kxl
Social Documentary
More time. More money.
Not at the moment, unless you have M6 and 75 Lux 😉 Otherwise you will be loosin it.The fastest way to make money in photography is to sell your gear.
I can relate only to the need to make work.
Equipment is forever interesting [as machines] but has absolutely no interest to me as an unmet need -- since I cannot imagine how the need would be unmet, unless it has not been invented yet. Almost any modern camera will do.
Time, ideas, revelation, a platform to exhibit [galleries, publication?], maybe income, are unmet needs, always evolving.
I agree. I need to take photos and make new work even though I have never sold or exhibited my photos. Gear is not an issue for me. I'm happy with a P&S as long as I'm taking photos.
I need to take photos, otherwise I feel sort of lost and confused.
I'm with you there. I'm finding that carrying Polaroid SX-70 with a pack of film in it is a great way to snap a photo a day, really focuses you on getting it right in the frame, etc, and gives you a print right there, in your hand. Very satisfying when I get it right. 🙂
G
When I'm productive, I keep taking photos without looking at them and finally when I run out of steam I go back and start editing those photos.
For Hsg...
"before the rain" Yang Yongliang
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eq4yTo_tuc8&feature=share
"The Day of Perpetual Night" (show at the Venice Biennale 2015)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXEjy4dxeVY&feature=share
The second video reminded me of the opening scene in the movie Blade Runner.
The sound effects in the first video was very good.
Very interesting but also something very new. Thanks for the links.
There is amazing work coming out of China. While these are video, they have a feeling of being still images which change, rather than a film. They were shown very large in small rooms, so they were overwhelming.
If you really believe this, your view of photography is very different from most people who take photography as an art at all seriously.No matter how successful a gallery show might be - how such a work performs on computer/tablet/phone screens is its final test.
Gallery success is measured in terms of how much money is made, and computer screen success is measured on how many people have viewed and 'liked' a work.
Which one is true success? Its hard to say.
When I begun to take street photographs, I needed a RF-like digital camera. At that time there were only two such cameras, Epson RD1 and Leica M8.
Fast forward to today and the market is full of RF-style digital cameras at very good prices... My photography needs are met.
Do you have any photography need(s) that are still unmet?
If you really believe this, your view of photography is very different from most people who take photography as an art at all seriously.
Then again, you said that you also believe that no-one except family and friends will come to an exhibition unless it's touted on social media. I take it you've never been to Arles? Or indeed to anywhere there are galleries?
For that matter, you seem to believe that making money, or "likes" on social media, are the only measures of success in photography. What a miserable life you must lead if you believe that.
Cheers,
R.
Fair enough. "Constrained" is probably a better word.+1 except for the miserable life part