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A photography series is a group of photographs sharing a
subject or a theme. The photographs should look unified as a group; they should
(usually) all be either color or black and white, printed at the same size and
format, shot with the same or similar cameras and mounted and framed the same
way. Following these guidelines, there are many ways to create a photography
series.
One ProcessOne way to make a photography series look unified is to use the same process to print all of the photos. There are limitless ways to print photographs from digital and film cameras besides the well-known inkjet and Fuji Crystal Archive prints done at home and in labs. A film camera gives you more options; use your negatives to make wet darkroom prints on different kinds of papers and tone them differently. Use 19th century photographic processes such as cyanotype or platinum/palladium. Digital files can also be used to create digital negatives for contact printing, if you use one of the older processes. These prints will look unified as a series even if the subject matter varies.
One Genre
make your images go together by sticking to one of the
classic genres of photography: portraits, still-life, nudes, landscapes, street
photography or architectural photography. Look through photographic monographs
at a library to view other possibilities. Ansel Adams was known for his
landscape series about Yosemite. Walker Evans did a series of unforgettable
portraits of sharecroppers in Alabama in the 1930s. Alfred Stieglitz
photographed his wife, Georgia O'Keefe, repeatedly over the years. It doesn't
take years to create a photographic series; memorable series have been created
in a few minutes, such as Robert Capa's series about the landing on Normandy
Beach in World War II.
One Place
One of the surest ways to make a series of photographs work
as a group is to photograph one place as exhaustively as you can. A "place" can be as small or
expansive as you wish. It could be your childhood home, a neighbor's farm or
one room in a house. Some of the best series of photos about a place include
the people living there. The photos show the relationship between the place and
the people, as in Shelby Lee Adams' series about Appalachia and its people.
One Theme
A more difficult assignment for a photographic series is to
take a group of photos revolving around a theme. The theme could be purely
visual, such as "light" or "shadows," narrative such as
"dreams" or a concept as nebulous as "freedom." The group
will go together better if you use one camera, format, printing process and if
you frame the photos the same way.
YOUR TASK: Research some of the photography series and
photographers mentioned above. Find a favorite series ON YOUR OWN.
-Create a POST about the photographer- about the series,
about the process, etc. .
-link or upload some of his/her images (be sure to caption
with a copyright!)
-explain briefly what it is that attracted you to their work
In your research, be thinking about what you might consider
doing for a photography series (say, about 9 images- hint!)Shagun Ray, Vintage Camera Series |
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