A book about the craft of camera-using and the creative struggle of
picture-making. Learning how a camera works is not difficult. Once you
understand how to focus and expose, the rest are details. So why is it
such a challenge to make photographs that feel like they do what we
hope for? Could it be we're asking the camera to do the work that all
along has been ours to figure out? Is it possible we've been thinking
too much about the camera and not enough about our own creativity? In
an industry that obsesses over the gear and all too often ignores the
deeper questions around creativity and expression, this should come as
no surprise. It’s true, the camera sees differently than we do. As
our creative collaborator it can do things that we simply cannot. It
can see much faster (1/8000 of a second) and much slower (8 seconds,
or 8 minutes) than we can. It can cut the light in half, or double it.
It can magnify, compress, and otherwise transform our field of view
through lens and aperture choices. Learning to see as the camera does
is, itself, an exercise in creative thinking and imagination. The
journey of mastering this craft is not so much about bending the
camera to our will, but working with the many different ways the
camera is able to see the world in order to create photographs that
express the way we see and feel about it. That effort is more creative
than it is technical. Crucially, this journey is also about learning
to give ourselves the permission to create photographs that are truly
our own, to risk and experiment, and to explore and play. Too often we
hold ourselves back. In Light, Space, and Time, photographer, teacher,
and author David duChemin helps you learn to look in the same way as
the camera does, and to think in the same language as the camera
speaks. In 20 powerful essays, and featuring more than 100 beautiful
photographs, David explores the place of the human behind the camera
in the act of picture making, and he does so with the same inspiring
heart, soul, and voice that he has brought to his previous
best-selling books. Books that teach not only how to make photographs,
but how to think like a photographer. Throughout the book, David
encourages you to move beyond the functions of your camera to embrace
the creative choices those functions make possible. This exploration
provides new frameworks for thinking about your decisions, presents
new ways to see and look, raises new questions about the challenges we
face in being creative, and offers new answers as you carve out your
own unique path forward. Most importantly, David will inspire you to
head out with your camera and play with the possibilities held by
every intersection of light, space, and time that eventually becomes a
photograph. The result of all this? Freedom. Freedom to find new ways
of wrestling with the challenges we all face when collaborating with
the camera to make something that is truly our own. Freedom to embrace
your fundamental creative nature, to overcome the fear of trying
something new. Freedom to work as an artist more at ease with a
process that's inherently messy. And freedom to make the kinds of
photographs you’ve always wanted to create.
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Essays on Camera Craft and Creativity
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9798888142028
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Rocky Nook
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter