Joke and me went to the second hand bookstore. New books are expensive here, and we are not rich. Second hand books are fun. And what did I find? Dream Street, about the Pittsburg project, the masterpiece of W Eugene Smith, the great photographer who pioneered the photo essay. What a treasure!
Check this:
http://www.ralphmag.org/DY/smith-photographer.html
http://masters-of-photography.com/S/smith/smith_articles3.html
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Saturday, 30 November 2013
Friday, 29 November 2013
Monday, 25 November 2013
We're in the field now. which is great. It is wonderful to document the things that matter. In this case: HIV testing and counseling.
We did this in Nkhotakota earlier today, now we are in Dwangwa, where tomorrow we will photograph the field work with plantation workers and fishermen, and clinical work in several places. I will keep you updated.
We did this in Nkhotakota earlier today, now we are in Dwangwa, where tomorrow we will photograph the field work with plantation workers and fishermen, and clinical work in several places. I will keep you updated.
Friday, 22 November 2013
I did get the brief for the photos I am going to make next week. Very nice! It is via Africa Interactive. I'll be photographing PACT projects. It is about capacity building, and HIV/Aids projects. I love field work, and I am looking forward to this assignment. I will keep all of you updated!
I have worked with Africa Interactive before; then it was photos of a technical college.
On another note: I am getting active on Flickr again. Check out my photos there:
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/arjenvdm/
I have worked with Africa Interactive before; then it was photos of a technical college.
On another note: I am getting active on Flickr again. Check out my photos there:
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/arjenvdm/
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
Yesterday I taught again at the Polytechnic. As always it is fun and the class is interested as well as interesting. A slight drawback was that we still have no electricity at Chichiri Campus. That means I cannot project any photos. Now how do you teach depth of field and selective focus without showing photos? I decided to throw in the time and let the students handle the cameras themselves. The cameras students have themselves are usually point and shoot, so they can not do much in this area. But we do have two Sony A300 cameras. (Thank you Sony, for the donation!). Some students did it just like that without any experience, others needed a bit more time. But we got it done. See the student photo above, showing selective focus with me out of focus.
Tomorrow there's another lesson. I just hope for electricity.
Tomorrow there's another lesson. I just hope for electricity.
Monday, 18 November 2013
Game Haven is a good place for this, and as always Greg, the manager, was very helpful.
Today Joke (my wife, pronounce Yo-kah) will be coming back from a week research in Kenya. It will be good to see her.
Saturday, 16 November 2013
I am doing a nature and wildlife photography weekend at Game Haven in Bvumbwe. I have
only three participants, they are very nice. All women. As they are interested
in people photography also we put some of that in. They got some interesting
images this morning. Tomorrow morning we have another early morning game drive.
Wednesday, 13 November 2013
I'm back now from a trip to Lilongwe and Machinga, with Frank from FD. We made photos and interviews for JTIs Inside Magazine. Interesting work. We left Blantyre at 5 am because Frank had some work to finish the night before. He had worked deep into the night, so I drove most of the way while he rested. In Lilongwe we did portraits and photos of the factory. They keep it as clean as possible, but the tobacco dust got to my head anyway. I was tired pretty soon, and I kept thinking it was the tobacco dust. But when I was home, this morning I tried the exercise bike, and found they I am terribly out of shape. So that played a big part. Im going to exercise, to keep my photos up to standard. I have to be able to walk around all day with my equipment on my back, and kneel and climb and what have you. I want to be a photographer, I better keep myself in shape. Maybe my age is also catching up with me!
Anyway, I love portraits, and I love industrial photography, I kept Rodchenko in mind.
Then yesterday we visited JTI Liwonde. We started with a tree nursery, which is quite photogenic. Then we saw a live barn (barn made of live trees!) under construction: it will take three years for the trees to grow big enough. And a farmer who managed to invest in a shop in Machinga.
Today I will teach again at the Poly, and photograph a meeting, here in town.
Anyway, I love portraits, and I love industrial photography, I kept Rodchenko in mind.
Then yesterday we visited JTI Liwonde. We started with a tree nursery, which is quite photogenic. Then we saw a live barn (barn made of live trees!) under construction: it will take three years for the trees to grow big enough. And a farmer who managed to invest in a shop in Machinga.
Today I will teach again at the Poly, and photograph a meeting, here in town.
Sunday, 10 November 2013
Yesterday I first met the mature entry students at Polytechnic. I was a bit intimidated, because there were Thom Kanje, business editor of the Daily Times, and Gregory Gondwe, also a very experienced jounalist of the Daily Times. I wondered if I had to teach them, or they should be teaching me. In photography of course I do have the skills. And they were motivated. Thom mentioned he would like to make photographs like Thoko Chikondi, my former student and assistant. She is getting famous, in the journalism community for sure, and maybe even with the general public.
Because the group is small, eight students, and very experienced, it all went fast and smoothly. We covered more ground than in the regular class, and still we were finished with all the subjects before time. And we found time for practicals, the cameras Sony donated are very valuable. Some students did make good photos.
The theory of exposure takes a bit of time to get used to, but I'm sure these students will pick up on it soon.
Next week I will prepare a bit more work for them.
Because the group is small, eight students, and very experienced, it all went fast and smoothly. We covered more ground than in the regular class, and still we were finished with all the subjects before time. And we found time for practicals, the cameras Sony donated are very valuable. Some students did make good photos.
The theory of exposure takes a bit of time to get used to, but I'm sure these students will pick up on it soon.
Next week I will prepare a bit more work for them.
Saturday, 9 November 2013
Yesterday I photographed a pre-miss Blantyre event at Mkango lodge. Nice place, nice people, and some new models I had never photographed before. The blue photo is Priscilla and the quirky one is Yalenga.
This afternoon I have another class at the Polytechnic. This will be the mature entry students. It is interesting, I have not taught that group before, so it will be a new experience.
Thursday, 7 November 2013
Today was my second time teaching at the Poly. It was a bit technical so I stretched the students minds. Exposure; basic and necessary for a serious photographer, which I am going to make out of them.
Next week we will be going into practicals. We are a bit short of cameras, and not all students have one themselves. Even with a camera phone they can do assignments. It is more about the content then about image quality.
Tomorrow I will not be making photos for a corporate calendar, that is delayed till next week. But I will be going out to Zomba to photograph an event: a corporation donates to charity, and they want my talent there for the photos. I did the same last week, and it was hot, hot, hot! Anyway, I chose to come to tropical Malawi, and I should not be complaining. I'll drink lots of water, and enjoy the job!
Next week we will be going into practicals. We are a bit short of cameras, and not all students have one themselves. Even with a camera phone they can do assignments. It is more about the content then about image quality.
Tomorrow I will not be making photos for a corporate calendar, that is delayed till next week. But I will be going out to Zomba to photograph an event: a corporation donates to charity, and they want my talent there for the photos. I did the same last week, and it was hot, hot, hot! Anyway, I chose to come to tropical Malawi, and I should not be complaining. I'll drink lots of water, and enjoy the job!
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Yesterday I started teaching at the Polytechnic. Finally. The semester was delayed a bit because of a strike of the support staff. That pushed the lessons back a few weeks.
Yesterday was interesting, a new class. Some were very interested, and some even had good ideas on what they were looking for from me. They had published photos, but felt they lacked the knowledge on how to work towards a great photo.
We were in a new classroom, the electrical sockets were not installed yet. That was o big deal, enough light. But tomorrow I want to start projecting photos to discuss. The sockets should be there!
Yesterday was interesting, a new class. Some were very interested, and some even had good ideas on what they were looking for from me. They had published photos, but felt they lacked the knowledge on how to work towards a great photo.
We were in a new classroom, the electrical sockets were not installed yet. That was o big deal, enough light. But tomorrow I want to start projecting photos to discuss. The sockets should be there!
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