WHY THE CREATIVE PROCESS IN PHOTOGRAPHY TAKES TIME – THE CREATION OF EQUIVALENTS I – Pennzoil Pl., Houston, TX
The creative process in photography – How important this process is?
Equivalents I (Pennzoil Place, Houston TX – Arch. Phillip Johnson) is the start of a new black and white fine art series and maybe a new direction in my work, a direction not so minimalist as before, with more complex subjects and relations among them. As always, my creative process in photography is based on my interpretation of the world, my images are born from my experiences and what I do is to tell my stories through them. I tell my stories through black, white and shades of gray, through lines and shapes. Every tone in my images means something, every line, every accent, contrast or the lack of it.
HOMAGE TO ALFRED STIEGLITZ
This is why I call this series Equivalents and I mean it as an homage to Alfred Stieglitz, the one who used this word for the first time at the beginning of the 20th Century to create the first abstract photography series, when he shot more than 200 photographs of clouds, deprived of any other context, aiming with this series to capture only the feeling in his images and to find a channel of communication with the viewer beyond known shapes or subjects. The fact that I’m photographing clouds too when I shoot long exposures may be just coincidental, but maybe not. maybe clouds are indeed a good tool to communicate with the viewer through their symbolism. For me, they are one of the aspects of my creative process in photography.
Here is a short but very interesting video that talks about this series and why Stieglitz was photographing clouds.
UPDATE: In case the video below is not working try this Wayback Machine alternative link.
Stieglitz is one of the most important photographers, artists and thinkers of the 20th Century. He was not only a photographer but also a theoretician and one of the souls of NYC’s and the entire US photography life at the beginning of the century, his influences going way beyond the US and spreading out in the whole world.
Through the Photo-Secession Group he founded and the magazine they were issuing, called Camera Work, also through his gallery where he exhibited young fine art photographers (that’s where the work of Ansel Adams was exhibited for the first time), he fought to make photography accepted as a fine art medium and he managed to change the way people view photography, from a mean of documenting the world to a mean of interpreting the world.
One of the tools he used to do that was to photograph clouds as a way of showing that the subject is of little importance in fine art photography, that what is important and what creates art is the vision of the artist interpreting the subject.
MY GOAL IN PHOTOGRAPHY
This is what I strive for too, in my photography work and my writings, in my work with my workshop and mentoring students and also through this blog and other channels I have to communicate with people: to make photography accepted as more than photography in the traditional sense of the word, as (en)Visionography – the art of expressing our internal world through the images we create and the result of our personal creative process.
This is the aim of art and its sole purpose, to serve the artist as a tool for expressing his beliefs and feelings related to the world he perceives.
You can read much more about my philosophy, and also how I put it in practice, how I create the images I create, in my 424-page book From Basics to Fine Art – Black and White Photography, and in my video tutorial and eBook Long Exposure, Architecture, Fine Art Photography – Creating (en)Visionography .
Alternatively, you can come to one of my workshops where you hear everything about it in person and see a demo of my entire creative and processing workflow.
THE IMAGE – VISION AND MAKING OF EQUIVALENTS I
This image was shot in Huston and it shows one of the icons of the city and of modern architecture in general, Philip Johnson’s Pennzoil building. It was taken quite some time ago, but only now it was ready to be interpreted and processed.
WHY THE CREATIVE PROCESS IN PHOTOGRAPHY TAKES TIME
I sometimes need a long time to start working on a certain image, even if I may know from the beginning that I will work on it. This happens because creating fine art photography means expressing yourself and sometimes you need to wait for the right experiences and the right state of mind or to have a certain interpretation of the world, in order to create a certain image and make it represent the essence of both the subject and of the artist’s mind and soul.
Art is not a question of quantity, is not a question of speed, of producing work in an intense rhythm. It is a question of creating with authenticity and as a result of an internal need to express an idea or feeling.
This is why art will show exactly the personality of an artist if we know how to read it. Artists who are preoccupied by the detail by the accuracy in expressing an idea and in creating the material form of this idea, which is the image, in fine art photography, will need a longer time to craft their images in order to express their ideas. If you belong to this category, don’t be afraid if you don’t produce a lot, just be interested in the quality, honesty and authenticity of your work. This is what will make a real work of art, this is what will outlive you and will keep your ideas and soul alive forever.
This image was not an easy image to process, just like all images that have a lot of detail and where you need to create a hierarchy in the importance of the elements you show, so they culminate with the most important point in the image: your subject. I needed many hours of tweaking and changing the balance between contrasts and tones till I brought everything together and the images spoke to me with the voice I intended it to have: the voice of my VISION.
It is an image that also needs some time to be read, as it needed time to be created. You will see in some areas very subtle differences in tones and probably with the compression of the internet you will lose a lot of its subtlety. But I can tell you: it is there.
This is part of my visual language and one of my mantras, also one of the best pieces of advice I could give to a fine art black and white photographer: to create the most subtle difference in tones, many times imperceptible if you don’t look carefully at the large size of the image.
This is one of the images that really needs to be seen printed in large so to notice every detail. The same stands for my next image that I will publish soon: Equivalences II – shot in London.
You can see these subtle changes the image underwent during my processing in this video where I show the Before, After and in-between states of my image and how it evolved from the RAW state to the final image.
You can read this article I wrote if you want to consult a more in-depth tutorial about the creation of a fine art architectural photograph.
IMAGE MAKING OF – VIDEO
Vimeo version of the video is available too.
I think this is going to be a longer project for me, as I have many ideas to explore, not only architecture but other subjects too, maybe even people.
In parallel, I will continue to work on my tilt-shift blur long exposure series Fluid Time and I have some other ideas waiting in line to find the time to put them in practice.
TECHNICAL DATA
TECHNIQUE
Long Exposure image.
– Camera settings:
252.0 sec. , 10mm @ f/7.1, ISO 100
If you want to learn more about long exposure photography you can read my Long Exposure Photography Extensive Tutorial which is a complete guide to this fascinating technique
EQUIPMENT
CAMERA: Nikon D7000
LENS: Nikon 10.0-24.0mm f/3.5-4.5
ND FILTERS:
– 10+6 stops Formatt Hitech ProStop IRND Filters
Black and white processing – Photography Drawing (PhtD)
– LR5, PS CC, Topaz B&W Effects (Topaz Labs B&W Effects 2 Full Review) +Topaz DeNoise + Topaz Detail + DxO View Point
FURTHER STUDY RESOURCES
FINE ART BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOGRAPHY, ARCHITECTURAL PHOTOGRAPHY, LONG EXPOSURE PHOTOGRAPHY
Find more resources about fine art black and white photography, (en)Visionography, long exposure photography and architecture photography in Julia Anna Gospodarou’s extensive collection of photography tutorials. To receive free future tutorials, you can subscribe here.
Learn more about how to create fine art photography, architectural photography, long exposure, etc. from conception to advanced processing in Julia’s video courses Understanding Fine Art Architectural Photography – The Complete Course, From Vision to Final Image – Mastering Black and White Photography Processing, in the video tutorial Long Exposure, Architecture, Fine Art Photography – Creating (en)Visionography, and the book From Basics to Fine Art – Black and White Photography, or by attending one of her highly appreciated workshops.
Find Julia’s recommendation for the best software and gear to create fine art photography and curated deals and discounts for these tools.
To study with Julia Anna Gospodarou personally, find out about our
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Founder of (en)Visionography™ and creator of Photography Drawing™, internationally acclaimed fine art photographer, Master architect, educator, and best-selling author, with 25+ years experience in photography and architecture, Julia Anna Gospodarou is a leader in modern fine art photography who shaped with her work the way architecture fine art photography looks today.
Awarded more than 100 times in the most important photography competitions worldwide, two-time International Photography Awards IPA Photographer of the Year, World Photography Awards SWPA, and Hasselblad Masters Finalist, her work was widely exhibited and published internationally.
With a passion for the world’s civilizations and speaking six languages, Julia was always in the avant-garde of thinking as an architect and a photographer, constantly pushing the limits of what is possible, constantly reinventing herself as an artist and an individual. Her huge love for travel and discoveries and her passion for teaching, art, and photography led her to become in the past one and a half decades one of the world’s top-rated fine art photography educators and workshop organizers.