SPF
Newbie
Many have suggested that you check out other photographers. I'd second that.
I'd also suggest that you think hard about what it is that you want from your photography.
I can't help but notice that you live in Toronto where the streets are probably still pretty chilly right now.
But Toronto is also one of the planet's most diverse cities. Refugees and immigrants from around the world make it their home. I can only imagine the photo essays waiting in those communities or in your own.
W. Eugene Smith died before he saw his Philadelphia project fully realized. You should check out his work in a little book called "Dream Street." It's his paean to his hometown, its industry and its people. Has anyone made a document of Toronto's life and people?
He approached the project as a journalist or as a documentary photographer. With the exception of someone like Winogrand, who truly did burn film in search of an interesting image, most good photographers or storytellers, of any stripe, develop a through line to their images.
I'm fairly certain that Robert Frank set out across the US with the idea of "sucking a sad poem onto film" as Jack Kerouac put it in the intro to "The Americans." He shot on the street but some of the most compelling images in that book come from funerals, barbershops, men's rooms, restaurants and bars.
Contrast his images (which I am an ardent admirer of) with those of photographers who get inside their subject's lives. Frank was an outsider and kept his distance. It worked for him and HCB and Winogrand (who is enormously over rated in my book save his "departures" series from shortly before he died.)
See Mary Ellen Mark or Larry Towell, who followed a group of Mennonite farmers (from Canada!) for years for "street style" aesthetics and shooting style but an entirely different method of connecting with subjects.
Good luck.
I'd also suggest that you think hard about what it is that you want from your photography.
I can't help but notice that you live in Toronto where the streets are probably still pretty chilly right now.
But Toronto is also one of the planet's most diverse cities. Refugees and immigrants from around the world make it their home. I can only imagine the photo essays waiting in those communities or in your own.
W. Eugene Smith died before he saw his Philadelphia project fully realized. You should check out his work in a little book called "Dream Street." It's his paean to his hometown, its industry and its people. Has anyone made a document of Toronto's life and people?
He approached the project as a journalist or as a documentary photographer. With the exception of someone like Winogrand, who truly did burn film in search of an interesting image, most good photographers or storytellers, of any stripe, develop a through line to their images.
I'm fairly certain that Robert Frank set out across the US with the idea of "sucking a sad poem onto film" as Jack Kerouac put it in the intro to "The Americans." He shot on the street but some of the most compelling images in that book come from funerals, barbershops, men's rooms, restaurants and bars.
Contrast his images (which I am an ardent admirer of) with those of photographers who get inside their subject's lives. Frank was an outsider and kept his distance. It worked for him and HCB and Winogrand (who is enormously over rated in my book save his "departures" series from shortly before he died.)
See Mary Ellen Mark or Larry Towell, who followed a group of Mennonite farmers (from Canada!) for years for "street style" aesthetics and shooting style but an entirely different method of connecting with subjects.
Good luck.