RECOMMENDED ON-LINE PHOTO MAGAZINES

• Lenscratch (excellent interviews with photographers)
• Lens Culture
• Neutral Density Magazine
• Flak Photo
• Fraction Mag
• PH Magazine
• PDN Online (for professional photographers)
• Burn (for emerging photographers)
• Adore Noir B&W Photography Magazine
• Shadow & Light (more mainstream)

PHOTO E NEWSLETTERS
• Red Dog News (very cluttered design but lots of info)
• Pro Photo Daily, daily email newsletter (subscribe here)

©Douglas Beasley 2017

 

ART, WRITING & THE CREATIVE PROCESS
RECOMMENDED MEDIA LIST


HIGHLY RECOMMENDED BOOKS
:
• Art and Fear, by Bayles and Orland, The Image Continuum
• Steal Like An Artist, Austin Kleon, Workman Publishing
• The War of Art: Break Through Blocks and Win Inner Creative Battles, Stephen Pressfield

RECOMMENDED BOOKS ON CREATIVITY:
• 101 Things To Learn in Art School, Kit White, MIT Press
• Catching the Big Fish, by filmmaker David Lynch (Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks…)
• The Creative Habit, by choreographer Twila Tharpe
• Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets and Philosophers, Leonard Koren, Stone Bridge
• Zen In the Art of Making A Living, Daido John Loori
• Marry Your Muse, Jan Phillips
• The Artist’s Way, Julia Cameron
• The Artist’s Tao, Sean Starr
• Zen Brush, Tao Words, Gene Lavon Porter, MA
• The Widening Stream: Seven Stages of Creativity, David Ulrich
• Just Kids, Patti Smith, wonderful book on her tenacity and time with Robert Mapplethorp

RECOMMENDED BOOKS ON PHOTOGRAPHY:
• The Photographer’s Eye John Szarkowski
• The Mind’s Eye Henri Cartier-Bresson
• Examples: The Making of 40 Photographs Ansel Adams
• Towards a Philosophy of Photography, Vilem Flusser
• Why People Photograph, Robert Adams
• On Beauty in Photography, Robert Adams
• On Photography, Susan Sontag
• Letting Go of the Camera, Brooks Jensen, LensWork Publishing
• Ping Pong Conversations, Alec Soth with Francesco Zanot, Contasto

RECOMMENDED BOOKS ON WRITING:
• If You Want To Write, by Brenda Ueland
• Writing Down the Bones, by Zen practitioner Natalie Goldberg

RECOMMENDED PERIODICALS
• The Sun (literary magazine)
• Orion (progressive nature magazine)

©Douglas Beasley 2018 

 

RECOMMENDED MEDIA LIST


VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
:
• Art and Fear, Bayles and Orland, The Image Continuum
• Steal Like An Artist, Austin Kleon, Workman Publishing
• The War of Art: Break Through Blocks and Win Inner Creative Battles, Stephen Pressfield

RECOMMENDED READING/ART, CREATIVITY:
• Why People Photograph and Beauty In Photography, Robert Adams
• The Creative Habit, Twyla Tharpe (dancer/choreographer)
• Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets and Philosophers, Leonard Koren, Stone Bridge
• 101 Things To Learn in Art School, Kit White, MIT Press

RECOMMENDED PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS:
• God Is At Eye Level by Jan Phillips, Quest Books
• The Tao of Photography, Seeing Beyond Seeing by Gross and Shapiro, 10 Speed Press
• The Tao of Photography by Tom Ang, Amphoto Books  (more basic than the one above)
• Letting Go of the Camera, Brooks Jensen, LensWork Publishing

RECOMMENDED PERIODICALS:
Photo:
• Shots (submit images on a theme for each issue)
• B&W Magazine
• Lens Work Quarterly (beautiful B&W reproduction)
• Aperture
• Nueva Luz
• Blind Spot
• Photo District News (for professionals)
• American Photo
• Zoom (Italian photo magazine available in US)
Other:
• The Sun (literary magazine)
• Orion; People and Nature (progressive nature magazine)

©Douglas Beasley 2018

 

CULTURAL SENSITIVITY IN TRAVEL PHOTOS

• Learn the customs and especially the cultural taboos of the area you will visit
Taboo in some cultures: Pointing, touching, patting head, showing feet, etc.

• No touching anyone without permission

• Be careful not to regard those from a drastically different culture as if they are in a zoo

• Respect the right to privacy of others

• Make eye contact with your subjects and potential subjects

• Ask for permission to ‘make’ photos, don’t ‘take’ them!

• Remember to say ‘thank you’ in their language when done

• Politeness goes a long way and should always be practiced, even when told ‘no’.

• Just because people don’t speak English or seem ‘primitive’ to you does not give you the right to do whatever you want or point your camera wherever you want.

• The sense of personal space around an individual is different in different cultures. Warmer places or densely populated areas seem to be more comfortable being in close proximity to each other while in more Northern climates people have a larger sense of personal space around them. Know what is appropriate to not offend others, put your subject at ease or use judiciously to throw your subject off balance.

• When you ‘steal’ photos by waiting until you think they are not watching sends a clear message to others about your intentions, integrity and ethics. It also affects how residents see the behavior, treatment and ethics of all photographers or foreign visitors. When you sneak photos of someone who does not want to be photographed your subject may not know but others do see and know what you are doing.

• Asking permission is not always a prerequisite when doing ‘street photography’, photojournalism or just including someone as part of a larger scene. The key is still acting in respectful manner and remembering that ‘no’ means no!

I have also made what I call the ‘cowards photo’ many times- photographing someone from behind after they have passed me by because I was afraid to ask them if I could make a photo with them. Practice speaking up and being decisive. The worst that will happen is they will say no but every ‘no’ get’s easier to take and get’s you closer to the next yes.

We are there because we want to make photos and trying new ways of making photographs is important to our experience. I also encourage you to trust your instincts and put that into action. One way to discern for your self what is appropriate behavior is to ask yourself “would I photograph that way at home if it were the people in my community?” How would you approach it photographically if your subjects were in that same situation at home? Use that as your guide to behavior.

­It is up to you to find a balance of respect for your subject and doing what it takes to get the photos you want. Find that place on the scale where you have a comfortable balance of action and respect.

Thank you for this consideration.

 

©Douglas Beasley 2017

 

WORKING WITH MODELS 

PRE-SHOOT:
1)  Be respectful at all times
2)  Find out something about who your model is as a person (interests, job, family, etc.
3)  Treat the model as a person first, subject or model second, never as a prop or object
4)  Provide a safe, comfortable, private place to change wardrobe, do makeup, etc.
5)  Going over wardrobe or props can be a good way of building rapport and getting to know each other better
6)  Sometimes it helps to explain why you wanted to work with them (but don’t be creepy!)
7)  Talk about the ‘feel’ or look you are trying to achieve, share previous photos if relevant
8)  Help subjects feel comfortable with you, your location, studio or (especially) your home
9)  If doing nudes, make sure the room or studio is warm enough + respect privacy needs
10) Create an ‘emotionally safe’ place for models to relax and be themselves
11) Work on breaking the distance barrier, having them comfortable with you inside their personal space
12) Sometimes it’s good to act like you are more in control (visually) than you actually are
13) Sometimes it’s good to show your vulnerability, your inexperience, your insecurity…
14) Get their input on what they like or what they want, while keeping your visual needs in mind as well
15) Discuss the mood of the shots you’re looking for (if you know)

WHILE SHOOTING:
1)  Establish exposure and camera settings before starting to shoot
2)  Take a meter reading up close on their face or skin (this can also help break the distance boundary)
3)  After proper exposure is established, use the RONCO™ method of “Set it and forget it
4)  Move around your subject to see how the light changes from different angles (front, back, sides…)
5)  Work on establishing and maintaining a connection to their ‘energy’
6)  Try to keep the communication flowing while shooting
7)  Keep comments and photo-direction positive rather than being critical or negative
8)  Suggest rather than tell your subject how to move or be, do not order them around
9)  Don’t over-pose or micro-manage models body language or it will get too stiff or posed looking
10) If gestures do get too posed have them shake it out and start fresh
11) Ask them how they are doing as the shoot progresses; let them know it’s OK to take a break
12) Be in control but don’t be pushy or domineering, try and keep it collaborative
13) Maintain respectful boundaries; when you know where their boundaries are, honor them
14) No touching without the model’s permission, even if just to move hair from their face
15) If done respectfully, you have the right to ask (nicely) about any poses or scenarios you want to try
16) They always have the right to say no to anything they are not comfortable with

POST-SHOOT:
1)  It can be helpful to share the image editing process with your model
2)  Make sure models get copies of the photos you made with them, in either digital or print form
3)  Do not exhibit or publish photos displaying nudity or vulnerability without your model’s permission

 

© Douglas Beasley 2017

 

WORKSHOP SURVIVAL

Developing ‘Group Mind’
It is difficult for photographers, who are often loners and/or strong individuals who work at their art and craft in a solitary manner to come together and develop ‘group mind.’ Please try to develop sensitivity to the group energy and consciousness while holding on to your individuality and personal preferences. Practice your skills of sensitivity and developing trust in your intuition. It is also a great opportunity to practice awareness of your surroundings, not just physically but energetically, and tuning into that energy.

If there is a personality in the group that you find difficult, look deeper to see how that person may mirror an aspect of yourself or your background that you are troubled by. I find that often what bothers me most in others are traits I also see in myself. You can use that understanding to apply patience and loving compassion towards them (and yourself) liberally.

Ground Rules:
– Respect the vision of the other photographers
– Respect others’ shooting styles, no matter how awkward their process seems to you, as    long as not disrespectful or harmful
– Be aware and try and stay out of other photographers’ backgrounds
– If others are in your frame of view ask them politely to stay clear for a moment (they don’t know how wide your shot is)
– Try to help each other go further and deeper rather than being in competition with each other for the ‘best’ shots
– Let’s lovingly and gently push each other forward artistically

For people/model shoots:
– Respect your subject physically, verbally and emotionally at all times
– No touching without permission
– Only one person giving direction to the subject at a time. Too many people giving directions at once is very confusing for the subject
– No ‘spy shots’ while close enough to address the subject or model directly. Further away is ok when appropriate and with permission.
– No ‘stealing’ photos while someone else is engaged with or directing their subject

 Pitfalls of digital:
There are many benefits to working with digital capture but there are also some strong pitfalls, which include:
– Not being fully aware because it is easier to over shoot now and edit later
– Constantly checking the preview screen on the back of the camera (breaking your stream of awareness)
– Excessive or premature editing (deleting too impulsively)
– Making impulsive compositional or exposure decisions based on feedback from the small camera LCD 
– Not developing trust in your intuition to guide you 
– Not developing patience in your process
– Depending upon instant feedback rather than developing trust in your instincts
– Editing in the vehicle or on the go instead of experiencing life in the present moment!

Dangers of sharing work:
Critiques are very important but there is also a danger of critiques or sharing work in progress. It can put emphasis on ‘success’ rather than visual risk taking. It can encourage you to repeat what you already know to be successful to prove your competence or worth to the group. It can put pressure for you to impress others or me rather than pushing your own limits, pushing a concept further or letting yourself be ‘in process’ longer without finding a visual solution. Being lost or feeling groundless can be a valuable way to deepen your artistic vision and find or forge a new path…

What you learn and how the exercises and assignments affect and influence you in the long run is more important to me than whether or not the pictures are successful. A failure you learn from may be much more valuable than a good photo. Let’s take a long-term approach together in your process of growth.

My emphasis will be on creating a safe space to share in a deeper more meaningful way. Please help support that endeavor and hold that ideal as we begin to open up to each other.

 

©Douglas Beasley 2017

PHOTO EDITING TIPS

1) Editing is a virtue. Practice being decisive.

2) Less is more! Showing fewer images is usually better than showing more.

3) More is often too much. Leave your audience wanting more rather than wearing them out with too many. If in doubt refer to rule #2.

4) Think in terms of series with an overall consistent viewpoint to a given body of work rather than finding single stellar images.

5) A good single image may not fit in with a particular series of images.

6) Start strong and end strong.

7) The first photo is very important and sets the tone and anticipation for the rest.

8) The last photo is very important and is the visual impression you will leave them with.

9) If you have to make a choice between several similar images, remove the weakest ones first.

10) If you have to make a choice between three or more images just compare two at a time and pick the best of those two. Then compare it against the next image.

11) If there are two similar images in your portfolio, keep them next to each other to highlight the difference between them. Separating them will make it seem like you are trying to hide the fact that you have similar images in there.

12) Refresh yourself often. Get up and walk away, take a break. Stretch.

13) The best computer or editing accessory is a good chair, (like an ‘Aeron Chair’ by Herman Miller). In the long run they are worth every penny.

14) If an Aeron chair is too expensive, try using a balance ball (about $30 from yoga supply shops). A standing desktop may also be helpful.

15) Seek the opinion of others, but only those you trust and respect visually.

16) Your spouse or mother isn’t usually the best judge of photo quality, despite their overwhelmingly positive or negative opinions, so weigh their opinions accordingly.

17) Don’t make decisions by a vote. Your photography is not a democratic process nor is it a popularity contest.

18) Just because someone likes it doesn’t mean a photo is good and just because someone doesn’t like it doesn’t make it bad.

19) Weigh opinions of others but learn to trust your own instincts.

20) Learn to listen for your own inner voice to guide you. Weigh opinions of others but learn to develop trust in your own instincts.

©Douglas Beasley 2018

 

EXPOSE YOURSELF: PHOTO MATH

Aperture, shutter speed, ISO are all interrelated!
Changing one affects the other!

Exposure is like filling a bucket of water. Assume one gallon represents ‘proper’ exposure. You can get one gallon in the bucket very fast with a large hose (a large aperture like f2.8) turned on for a short time (a fast shutter speed). Or you can get a gallon of water with a very small hose (small aperture like f16) turned on for a longer time (slow shutter speed). Either way you end up with one gallon of water (proper exposure).

To maintain the same exposure:
– Changing to a larger aperture (lets in more light) needs a faster shutter speed (that lets in less light)
– Changing to a smaller aperture (lets in less light) needs a slower shutter speed (that lets in more light)

– Changing to a slower shutter speed (lets in more light) needs a smaller aperture (that lets in less light)
– Changing to a faster shutter speed (lets in less light) needs a larger aperture (that lets in more light)

It is very important to realize:
When camera is set to Auto or Program mode: when you change aperture or shutter speed the camera automatically compensates by changing the other a corresponding amount the opposite direction (to keep the exposure the same).

To make your photo darker or lighter you must increase or decrease exposure!
Increasing exposure causes the photo to be lighter (moves histogram towards the right)
Decreasing exposure causes the photo to be darker (moves histogram towards the left)
This can be accomplished in manual mode or by exposure compensation.

Using your camera in Manual mode: when you change aperture or shutter speed the other does not automatically change to compensate, therefore the image gets more or less exposure (making it darker or lighter).

You can also use exposure compensation. + gives more exposure, making the image lighter. Setting to – gives less exposure, making the image darker.

 

PHOTO MATH

Aperture/f Stops
In 1 stop increments: f1.4, f2.8, f4, f5.6, f8, f11, f16, f22, f32, f45, f64, f128
In 1/3 stop increments: f5.6, f6.3, f7.1,f 8.0, f9, f10, f11, f13 etc.

Shutter Speeds
In 1 stop increments: I second, ½, ¼, 1/8th, 1/15th, 1/30th, 1/60th, 125th, 1/250th, etc.
One stop is always lets in twice as much light or half as much light.
In 1/3 stop increments: 1/30th, 1/40th, 1/50th, 1/60th, 1/80th, 1/100th, 1/125 etc.

ISO (film or digital sensor’s sensitivity to light)
In 1 stop increments: 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, 3200, 6400.etc.
One stop always lets in twice as much light (lower ISO) or half as much light (higher ISO)
The higher the number the more sensitive to light the camera sensor becomes (but increases digital noise).

 

©Douglas Beasley 2014

 

A GUIDE TO CRITIQUING THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF OTHERS

• What is your first, intuitive or visceral reaction? Do you like the photo?
• Does it show artistic vision or is it just a lucky shot?
• Are you drawn into the image? Is it compelling?
• Do your eyes linger or is it a quick read and you’re ready to move on to the next image?
• What is the photo about?
• What is the subject of the photo? Is it too obvious or too subtle?
• Do you sense the photographer’s connection to, or caring for, the subject matter?
• Do you sense the photographer’s presence in the image?
• Are the technical aspects (exposure, contrast, color balance, etc.) of sufficient quality?
• Do any technical deficiencies get in the way of experiencing the photo or its intent?
• Have you seen similar images? How is it the same or different than those?
• Does it fit into a particular photographic genre? (like nature, landscape, documentary…)
• Is it a good example of that genre or a copycat or generic example?
• Are you shown anything new? Is there a unique perspective or point of view shared?
• Is there a mood or feeling portrayed? What is it?
• Does that mood add to your understanding or enjoyment of the image?
• Are the photos well ‘seen’? Is the whole frame utilized, corner-to-corner, edge-to-edge?
• Could the photograph be framed or cropped more effectively? How?
•  Where does your eye enter the frame?
• Where is your eye drawn? How does it more through the frame? Where does it land?
• Is your eye led out of the frame? Where?
•  Is there a metaphor present, intended or not? What is it? Is it too obvious or cliche?
• Does the metaphor deepen your understanding of the photographers intent? Or your enjoyment of the photo?
• Are there any additional layers of meaning intended or implied?
• How could the photo be made stronger? Or clearer? Or more subtle? Or simpler?
• What would you have done differently?

©Douglas Beasley 2017

 

JUDGING PHOTO EXHIBITS: A CONFESSIONAL

Recently I judged the photography competition for the Minnesota State Fair Fine Arts Exhibit. As the sole judge in the photo category this was an overwhelming task with over 1,100 entries that needed to be narrowed down to just 107. That’s less than nine percent of the entries making the cut! Although honored to have been chosen to be the judge this year, it is made even more difficult because I was suffering jet lag after returning from Italy late the night before. Walking through the room with the photos laid out on the floor along the walls told me there was going to be a lot of very enticing images to have to choose from but also that many will be easy to eliminate.

With the help of several volunteer assistants, my first undertaking is to remove as quickly as possible all entries that are visually or technically poorly executed. This is to avoid further visual overload and to save energy for the hard choices I know lay ahead. Poorly executed unfortunately often means very bad digital printing. With good Epson photo printers starting under $200 it is probably more due to lack of experience and judgment discerning print quality than a technical issue. I also try and look closely at the small prints that seem well executed so they don’t get lost among the giant oversized works that scream out at you. Small intimate works can easily get overlooked and I really try and see the intent and value in each piece. Almost half the photos have now been sent away!

Usually I also take into account presentation but have been asked to overlook matting and framing choices, since not everyone can afford that and to base my choices purely on the photograph itself. This is the only guideline I have been given by the State Fair. I try, but much of the wildly ‘creative’ framing and colorful mats, carefully chosen to match the colors in the photo and often double or triple matted really get in way of the photograph. I wish people realized how distracting this is and how much it detracts from, rather than enhances, their image. If only they could visit a few museums or galleries that are not in malls and that don’t start with “Thomas” or end with “Kinkade” or that don’t feature duck art, I think it might really help. Access to real galleries is where people who live in the metro area have a distinct advantage over the rural population. A mediocre photograph is not made any better by a colorful mat and ornate frame. It is in fact, much worse, sometimes even offensive.

My next task was to eliminate typical or trite responses to cliched subjects. Way too many cute kittens, cute kids and old barns. I have nothing against kids, kittens or nostalgia but cute gets old quickly when looking at over 1,100 framed images and nostalgia doesn’t replace vision, craft, soulfulness or insightfulness. Cute or nostalgic simply aren’t enough to carry a photo under this level of competition. Use that as a starting point in going deeper and maybe we are getting somewhere. And if you are going to choose subjects, including flowers, that many others are going to submit nearly identical versions of, please try and find a more unique or personal way of interpreting your subject. I suggest to my very helpful assistants that they should consider having a whole separate exhibit, hopefully in a building far away, for the hopelessly cute including any photo where your first reaction is “awwww”. It would probably be a very popular State Fair destination but you won’t find me there unless there is something very tasty on a stick on the other side and no other way to get there.

Another category with a lot of entries is travel. These span the globe from nice vacation snapshots to some very insightful beautiful photographs. I feel bad eliminating anyone’s favorite travel shot or the amazing sunrise or sunset because I love that they stopped and noticed. I know their friends or relatives told them it was a great shot and I’m sure the experience of being there was great but it is usually the place or moment that is significant, not their photographic record of it. The choices of what to eliminate so far have been fairly easy and instinctual and I am confident in my choices. From previous experience, I know that now the real work begins…

My criteria for selection includes concept, execution, creativity and exemplary implementations of a wide range of styles or genres. The most important criteria for me is emotional impact: what makes the viewer think, or even better, feel. That quality of ‘emotional impact’ is, of course, completely subjective and up to me to interpret. I try to be as objective as possible while also fully realizing that true objectivity is impossible. I recognize many of the photographers by style, content or because they have signed their name on the front. Many of these people are my friends, my colleagues, my students. How can I be objective about someone’s photo when I know their strengths and weakness, their vulnerabilities, their struggles, their growth and compare that to the photo of somebody I don’t know? I try to be objective but I simply don’t think it’s possible, at least for me. It was much easier when I judged shows in Alaska and Hawaii where I didn’t know hardly any of the photographers. I think maybe the State Fair should bring in judges from outside Minnesota to avoid this dilemma.

Jurying is mostly selection by elimination. I need to take into account balancing how many images in a given genre (i.e. nature, wildlife, documentary or digital composite) are accepted so the exhibit shows a balance and range of different methods of working with the medium and ways of seeing. In the end it is more about trusting my instincts, but there still is a lot of second-guessing myself. In the final selection there are a few that didn’t make it that now, in retrospect, I think should have. If your photo was rejected please know that it was definitely one of these. There are also a couple I think now, in retrospect, shouldn’t have made it in and I agonize over these decisions. Another day or another time there might be different choices but that is always the case. Today I stand by these choices. I also feel for all those that chose to honor moments in their lives by making a photograph. Who am I to now diminish that moment by saying it’s not good enough to stand with these other moments submitted by those more accomplished, more experienced or more sophisticated photographers or alongside the hundreds of professional and commercial photographers who also chose to enter the fair?

Now we are down to at least 250 or 300 photographs, all strong and all very deserving of a place in the show. And I have to still eliminate two thirds of these! If you have made it this far you should know that your work is good but there simply isn’t room to include all of these in the show. To narrow it down to 107 it is no longer about what is better than something else but what appeals to me at this time, this day, this point in my life, my career. But are these really the ‘best’? No, there is no such thing in art. These are my favorites and I leave it at that. It also becomes about having a well-rounded show with many styles and genres represented.

Picking the first through fourth place and merit awards is by far the hardest part of the day for me. With jet-lag swirling through my body and the sensation of my blood turning to cement I am temporarily unable to continue. I ask that all possible candidates for awards be lined up against the back wall but I simply can’t choose. I want to just give them all an equal designation of ‘my favorites’ and walk away, but winners must be chosen. The task is made harder and more complicated by the fact that I know at least half of the award contenders personally and a couple of them are very close friends. I consider eliminating any awards to friends. I consider only giving friends ‘honorable mention’ status. But either of these choices would be doing their work and them a disservice. I walk away again to try to clear my head and gather energy. When I return I talk with the exhibit director and with several of my helpers about my dilemma in making awards to friends. They both help me realize that I just have to give the awards to what I feel is the strongest and most powerful work, no matter whose it is.

Even though overall I love my choices, I am haunted by a couple images that made the final cut that I let outside factors influence me (who they are, what their previous work is like, their standing in the photo community) and a couple that didn’t make it in that I think I made a mistake on. When I go back the next day I tell the Fine Art committee I think have made a mistake at the last minute by impulsively, under pressure, cutting the photo of a man with a red white and blue straw hat the says “Made In China” on it. Is this photo ‘better’ than many of the other much more ‘fine art’ photos rejected? No, but it has made an impact on me and it is one I want others to see, probably more for the wry political commentary than anything artful, yet it is well done technically and aesthetically. They let me add it back in! Now we have 108, what some say is a auspicious number; the same as the number of prayer beads on a Tibetan Buddhist mala. Perfect.

If your photo didn’t get into the State Fair Fine Arts Exhibit it is important to remember that less than one out of eleven photos were accepted, due to space limitations. It was the highest number of entries ever. Out of the eleven hundred images, many by well known artists and accomplished professionals, I thought there were about three hundred strong enough to be in the show and still only one third made it in. Your job is to make it to that top three hundred. If you didn’t make it that far (and I wish there was a way for people to know) you probably need to work on developing your vision and craft. If you did make it into that top three hundred, from there it is up to the taste and whims of the judge. There are many factors that influence the judging that have nothing to do with the quality or artistic merit of your work: the judge’s taste, how many similarly themed entries there were, the need of the judge to create a well rounded show reflecting many sensibilities. There were some very good photos that didn’t make the final cut and every time I had to eliminate one of these it hurt. Undoubtedly there were also excellent entries that somehow got overlooked in the chaos of the sheer mass of submitted images (or the apparent blindness, ignorance or poor taste of the judge). I think it is the job of the photographer to submit a photo with a strong enough vision coupled with a high level of execution to be in the top tier but also true to the photographer’s individual vision. Submit images that you feel most passionate about, not ones that you think will get in. From there it is anybody’s guess as to the whims of fate that year…

 

© Douglas Beasley 2009