11.05.2010

Let’s Start By Being Honest . . .

And if I’m being honest here it is: For a while now I lay in bed with my hubs at night and whine about how I can’t figure out if I love or hate photography. How could I not know? Then I’d have a session that I loved, where everything went right and I’d get this couple that swooned at each other and had love spilling into every image I shot. And I would love it again.

But then I’d come home to the computer – that computer I spend half my life on – and remember that I have hours of editing ahead of me. I’ve even gotten really efficient with batch processing, but still, the editing looms. Not because my images are bad but because I have to do all the fancy things that other photographers in the business are doing. You know, the tricks of the trade. I have spent countless hours trying to figure out what some photographers do to their images in Photoshop. Ok, so I never took a class or did any workshops, but I was certain I could figure out their tricks on my own. And a lot of them I did. I wanted my pictures to look like everyone else’s. I wanted to do what they did. Ridiculous. Just plain ridiculous.

When I first went digital, I had no idea who any of the big names were. I didn’t look at their stuff or see what was going on around me.  I had no idea about who others were as artists. I think it was better that way because I was more me. I wasn’t trying to keep up or fit in. But I started seeing perfection in images around me. A sharpness I had only seen in magazines or not ever seen at all. I’m ashamed to say that I wanted so badly to be like everyone else. Had the world remained true to film, I would have too, but it didn’t. So I didn’t either.

I’ve been e-mailing Gina Leigh back and forth. What an amazing artist she is as a film photographer. Today she picked up the phone and called me. I didn’t even give her my number but she looked me up and out of complete and honest sincerity she gave me some of the best advice when it comes to being a photographer. “For a while, don’t even look at the work of other photographers. Decide who you are as an artist and let that be what inspires your work. Figure out what you love, what absolutely gives your life meaning, and let that be what others see in your images.” Great advice, right? Stop trying to be what the others are being, and do what YOU love.

Well, what I love is weddings and couples who WANT to be in front of my camera. I love shooting my beautiful sister in the middle of a dry lake bed because she WANTS to be there. I love shooting what I want to shoot. My very favorite digital photographer is Clayton Austin because he has an artistic vision that is unique to him. His images are expressive and beautiful. That I could put as much heart into my images as he does is my hope for my own work. I don’t want my work to look like his, but I want my work to be my work the way his work is his work. And what I love about him is his philosophy that he shoots for himself, a selfish photographer. I want to be selfish too. I want to shoot what I love because that’s what I shoot best. What I love is two people who can love like I’m not there or one unique individual who can be reflective and beautiful and playful while my camera is watching.

I’m going to make the transition back to film. I have so much fear when I say that but excitement as well. I’m in essence beginning again. Targeting a different market with a different product, and I’m going to feel just like I did when I picked up my first film camera at 15. “What the heck am I doing?” But I want to be in love with what I do again. And I think it’s more than just switching to weddings/couples only. It’s going back to that film. Going back to what made me want to be a photographer. It’s risky, putting down the digital camera, but I feel like more of me will start showing. At first, after I decided to make the switch, I felt that fear of having fewer bookings or losing families to those other photographers I was secretly in competition with. But that’s okay. I don’t have to be a family portrait photographer if I don’t want to. We can each just do what we do best and love most.

Thanks, Gina, you have been tremendously helpful in reminding me what I love. Thank you,  Becky Earl, for your recent move to film, for doing what YOU want to do and helping me to see that I don’t have to shoot everything just to say that I shoot everything. And thank you, Clayton Austin for being a selfish photographer. Your images are you.

(If you’ve booked a family session with me, I am still in the family portrait biz until the end of December :).

4 comments:

AmyLynn Blake said...

Good for you Rachel!! I'm so excited for you. I've been feeling the need for some serious reflection lately too - not necessarily a move toward film, but feeling an overall need for more "ME" in my images. I read a review of Jonathan Canlas' Film is Not Dead workshop not too long ago and a few things really resonated with me about it.--Mostly just the slowing down and thinking about your shot more in camera. Can't wait to see your future work!!

Colibriphoto said...

I appreciated your courage and understand FULLY your journey. If you do what your heart tells you to do, you will succeed. Good luck! Valerie

Clayton Austin said...

Hi Rachel! Thanks for the awesome shout out! Though I will drop my two cents while I am here. I love film. I do. So this has nothing to do with whether digital is better or film is better. That argument will last longer than Jesus. Its just that I fear that many photographer really lose sight of the art can be so wonderful and can only be found in either the physical darkroom or digital darkroom. Many photographer are just that. Photographer. They only hold themselves accountable to taking the actual image and then drop their little roll of film into an envelope and leave the rest to someone else. There is an opportunity to missed in this process. The opportunity to become emotionally attached to your work because you are completely committed to it through the entire process. Which may involve a tad bit more leg work. May I suggest that you not look at it as a tedious task but a unique privilege??

Gina Leigh said...

I'm really, really happy for you! The switch is scary and exciting at the same time, I'm sure, but you will love the results. Best to you!