There is a notion that if you want to become a good photographer, then perfect compositions and great lighting will be your best friends. And this is true. But the intention, why you are making the image, and your relationship with your subject are what make good photographers great. Belgian photographer Bieke Depoorter is one of those great (if not one of the best) photographers making use of the relationships she is able to establish. Her unconventional approach to the presentation of her projects and the way she pushes the limits of the medium are just a couple of the things about her that have fascinated me for quite some time, and I was fortunate enough to be able to talk to her about this, and much more.
Thank you for listening or watching.
Find Bieke Depoorter:
https://biekedepoorter.com
https://www.instagram.com/biekedepoorter/
https://www.facebook.com/BiekeDepoorterPhotographer/
https://twitter.com/biekedepoorter
Listen on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/36TS6kC
Listen on Google Podcasts: bit.ly/2UHwbun
Listen on Spotify: spoti.fi/3rrYMA0
Listen on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-228441570
Check out https://aboutphotography.blog for more stories about photography
Index:
00:00 - Who is Bieke Depoorter?
00:48 - As a documentary photographer, what are your views on creating work for yourself versus creating work that has an impact?
03:36 - Is it possible to be honest as a photographer?
09:03 - Do exhibitions influence your project?
12:12 - A short recap of the project
13:06 - How do you perceive the balance, or perhaps tension, between art and documentary?
17:12 - Impact of (negative) feedback
24:13 - Balance between art and documentary regarding Magnum photos. Can photojournalism be objective?
26:03 - How demanding are the emotional connections?
28:48 - Does it help at all if the project becomes personal (when you spend a lot of time with someone, you inevitable get closer to each other). Is it how to get beyond obvious?
32:14 - Do you get better pictures if you spend more time with your subject?
35:28 - How do you recognize that the person has the potential to be a subject for a project?
39:28 - Do people on the street like to be photographed?
40:41 - What is the idea behind the format of your books?
42:13 - The photographer has the power to choose the story.
44:38 - Telling a story and editing the work. How do you choose 50 images out of 10K?
46:34 - Can you stay objective when editing your own work?
48:41 - How can someone improve their photography?
52:48 - Is composition important?
53:26 - Should you search for your own voice/style?
55:50 - Can you make a living as a documentary photographer?
57:30 - Any advice you would give to your younger self?
58:50 - What have you learned about yourself through these projects?
01:01:00 - The end, thank you for watching!
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There is a notion that if you want to become a good photographer, then perfect compositions and great lighting will be your best friends. And this is true. But the intention, why you are making the image, and your relationship with your subject are what make good photographers great. Belgian photographer Bieke Depoorter is one of those great (if not one of the best) photographers making use of the relationships she is able to establish. Her unconventional approach to the presentation of her projects and the way she pushes the limits of the medium are just a couple of the things about her that have fascinated me for quite some time, and I was fortunate enough to be able to talk to her about this, and much more.
Thank you for listening or watching.
Find Bieke Depoorter:
https://biekedepoorter.com
https://www.instagram.com/biekedepoorter/
https://www.facebook.com/BiekeDepoorterPhotographer/
https://twitter.com/biekedepoorter
Listen on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/36TS6kC
Listen on Google Podcasts: bit.ly/2UHwbun
Listen on Spotify: spoti.fi/3rrYMA0
Listen on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-228441570
Check out https://aboutphotography.blog for more stories about photography
Index:
00:00 - Who is Bieke Depoorter?
00:48 - As a documentary photographer, what are your views on creating work for yourself versus creating work that has an impact?
03:36 - Is it possible to be honest as a photographer?
09:03 - Do exhibitions influence your project?
12:12 - A short recap of the project
13:06 - How do you perceive the balance, or perhaps tension, between art and documentary?
17:12 - Impact of (negative) feedback
24:13 - Balance between art and documentary regarding Magnum photos. Can photojournalism be objective?
26:03 - How demanding are the emotional connections?
28:48 - Does it help at all if the project becomes personal (when you spend a lot of time with someone, you inevitable get closer to each other). Is it how to get beyond obvious?
32:14 - Do you get better pictures if you spend more time with your subject?
35:28 - How do you recognize that the person has the potential to be a subject for a project?
39:28 - Do people on the street like to be photographed?
40:41 - What is the idea behind the format of your books?
42:13 - The photographer has the power to choose the story.
44:38 - Telling a story and editing the work. How do you choose 50 images out of 10K?
46:34 - Can you stay objective when editing your own work?
48:41 - How can someone improve their photography?
52:48 - Is composition important?
53:26 - Should you search for your own voice/style?
55:50 - Can you make a living as a documentary photographer?
57:30 - Any advice you would give to your younger self?
58:50 - What have you learned about yourself through these projects?
01:01:00 - The end, thank you for watching!
Discovering Distinct Worlds Of People AT HOME - Book By Susan Kandel - Published By Stanley Barker
Podcast About Photography
38 minutes 55 seconds
4 years ago
Discovering Distinct Worlds Of People AT HOME - Book By Susan Kandel - Published By Stanley Barker
Hello fellow photographers. In this episode I am talking with American photographer Susan Kandel and we are talking about her new book AT HOME published by STANLEY/BARKER. It is a project Susan spent more than 10 years on and she photographed many families at their homes. My name is Martin and this is a Podcast about photography.
Thank you so much for joing me/us on this episode. Make sure you are subscribed if you want to be notified when I post a new episode. And also there is one thing I would love you to do. I would be very thankful if you could go and give this podcast five star rating and the review. If you like this content and you think other people might enjoy it as well feel free to take a screenshot and through it out on your instagram story or share it with your friends. all the information can be also found in the description.
We are also discussing some photographs and stories. Since the podcast is audio experience only, if you want to see the images we are talking about then visit aboutphotography.blog and you can find them all in the dedicated post.
https://aboutphotography.blog/podcasts/susan-kandel
If you want to follow me on social media
SoundCould: https://soundcloud.com/user-228441570
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aboutphotographyblog/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aboutphotographyblog
Twitter: https://twitter.com/aboutphoto_blog
Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/aboutphotographyblog/
You can find this content and more on https://aboutphotography.blog
INDEX:
00:00 - Hello There!
02:02 - Working and attending classes at MIT
05:57 - Workshop with Garry Winogrand
06:38 - Inspiration
07:40 - How Garry Winogrand got trampled during photographing of football game
07:58 - Adapting style
10:35 - Doing photography for living
12:44 - Stanley/Barker photography book AT HOME
18:14 - What was the most difficult part in the transition of photographing people outside and inside
19:12 - How can you get candid photographaps when you have the permission to photograph
20:25 - How did you imagine the project to work out
21:13 - When did you realise the project was done?
21:44 - Images and interesting stories
23:58 - Did you miss many shots?
24:20 - Images and interesting stories
31:19 - What is it like to revisit your work after quite some time
31:57 - Sequencing and other work with publisher
32:42 - AT HOME
33:25 - What about consent and giving prints away
35:21 - What about other project for future books?
37:02 - Future dream project?
Podcast About Photography
There is a notion that if you want to become a good photographer, then perfect compositions and great lighting will be your best friends. And this is true. But the intention, why you are making the image, and your relationship with your subject are what make good photographers great. Belgian photographer Bieke Depoorter is one of those great (if not one of the best) photographers making use of the relationships she is able to establish. Her unconventional approach to the presentation of her projects and the way she pushes the limits of the medium are just a couple of the things about her that have fascinated me for quite some time, and I was fortunate enough to be able to talk to her about this, and much more.
Thank you for listening or watching.
Find Bieke Depoorter:
https://biekedepoorter.com
https://www.instagram.com/biekedepoorter/
https://www.facebook.com/BiekeDepoorterPhotographer/
https://twitter.com/biekedepoorter
Listen on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/36TS6kC
Listen on Google Podcasts: bit.ly/2UHwbun
Listen on Spotify: spoti.fi/3rrYMA0
Listen on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-228441570
Check out https://aboutphotography.blog for more stories about photography
Index:
00:00 - Who is Bieke Depoorter?
00:48 - As a documentary photographer, what are your views on creating work for yourself versus creating work that has an impact?
03:36 - Is it possible to be honest as a photographer?
09:03 - Do exhibitions influence your project?
12:12 - A short recap of the project
13:06 - How do you perceive the balance, or perhaps tension, between art and documentary?
17:12 - Impact of (negative) feedback
24:13 - Balance between art and documentary regarding Magnum photos. Can photojournalism be objective?
26:03 - How demanding are the emotional connections?
28:48 - Does it help at all if the project becomes personal (when you spend a lot of time with someone, you inevitable get closer to each other). Is it how to get beyond obvious?
32:14 - Do you get better pictures if you spend more time with your subject?
35:28 - How do you recognize that the person has the potential to be a subject for a project?
39:28 - Do people on the street like to be photographed?
40:41 - What is the idea behind the format of your books?
42:13 - The photographer has the power to choose the story.
44:38 - Telling a story and editing the work. How do you choose 50 images out of 10K?
46:34 - Can you stay objective when editing your own work?
48:41 - How can someone improve their photography?
52:48 - Is composition important?
53:26 - Should you search for your own voice/style?
55:50 - Can you make a living as a documentary photographer?
57:30 - Any advice you would give to your younger self?
58:50 - What have you learned about yourself through these projects?
01:01:00 - The end, thank you for watching!