Waiting for Summer

Waiting for Summer

Saturday, 14 March 2015

Over and out

For anyone following the blog, this is my last post.  I have decided to cease my OCA studies and focus specifically on my street photography and shape my development myself.

If you like street photography and want to see more, go to:

note - website is still under construction so keep checking back!

Friday, 6 March 2015

Anecdotal lesson about authorial control

I recently posted a photo on Flickr:

Oxford Street, London, England
And I entered this photo into the Instruction #01 of the "Street and Repeat - 105" group.  Unfortunately, my photo wasn't selected as one of those to go through to the curated pool, but it was very interesting to read the comments added by fellow group members.  In street photography, I deliberately do not give my images captions when they are posted to Flickr.  They are named after the location I took them in so as to leave interpretation open.  Not one of the comments I received reflected what I saw when I took the photo. What I had noticed and the reason why I took the photo, was firstly that the man and the woman in the poster had the same straight white hair, so the photo is about the irony of that juxtaposition.  The other thing I was excited about was having seen the fictional "Lucius Malfoy" from the Harry Potter series, so it was also a shot with a bit of humour.  These are the comments I received:


The comments refer to:
  • Sci-fi exploration
  • Two other characters: Biff Byford and Bill Murray
  • Fantasies about glamorous ladies
  • Deep thinking
  • Conjuring up a magician's accomplice
  • A floating head
  • A head being a badge
I amazed that the interpretations went deeper than my original thinking, and also very pleased about this.  But this process also taught me a bit more about loss of authorial control.  In this case, I didn't want any authorial control, hence the image is not captioned or described, but it does show that you cannot predict how other people will read an image and what context/narrative they will assign to it.

It's the first picture I've ever posted on Flickr that has received feedback like this and it was also very interesting to see how a whole narrative can be created out of a simple two-point composition.  If I had added a caption that directed interpretation, the reaction might have been quite different.

Sunday, 1 March 2015

More about Dougie Wallace

Great to see that Dougie Wallace has been shortlisted for the WPO awards for his work on life expectancy differences between Glasgow and Knightsbridge called Glasgow; Second City of The Empire. On the run up to the Scottish Referendum as mentioned on the BBC News: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-31587522 (also shown on the WPO site http://worldphoto.org/images/image-gallery/26209/?page=4) and this is particularly encouraging as I would like to produce the sort of work that Wallace does: a sort of blend of street photography, documentary and photo journalism, but the result of which is a social commentary.  I know how hard he has worked for this, and he seems to have gone from strength to strength since publishing Stags, Hens and Bunnies, and so I am pleased he has this latest success, and am looking forward to going to the exhibition.

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