means to be a photographer today, or even what photography means today, in an age when everyone with a phone also has a camera and anyone with a computer can transform a photo beyond recognition or conjure one from scratch. Is it retro to own a dedicated camera that isn't for work? Do we need to start distinguishing "deliberate" or "intentional" photography from the thing everyone does with their phones to memorialize or overshare their lives without ever thinking about photography? What would that even mean?
Also: pictures. You seem to really like looking at pictures and talking about them, and so do most of us. I sort of like Kye Wood's idea but it sounds like too much work. I'd propose instead starting a Flickr group where people (you included) submit their most *interesting* picture lately--one that cries out for discussion, or goes to the heart of the matter of what we "online photographers" are or do. Then, maybe, once in a while, you could pick the most compelling one(s) to you at the moment and start a conversation here?
And that brings me, I think, to the crux of the matter. This blog has always been, to me, about a deeply knowledgeable and committed enthusiast, superb writer and gracious host sharing his enthusiasm (with diverse side-enthusiasms thrown in) and inviting engagement. I hope that continues, wherever your enthusiasms lead. If you're feeling depleted, maybe you just need a break, or maybe an enthusiasm has very subtly altered course.
Posted by: robert e | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 12:31 PM
I'm a bit late to the "what should you do party," but here goes. Following with the themes of seeing more of what you're seeing (as you have a great eye) and more of your photos. But combine it with your impression of AI-generated images. Perhaps combine a photo of a local lake, for example, and then what Dalle or similar comes up with driven by your written description of the scene. Then, write about the contrast between the two. Thereby, you would combine your image-making skills, your scene description skills, and your writing! How's that for a kick!?
Posted by: Allan Stam | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 03:28 PM
At the very least you can put a watermark with the URL to this site on each image. If you don't want it in the actual image, you can use PhotoShop to extend the canvas a little and print it to the new extended area.
Posted by: KeithB | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 03:51 PM
All very literate and well-argued, but those are still excuses.
You live in a visually interesting part of the world, enjoy making photographs, and we like to see them. Cost of gas? it's hardly more than it was in 1976- and your tax professional can certainly find a way to write some of that off.
It's May-- the most beautiful time of year in upstate New York. Take a drive over to Watkins Glen and have a look at the waterfalls there and in nearby Montour Falls. It will be good for your eye, mind, and spirit to get out of the house, undistracted by chores and errands.
Posted by: Mark Sampson | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 07:26 PM
You say that "the 'online photographer; in this site's title is you, not me". Are you sure? I've only been wrong about that for 15 years or so...
Posted by: Bear. | Monday, 13 May 2024 at 10:09 PM
I think James is right on the money. An electric bike will take you places fast and safe.
Posted by: David Lee | Tuesday, 14 May 2024 at 09:05 AM
I will note that if ever I want to pick a photograph to pieces for some real or even imagined error in, say, an online forum I always find it best to use one of my own benighted photos as the illustration.
I know the photographer won't get mad at me!
...Mike
Posted by: MikeF | Wednesday, 15 May 2024 at 08:57 AM
Well, as an alternative to writing about the process of taking and printing your own photos, here's something in the neighborhood that achieves some of the same goals (at least as I see it).
Every month, invite a reader (or ask for submissions and choose one from a reader, or ask readers to enter a lottery and choose one at random) to submit 3 photos, and you then generate an exhibition-quality print of it and write about the process. Obviously there's some risk you'll think unpleasant thoughts about the photographer along the way, warn people and get them to release you from being accused of defamation. And of course don't accept anything you'll be *mostly* negative about.
Or, ask readers, one a month or some such, to write an illustrated article about taking and printing one of their own photos. More viewpoints, but some of us are more skilled printers than other (I suspect myself of being midrange, maybe, certainly not top).
Obviously, this would get us quite a bit of discussion about "good" pictures, and printing, and perhaps some advanced photo topics. Does always have the risks of artists dealing with negative comments, but that applies to you, too, both sides.
Oh, and electric bikes are way cool, and fun, but safe? Can't see how they're any safer than regular bikes, which are pretty risky on roads, and in fact people frequently go faster on them than regular bikes hence perhaps MORE dangerous. If you get one, get it for fun and to get around your immediate neighborhood more. Finger lakes is hilly, yes? So a regular bike would be a chore a lot of the time? (I waved in your general direction when I passed the Finger Lakes exit from whatever freeway that was, 2 days ago.)
Posted by: David Dyer-Bennet | Thursday, 16 May 2024 at 03:58 PM