Photography podcast #134 features an interview with Toronto, Ontario fine art photographer Bret Culp. During the interview we talk about finding and developing your own photography or shooting style. Bret offers up some practical tips on how to make this process easier.
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Thanks to The Camera Store (The largest camera store in Calgary, Alberta, Canada) for sponsoring the Photography.ca podcast.
Click the player at the end of this post to listen to (or download) the 30ish minute podcast.
Bret shares his own Artist Statement on his Irish portfolio just to give listeners/readers an example on how developing an Artist Statement can focus you.
Irish Portfolio Artist Statement
“The mythic Irish landscape and its people have had a profound impact on one another. The Celts saw the land as a living source of wisdom, beauty and transformative spiritual power. Among the first to believe in the eternal nature of the human spirit they constructed monuments to death, rebirth and the cycles of the seasons and stars. Castles, fortresses and ruins are evidence of untold invasions and conflicts throughout a tumultuous history. These vestiges of the past continue to resonate through the countryside today. Beautifully poignant in the process of decay they tell their own story and possess their own mortality. Nothing that belongs to the earth is ever free from it. The sacred connection between the landscape of Ireland and its people has not disappeared over the centuries.” —Bret Culp
Overall Body Of Work Statement
“The transitory nature of existence binds everything in the material world. Careful observation reveals the beauty within each fleeting moment.” —Bret Culp
Links /resources mentioned in this podcast:
Bret Culp’s Irish Portfolio
Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity by Hugh MacLeod
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Thanks for listening and keep on shooting!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Bonjour et merci pour ce podcast inspirant.
I listen to podcasts while on a treadmill or bike. Thanks for the diversion.
Felt energized after this podcast. Just finished Group f.64 by Mary Alinder. Have read the two other books she wrote about Ansel. He was not all that kind or patient. Check out the less filtered version of the Half Dome ome shot on pages 56–58. These people helped each other all the time. Ansel was a severe critic.
lorin
Love this article.. sometimes I need a good kick in the pants to get me going again, Thanks for the ideas.
A most delightful conversation that served to reinforce many of my own views regarding the practice of photography.
Thank you, Marko and Bret.
Hi guys!
I do think that finding style is directly related to how much you want to do it! When you have that desire you will follow it as far as you are driven to. There are millions of people with expensive cameras who would not spend the time or energy to explore their potential because it is not important to them. For me, the first thing to be is an explorer!