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Photographers I like - Part 4 - Brian Auer

September 10th, 2008

brian auer selfportraitYeah i know I am late on showing the next interview. I was just a little busy the past days. But here it is now. Today I want you to check out Brian Auer. A guy from San Diego who started photographing when his son was born. I dont want to make a big introduction because I think his interview will tell you everything else.
Enjoy!

* Quickie/Who are you? (give a quick runtrought about yourself)
My name is Brian Auer, and I’m a 26 year old photographer from San Diego, California. My focus is fine art photography, and I operate a photography blog (http://blog.epicedits.com/) and a fine art photoblog (http://www.fineartphotoblog.com/) in addition to participating in a
photography podcast (>http://www.photonetcast.com/).

* How did it all start for you?
I caught the photography bug when my son was born in 2003. It started as a way to capture his childhood, but it quickly grew into a hobby and an obsession. As time went on, my enthusiasm for photography and art has grown considerably.

* What do you want to tell with your photography?
I have a deep appreciation for photography as an art form, and it’s such a subjective topic. I like to try new things and get creative with my work in hopes of finding my “artistic self”. I can only hope that my onlookers see this in my photography and venture out to do the same. Photography is about fun, exploration, and creativity — and that’s what I hope to tell with my photography.

* What are your tools?
Until very recently I’ve been shooting with digital cameras. My current dSLR is the Sony a700, after upgrading from the Konica Minolta Maxxum 7D. My favorite lenses are the Sony 50mm f/1.4 and the Sigma 105mm f/2.8 macro. I have a flash, but I’m very much a natural light photographer.
In the last several months, I’ve been exploring film photography and I’ve managed to acquire a whole collection of cameras: Minolta SRT-Super SLR, Minolta Autocord TLR, Minolta AL Rangefinder, Minolta Autopak 470, Minolta 110 Zoom SLR, Minolta Instant Pro Polaroid, and a LSI Diana+.
By the way, I’m a Minolta fan.

* What is your inspiration?
A lot of things inspire me… my kids, other photographers, the world around me, people, cultures, sports, environment, the Internet, new toys, life, etc. Everywhere you look, there are things to inspire us — you just have to open your eyes and your mind.

* What are your preferred Themes?
I’ve tried a lot of different themes and genres over the last few years. At the moment, I’m still pursuing street photography. Most of my favorite photos from “the masters of photography” are street photographs, and I find the experience of it to be quite intriguing. It’s always a challenge and
always different.

* Where do you want to be in 2 years?
I’d like to keep building my presence as a fine art photographer. In two years, I’m hoping to have a few exhibits and art shows under my belt. It’s such a long and difficult process to break into the art world, that two years is actually very little time.

* Current Projects you are working on?
In the short term, I’m working on my own $50 Film Camera Project (http://blog.epicedits.com/2008/08/11/photo-project-the-50-dollar-film-camera/). I picked up a Diana+ camera for this and I ran a few rolls of film through it. I think I’m in love. On the long term (over the next 18 months), I’ll be working on documenting Southern California Beach Town Culture. This certainly gives me a good excuse to go to the beach every chance I get!

* analog or digital
Both please. I love digital, but analog is quickly stealing my heart. Having never shot film before, I don’t have any negative feelings toward the medium. When I go out on photowalks, I usually try to bring my dSLR and a couple of film cameras.

* post-processing or unprocessed
Digital - process like crazy. In my opinion, Photoshop is just another tool in the bag, no different than a lens or a flash. Film - minimal or no processing. Film produces such great results all by itself, so there’s usually not much of a need to process anything.

* Who or What would you like to Photograph in future?
Nobody and no place in particular. I love photographing everybody I encounter on the street scene, and I love going to new places. I guess my dream would be to travel around the world to new locations and photograph the cultures that exist there.

* Which Photographers do you like or adore?
So many that I can’t even begin to mention them all. I draw most of my inspiration from my Flickr contacts, readers of my blog, and anybody else I encounter. Of course, when it comes to the masters, a few of my favorites are Elliott Erwitt, Jerry Uelsmann, and George Lange.

* When did you sale your first photo?
I don’t even remember… I tried my hand at the microstocks several years ago and I made a few pennies. That didn’t work out for me. Any major sales from stock and print have been in the last year or two.

* What is your favorite Place or Landscape to travel for taking photos?
Two places: California beach towns, and New York City. They’re such different experiences, but they’re both amazing places to photograph.

* Anything I forgot to mention?
Nope, not off the top of my head.

brian auer - another day at the beachbrian auer - warp speedbrian auer - darkness creeps in

brian auer - down here at the boardwalkbrian auer - its lonely out herebrian auer - mexican bus stop

brian auer - simply religiousbrian auer - black and whitebrian auer - abused and ignored

Epic Edit Weblog
Brian Auer’s Flickr Photostream
Photonetcast

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Photographers I like - Part 3 - Thomas Hawk

August 25th, 2008

thomas hawk selfportraitToday It’s going to be a longer interview cause the interviewee gave me some more input to think about and to see and understand the world with his eyes.
He is a photographer from ther other side of the world and an evangelist for zoomr.
He observes the world day in and out to get something he can shoot with his canon and doesnt event think of going back to analog photography.
Let me introduce to you Mr. Thomas Hawk. Let’s go …

* Quickie/Who are you? (give a quick runtrought about yourself)
I am a San Francisco Bay Area blogger and photographer. I shoot and publish photos online every single day. I’m married and a father of four beautiful children. I’m currently working on a goal to publish one million photographs before I die. I have a day job in the investment business to pay the mortgage, but my passion is photography which I practice extensively and have integrated into virtually all areas of my life. I’m also the CEO and Chief Evangelist for the photo sharing start up Zooomr.

* How did it all start for you?
I started shooting at a very young age. Maybe 7 or 8. Back then I used a cheap film Kodak Instamatic camera. The photos I took then were not serious and were more snapshots. When I was 15 my parents bought me my first SLR, a Sigma, in conjunction with a trip where I rode my bicycle across America. After this trip I also took my first and only photography class, a summer course at Glendale Community College. Here I was introduced for the first time to the darkroom and it was really at that time that I started taking a strong interest in photography. I later edited my high school yearbook, college yearbook and was editor-in-chief of my college newspaper. All of these positions gave me regular access to a darkroom where I continued working with film and producing my own photography. I bought my first digital camera, a Sony Mavica that you actually put floppy disks into in 2000. I’ve been working with digital photography ever since.

* What do you want to tell with your photography?
My photos are meant to corroborate a life passion that I have for integrating photography into life on a daily basis. To this end the camera becomes an extension of my person — like a camera built into your eye. When I’m not looking through the viewfinder I’m constantly framing through my eyes everywhere I go. Beauty is all around us and I want to show people that even everyday mundane things can be reconfigured creatively to represent something interesting or beautiful. I’m also very interested in art and anything and everything that has to do with the creative process. I also see myself as a documentarian and hope that with age my photos will represent well the various times in which I’ve lived. I work on various projects more specifically designed to tell stories, like my $2 portraits project where I pay anyone who asks me for $2 in exchange for their portraits. But mostly my photography is not about stories per se. it’s more a rush of a river of images that loosely document my life and what is going on around me on any given day at any given time.

* What are your tools?
At present I have 4 cameras. Three of them I rarely use (a Nikon Coolpix point and shoot, a Canon EOS 10D, and an iPhone). My main everyday tool is the Canon 5D. I also carry with me daily 5 prime lenses (all Canon): a 135mm f/2 (my favorite), an EF100 f/2.8 macro, a 24mm f/1.4, a 14mm f/2.8 and a 50mm f/1.2. I have a 70-200 f/4 zoom that I rarely use as well as a 1.4 extender. I’ve got 2 tripods, a Slik and a Manfrotto. I also have a Canon speedlite flash.
I process my photos on a MacBook Pro using Adobe Lightroom 2.0 and Photoshop CS3. I geotag my photos with Geotagger on the Mac. I store my photo archives on Drobos.

* What is your inspiration?
My inspiration comes from all over the place. Much of my inspiration comes simply from observing the world around me and seeing ways that I can frame photographs. Much of my inspiration though also comes from other photographers. I look at photos on Flickr and Zooomr every single day and seeing what others are doing there can be tremendously inspiring. I’m also very much inspired by many of the fine art photographers working today and from the past.

* What are your preferred Themes?
Right now I’m spending a lot of time looking at art. Paintings, sculptures, both street art and art in museums — discovering what art is and why certain art is valued and created. I’m also working on ways to show the present state of American Culture. I have a set called “So This is America” where I’m documenting much of the advertising that is presented to us in barrage like fashion almost daily. I’m working on portraits. I’m working on sets of images of neon and cemeteries and graffiti and mannequins. Actually I’ve got over 500 sets now on Flickr. My themes are less concentrated and I have several different themes and subject matter running through my photography at any given time.

* Where do you want to be in 2 years?
Right now I’m in the earliest stages of what I want to accomplish. The next 10 years will largely be dedicated to continuing to capture imagery. I have longer term plans for shows, books and presenting my work in various large scale installations 10, 20 years down the road. I’d imagine in 2 years my photography would look very similar to what it looks like today, just that I’ll have a lot more images shot, presented, arranged, published and collected.

* Current Projects you are working on?
Everyday I shoot is part of a bigger life project of amassing the collection of imagery that I’m amassing, so that above all is the overriding and single most important project. The one million published photos before I die project is the most important and most relevant. I’m very early in that project and have a terribly long way to go. That said, there are smaller individual projects I’m working on in conjunction with this. I’ve got 7 sub-projects I’m working on at present.

Neon Days and Neon Nights, a project where I’m shooting neon. I started seriously shooting neon after learning how much of it had been destroyed in the Vancouver area and realizing how quickly so much of the neon around us is disappearing. Neon disappears for many reasons — businesses supporting the neon frequently fail, it’s composition as glass is fragile and subject to vandalism and accidental death. I want to collect as much neon as possible. At present I probably have a few thousand photographs of neon.

Abstraction is a project where I’m learning to let the camera take a more figurative view of the world based less in realism and more in reconstruction. Lately I’ve been working with a lot of ways to use alternative focusing techniques and blur with this project.

$2 Portraits is a portrait project that I’m working on where I offer $2 to anyone who asks me for money in exchange for their portrait. The primary purpose of this project is to increase the human interaction between me and other human beings. I try to spend a few minutes talking to those who ask me for money and try to learn a little bit about their situation.

So This is America is a project I’m working on documenting marketing, advertising and in some cases contemporary art in America.

Beautiful Plastic People is a project I’m working on documenting mannequins and especially how they are built and arranged as it speaks to the sexualization of marketing and commerce.

The World Belongs to the Living is a project I’m working on documenting cemeteries. I think about death a lot and feel that a healthy focus on death can better help us recognize the importance of living.

And finally I’m working on a project documenting graffiti, stencil, murals, posters, stickers and other various street art.

* analog or digital
Definitely digital. I can’t imagine ever going back. I simply don’t have the time to work with analog given the scope and quantity of what I am trying to produce.

* post-processing or unprocessed
I’m an image whore and believe that almost any image can be improved with post processing. So much of the creative process takes place in the digital darkroom, just like so much of the creative process of the greats took place in the darkrooms of the past.

* Who or What would you like to Photograph in future?
There are so many cities that I’ve yet to photograph that I’d like to photograph. When my kids are out of the house and off to college (hopefully) I am going to walk across America with my camera. I’m going to shoot every day and especially spend time focusing on portraits of Americans, the people of America. This is the most important thing I’d like to shoot in the future. Other than this I want to continue shooting much of what I’ve already been shooting just in as many different places as possible.

* Which Photographers do you like or adore?
Oh there are so, so, so many photographers that I adore that I hesitate to even begin to answer that knowing that for every one name I give that there are a hundred that I’m leaving out.

That said many of my favorites are a mixture of current Flickr/Zooomr type photographers as well as many more professional fine art photographers.

Probably the photographer that inspires me more than any other is Lee Friedlander. Mostly due to the quantity and consistency in the quality of his output.

Other photographers that I like would include Aqui-Ali, Bernie DeChant, Merkley, Andy Warhol, Troy Paiva, Richard Prince, William Eggleston, Sweet Distin, torbakhopper, Extra Super Cutie, Glen Friedman, Stephen Shore, Mary Ellen Mark, Ar’alani, Kelly Castro, Drumond Buckley, Andreas Gursky, Walker Evans, W. Eugene Smith, Gary Winograd, Angelo Rizzuto, Gregory Crewdson, Edward Curtis, Bruce Gliden, Richard Misrach, Jeremy Brooks, Ron Dioro, Mike Garlington, pfeyh, Andrew Moore, Diane Arbus, Cole Rise, Brian Auer, immaculatious, Raoul Pop, Smoothdude, Snailbooty, I could literally go on and on for hours. I’m also especially fond of many of the photo realist painters, Richard Estes, Robert Bechtle, Chuck Close, Ralph Goings, Don Eddy, folks like that. Although not a photographer per se, Banksy is also a huge inspiration.

* When did you sale your first photo?
The first photo I ever sold was a photo of the Grand Lake Theater in Oakland for a television commercial for Choice Hotels. I think I sold it in 2005.

* What is your favorite Place or Landscape to travel for taking photos?
Probably New York City.

* Anything I forgot to mention?
My own personal mantra is that the best photographs in the world have yet to be taken. This mantra is not to dismiss the great work of so many great photographers from the past and present, but it’s meant to inspire hope that the road and future of photography is long and the tools are getting better and better. New artists will continue to emerge and finding these new artists remains exciting and inspiring.

Unfortunately as photography exists in the fine art world, today many of the best will never be recognized by a fine art community which exists in many ways as a walled garden fiercely protected by a very small handful of elites. Part of why I admire the success of people like Banksy is that they operate outside of the prison of convention as it is for todays world of contemporary art. A DIY mentality that exposes much of the fine art community for the fraud that it is and perpetuates, while achieving success on art’s own terms outside of the economics of the fine art world and its incestual landscape.

thomas hawk - into the unknownthomas hawk - this could be your lucky day in hellthomas hawk - as sure as zou have eyes

thomas hawk - angels are messengers from godthomas hawk - waterthomas hawk - all tomorrows parties

thomas hawk - So Happy Just to See You Smilethomas hawk - ronnies tunethomas hawk - December in Central Park

Tom, stay as you are and the world will thank you for you and all your efforts!
More information about Thomas and his work can be found under the following links:

Thomas Hawk Digital Connection
Thomas Hawk on Flickr

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