Treasure those photos that you don't quite understand. I have a number of color landscapes that I shot over 40 years ago that were stylistically so unlike anything I was doing at the time that I almost didn't keep them. They just didn't seem to fit in anywhere. Nevertheless, there seemed to be something there...
Now, they are exactly in the style that I have evolved into over the past decades, to the point where it feels as though my future self went back in time to shoot them. I think your subconscious can be giving you a message, telling you where to go next with your work, if only you'll pay attention! I'm very glad I didn't discard those images, and now consider them some of my best. What I considered to be my best work, 40 years ago? Not so much!
It's nice to be able to surprise yourself once in a while 🙂 I think one of the ways one can grow as an artist, in any field really, is by producing work that is outside of ones tried and tested boundaries. Consciously we can only make images as good as we are able to vision them. Tapping into the subconscious is hard though 🙂Treasure those photos that you don't quite understand. I have a number of color landscapes that I shot over 40 years ago that were stylistically so unlike anything I was doing at the time that I almost didn't keep them. They just didn't seem to fit in anywhere. Nevertheless, there seemed to be something there...
Now, they are exactly in the style that I have evolved into over the past decades, to the point where it feels as though my future self went back in time to shoot them. I think your subconscious can be giving you a message, telling you where to go next with your work, if only you'll pay attention! I'm very glad I didn't discard those images, and now consider them some of my best. What I considered to be my best work, 40 years ago? Not so much!
Style comes from a combination of process and mind I think. In the beginning we tend to learn the process, or craft from other photographers. Rule of thirds, golden light etc. Then we chose either to continue and excel in the craft, or to step away from the formulaic approaches and try something else. One benefit of being an amateur is that one can step as far away as one pleases, since selling the work is not a priority. Free to experiment, free to let the mind roam.As for "style" I decided long ago to let that take care of itself. As a (now happily retired) architect I tend to think in grids, and I've always leaned to static images such as buildings, landscaped open areas and more "manicured" visuals. Correctly vertical verticals are my most petty obsession. Here again my brain thinks in lines (not linear, something I will never, ever be accused of by anyone who knows me!) and sees things with its own internal vision and viewpoints. Much later down the track I return to those images and I see many new things in them. That's how it is.
So for me so-called "style" takes care of itself. A few art-focused photographers I know tend to disagree with me, they believe in "style" and "technique" (almost aways copied from books and magazines and the internet, but I'm too diplomatic - or I can'tt be bothered - to say this directly to them - but the publishing clients who now and then buy my images like them. And that's good enough for me.
100 % agree...
A really good photo has to have something mysterious about it.
Love this one.