Using vantage point to abstract subject and stress detail.Less often means more in photographic expression. One way to show less and say more is to use the camera position to abstract an image, stressing detail and stimulating the imagination of the viewer in the process. Where we stand often determines what we say. One reason why images are conventional and unexpressive is because photographers often use vantage points too far from the subject, and usually shoot from a predictable eye-level camera position. Many photographers, and the editors they work for, prefer more distant, less abstract vantage points because they have been schooled to "show the whole thing," dutifully du·ti·ful adj. 1. Careful to fulfill obligations. 2. Expressing or filled with a sense of obligation. du including the entire subject in the frame and creating a sterile, literal, cluttered image. For them, editorial photography is description--superficial illustration instead of interpretation or expression. They may also be unwilling to abstract because they patronize pa·tron·ize tr.v. pa·tron·ized, pa·tron·iz·ing, pa·tron·iz·es 1. To act as a patron to; support or sponsor. 2. To go to as a customer, especially on a regular basis. 3. viewers, fearing viewers will not recognize the depiction. They forget that viewers have imaginations and that captions and other images can always add important context for meaning. Photographers often flail to shoot with a purpose in mind. it's simpler and quicker to stand in front of the subject, get the whole thing in the frame and push the shutter button The shutter button is a button found on many cameras. When you press it, it opens the shutter of the camera. On many cameras, the shutter will then close automatically after the shutter speed has elapsed. . In fact, Bob Gilka, the former director of photography at National Geographic, once said that he looked for photographers, who, along with other skills, demonstrated a "willingness to bend." On the other hand, photographers who do choose to vary the angle of their approach may reveal details that would go unseen from straight-on vantage points. In Montecristi, Ecuador Montecristi is a town in the Manabí province of Ecuador and the capital of the canton by the same name. As of the 2001 census Montecristi had 14,636 inhabitants. The town is renowned for the production of Panama hats, the best quality of which is named , I found a woman so skilled at making Panama hats (see photo) that she seemed to do it without even looking at her hands. I shot down on her from a high vantage point to stress the character of her aged hands as well as the complexity of the job itself. I achieved intimacy through abstraction, emphasizing her arms and hands along with the partially made hat to tell my story. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] By getting down low, moving in and shooting up to abstract this vintage locomotive (see photo at right, top) in a park in the Chilean seaport of Arica, I was able to comment on its forgotten role in the history of South American commerce. For more than 100 years, this locomotive hauled freight from landlocked landlocked adj. referring to a parcel of real property which has no access or egress (entry or exit) to a public street and cannot be reached except by crossing another's property. Bolivia to the sea. Built in Germany in the 1920s, it represents a long-gone economic era. I moved in on it from a low angle to stress its flowing detail--streaks of seabird droppings that symbolically cover its surface. I found another old conveyance on the streets of Lisbon, Portugal. I abstracted an old car (see photo above, lower left) by moving in on it from an oblique angle, showing only the detail on one of its lights and part of its hood and radiator. I eliminated everything else--its spindly spin·dly adj. spin·dli·er, spin·dli·est Slender and elongated, especially in a way that suggests weakness. spindly Adjective [-dlier, -dliest wheels, roof and body. I had to--the more I tried to get into the picture, the more literal and cluttered it became. Conversely, the closer I moved to it, the more emphatic the details of its beauty, grace, engineering and style became. While shooting a workshop project on a Santa Fe Santa Fe, city, Argentina Santa Fe, city (1991 pop. 341,000), capital of Santa Fe prov., NE Argentina, a river port near the Paraná, with which it is connected by canal. , N.M., ranch, I used an extremely close vantage point to stress the detail of the obscure and diverse labeling on the spools of thread (see photo above, lower right) used by the ranch's owner to make unique textile products. This, too, is a form of abstraction--my angle of view embraced a pattern created by the ends of the spools, and very little of the thread itself. In all of these images, I moved much closer to my subject than many other photographers would, interpreting the subject and expressing its meaning, as opposed to being merely descriptive. Robert Capa Robert Capa (Budapest, October 22 1913 – May 25 1954) was a famous war photographer during the 20th century. He covered five different wars: the Spanish Civil War, the Second Sino-Japanese War, World War II across Europe, the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, and the First Indochina War. , one of the 20th century's greatest photojournalists The is a list of notable photojournalists from throughout history:
Philip N. Douglis, ABC ABC in full American Broadcasting Co. Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928. , directs The Douglis Visual Workshops, entering its 34th year of training communicators in visual literacy. Douglis, an IABC IABC International Association of Business Communicators IABC Indo-Americans for Better Community Fellow, is the most widely known consultant on editorial photography for organizations. He offers his comprehensive six-person "Communicating with Pictures" workshops every May and October in Oak Creek Canyon Oak Creek Canyon is a 12 mile (20 km) long river gorge located along the Mogollon Rim in northern Arizona located between the cities of Flagstaff and Sedona. The canyon is often described as a smaller cousin of the Grand Canyon because of its scenic beauty. , near Sedona, Ariz., USA. For registration information, call +1.602.493.6709 or e-mail pnd1@cox.net. Send photos for possible use in this column to The Douglis Visual Workshops, 2505 E. Carol Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85028 USA. You can view Douglis' multi-gallery cyberbook on expressive digital travel photography at www.pbase.com/pnd1. |
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