Interview - Chris Dickens, Editor – Slumdog Millionaire Part IV (Video) (link)

Some very interesting discussion in the middle of the clip where he describes beautifully how good editing can make something less obvious and more visual and ultimately more moving.

He also mentions Nicholas Roeg whose Walkabout is a very interestingly edited and shot film.

This is really making me think that writing for film is such a different job to writing novels or short stories. Whereas in the novels the quality of the words and sentences are what’s important, in film the best writers deal with visual sophistication.

(Click the link in the title)


Posted 2 years ago

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Essay - On the Reconfiguration of Symbols In-between Pictures

It is the ambitious photographer’s job to find, define, redefine, configure and reconfigure the symbolism present in the world. The photographer must continue the job of Adam but go further in naming things not just in and of themselves but as either something new, or more significantly, to give it a new character in relation to something else. Perhaps to everything else.

Take a tree and see a ghost. Photograph it as a ghost and you’ve created a new symbol whereby the world is now full of green and brown ghosts that grow and watch over our fields and fences. The ur-symbol has been reconfigured and that reconfiguration changes all instances of that symbol, and also adds new meaning to juxtapositions of that symbol with something else, like a field or a fence.

This truth is central to understanding how a photographer creates work beyond the first level of the obvious meaning. This second level intra-meaning can appear obviously on the surface of a picture itself but often results in trite, and cliché images. Not always, but often. There is more opportunity of reconfiguration in the spaces between images, that is, in the interplay between a set of pictures. Robert Frank’s work is an excellent example of a consistent reconfiguration of symbols according to a idee fixe. With The Americans however, he was able to reconfigure symbols within many of the photos themselves as well as producing meaning between the images, as well as holistically. Bravo, Robert Frank.

For a photographer, I’m not sure how feasible it is to consciously attempt this kind of reconfiguration. Rather, I think it is something that first, comes out of the character and personality of the photographer, and second, if it can be consciously manipulated at all, can be most easily done in the slower process of editing rather than the whirlwind battle of shooting.

A charge may be laid that, well aren’t you just giving a fancy name to telling a coherent story? No, what I’m talking about is telling a deeper story by not just using the meaning of pictures at their face value, which you do have to do of course, but finding and using deeper symbols amongst separate pictures and in-between large number of pictures to say consistently what you want to say.

Atget is a master of this in his later years. Perhaps it is best done over decades rather than mere years. I think this idea is useful in studying photographers like Winogrand and Evans who’s work’s significance or coherence often come from a consistent feeling. Often, this kind of symbol reconfiguration manifests as a feeling for the work, or the photographer. And the best photographer will engender the strongest, most consistent feeling amongst his viewers. It means that he has grasped, perhaps intuitively, his personal symbolic vocabulary, and has learnt the appropriate syntax.

Why do I feel like I’m writing bullshit? I will state the what I’m trying to say as simply as I can say it: there are symbols in the world, a fence can be a restraint to freedom, or a protective cacoon for instance. A photographer can create greater depth in his work by being aware of these symbols, which are often quirks of his own personality, in individual pictures but more importantly in the way he selects and orders pictures, and for the work as a whole. Now this isn’t new stuff, photographer and image makers have been doing this for centuries, but the number of images presented in photography and presented as a whole thing gives photography the unique potential to say something with symbols consistent throughout a set of images rather than singles. Done, good. I’m really sure this is not a new idea in art history. New to me though, and useful for the Twilight edit.


Posted 2 years ago

WIlliam Klein [part 1]

  • “You read [negatives] left to right like a text. It’s the diary of the photographer. You see what he sees through the viewfinder, his hesitations, his hits, his misses.”
  • “250, that’s a large body of work. The life of a photographer, even of a great photographer, is 2 seconds.”
  • “An accident makes the picture. A few steps away, almost a picture.”
  • “But there’s a limit. Both for me, and for them. The surprise the joke wears thin. ‘Hey, what’s this for anyhow? Enough already, this guys is out of his mind.’ ”
  • “Tokyo, 1961. A troup of modern dancers that I bring into the traffic of Ginza. They come towards me, twisting convulsively. My Leica becomes a movie camera. Shot after shot as fast as I can. … I walk backwards, they advance, spastic, and impenetrable, like Japanese should be. … We provoke each other.”
  • “Then he starts to ham it up. Too much. Not as good.”
  • “He makes his report, I make mine.”
  • “On the right, someone watches me, suspicious. I walk away. A few steps and we’re in Chekov. … Not a photograph, more a reflex at detail. A second later, she’s still there, but everything has changed, everything has come together. The light, the staircase, the actors, the pretty girl looking at the camera, this is a photograph.”
  • “And as usual someone watching me. And then another picture, the man’s gone, it’s over.”
  • “Only one photo and that’s it. Not so bad though. One’s enough.”

Posted 2 years ago

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The Frightening World of Editing

I avoid editing like the plague. Well, that’s not true. I’ve never been near the plague and I’m not certain how I’d react, but editing is a task that I put off, forget, avoid, and fear. Why?

  • It’s depressing how many bad photos you take compared to how many good ones, and hilarious compared to the great ones. I’m still not sure I’ve taken a great photo yet.
  • My aesthetic taste is developing. It takes time to think, make decisions, and in the end I’m not always sure that I’ve made the right one.
  • I’m often not certain about what it is that I’m looking for. Essentially I’m not sure what I’m trying to say and without such a standard, without such criteria, it is difficult to decide between one photo or another.
  • I’m shooting a lot, which means there is large overhead in sitting down to edit.
  • I haven’t really looked into what Lightroom can do and all the little tricks and efficiencies. I’m getting better all the time though (see some of the breakthroughs from yesterday’s shooting notes).
  • Editing involves judgement, and although it’s my judgement, it makes me think of being judged by others, and then of the difficulties in the industry, blah, blah, blah. Not good feelings.

How the situation will get better.

  • Accept that most photos will be bad. I’m learning, and most experienced shooters go through the same pain. Think about all of the things that I’m doing to get better and get more useable photos.
  • Keep on looking at the work of others and asking editing questions of whether I would’ve chosen a particular image, or mad a set a certain way. Think a write about the process of editing more.
  • This is the fun of taking photographs: exploring the world again. Editing is a process of rediscovery, looking again at what you’ve seen before. Take pleasure in the seeing itself rather than concentrating on success and what others will think of them, or whether they will be saleable.
  • Some of the pain of editing will be unavoidable. It is an attempt to think hard about what you want to say and how you want to say it and whether that’s original and meaningful or not. Of course it’s going to be a little difficult in some places.
  • Learn more of Lightroom and think about what features can help to make the process of reviewing a lot of images easier. But really, this isn’t the big problem.
  • Stop thinking about other people. Focus on the job at hand: getting better. Doubts, like counter revolutions are poisonous and must be crushed with more work.


Posted 2 years ago

© Adnan Chowdhury 2011