25 FAVORITE PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS

1. Wild Flowers, Joel Meyerowitz
2. American Monuments, Lee Friedlander
3. Public Relations, Garry Winogrand
4. The Americans, Robert Frank
5. Haunts, Chris Rauschenberg
6. Winogrand 1964, T. W. Stack
7. Diane Arbus monograph
8. Joel Sternfeld, American Prospects

9. Looking at Photographs, John Szarkowski
10. 108 Portraits, Gus Van Sant
11. The Snapshot, Jonathan Green (ed.)
12. Confidence Games, Thatcher Keats
13. Signs and Relics, Sylvia Plachy
14. Portraits, Bill Burke
15. Immediate Family, Sally Mann
16. In The American West, Richard Avedon
17. Eggleston's Guide, William Eggleston
18. Grim Street, Mark Cohen
19. Matt Mahurin (eponymous)
21. People Facing Their Birthday Cakes, Julio Grinblatt
22. At the Beach, Ernest Zarate
23. Found in Brooklyn, Thomas Roma
24. Evidence, Mike Mandel and Larry Sultan
25. Beach, Charles Traub

 


14 PHOTO BOOKS FOR PATRIOTS

1. The Americans, Robert Frank
2. American Monuments, Lee Friedlander
3. America in Passing, H. Cartier-Bresson
4. American Prospects, Joel Sternfeld
5. All American, Burk Uzzle
6. American Photographs, Walker Evans
7. Amerikabilder, Gerry Johansen
8. No in America, Mark Chester
9. Americans We, Eugene Richards
10. American Independents, Sally Eauclaire
11. American Beauty, David Graham
12. American Color, Constantine Manos
13. American Surfaces, Stephen Shore
14. In the American West, Richard Avedon

 


12 FAVORITE STREET PHOTOGRAPHERS

1. Garry Winogrand
2. Lee Friedlander
3. Tony Ray-Jones
4. Henri Cartier-Bresson
5. Helen Levitt
6. Leonard Freed
7. early Joel Meyerowitz
8. Alex Webb
9. Carl De Keyzer
10. Richard Kalvar
11. Michael Spano
12. Jeff Mermelstein

 


10 OVERRATED PHOTOGRAPHERS

1. Joel-Peter Witkin
2. William Christenberry
3. Herb Ritts
4. Nathan Lyons
5. Daido Moriyama
6. Matthew Brady
7. Man Ray
8. Walker Evans
9. Cindy Sherman
10. Richard Misrach

 


10 UNDERRATED PHOTOGRAPHERS

1. Henry Wessel
2. Bill Dane
3. George Kelly
4. Michael Bishop

5. Mark Cohen
6. George Barnard
7. Late career Friedlander
8. Joseph Lawton
9. Richard Kalvar
10. Paul Trevor

 


ENOUGH ALREADY!

1. Old cars and/or barns
2. Sunsets
3. Perfectionism
4. Tibet, Burning Man, or Katrina aftermath
5. Glorious NATURE in all its glorious glory
6. The decisive moment
7. Abstract expressionist color photos
8. Nudes without moles or fat rolls
9. Level horizons
10. Pretentious website lists

FRIENDS AND COLLEAGUES

In Public

Christophe Agou
Narelle Autio
Richard Bram
Bryn Campbell
Melanie Einzig
David Gibson
Nils Jorgensen
Jeffrey Ladd
Jesse Marlow
Trent Parke
Gus Powell
Matt Stuart
Nick Turpin
Amani Willett

Inner Light

Sean Ben-Safed
Chris Eagon
Joe Glasgow
Kelly Johnson
Scott Jones
Claudia Howell

Light Leak

Bobby Abrahamson
Chris Bennett
Lisa Gidley
Bruce Hall
Lyla Emery Reno
Faulkner Short
Bryan Wolf

Portland Grid Project

Mark Barnes
Lisa Gidley
Bruce Hall
Ann Kendellen
Alexis Pike
David Potter
Christopher Rauschenberg
Shawn Records
Bryan Wolf

Miscellaneous

Edis Jurcys
Kimba Kuzas
Dennis Purdy
Matt Schneider
Dale Strouse
Laura Valenti
TS Whalen

 


GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHY SITES

Blue Sky Gallery
JP Caponigro interviews
In-Public.com
Joy of Giving Something, Inc.
Magnum
Masters of Photography
Network Photographers
New Space
The Online Photographer
Photo.net
Portland Grid Project
Pushdot Studio
Dante Stella's Technical page
Street Photography article
2point8

 


BEST PLACES IN PORTLAND TO SPEND AN HOUR ON FOOT WITH A CAMERA AND NO PRECONCEPTIONS...

1. SE Industrial area
2. W Burnside near 10th
3. SE 82nd near Division
4. SE Hawthorne
5. NE Alberta near Albina
6. Chinatown
7. Downtown transit mall
8. Max to/from/including the airport
9. Waterfront Park north of Morrison
10. SmartPark stairwells

 


...AND IN EUGENE

1. Oregon Country Fair
2. 13th Avenue
3. Whiteaker
4. Saturday Market
5. Willamette near Post Office
6. Four Corners
7. Library
8. Alton Baker Park
9. Downtown Springfield
10. Skinner Butte Park


THINGS I'VE HEARD (OR OCCASIONALLY READ) PHOTOGRAPHERS SAY

"Any photo taken today, even the least interesting ones, will be interesting in 50 or 100 years." --Chris Rauschenberg, 8/9/01

"When I photograph, I am not necessarily attracted to specific subject matter. Instead, I'm interested in how a subject presents itself." -- Nathan Lyons, 10/2/01

"I used a rangefinder because I didn't want to worry about the edge thing. I just wanted to make photos of certain subjects and let the edges take care of themselves." -- Douglas Frank, 11/8/01

"Shoot what you see, not what you think." --Manuel Alvarez Bravo quoted in NY Times, 10/13/01

"When I look back at old contact sheets, I look for shots that look like someone else took them. I look for ones that show me a new direction." -- Stewart Harvey, 12/13/01

"I often look at books of photographs that don't appeal to me, to try to understand why I don't like them." --Stu Levy, 1/10/02

"For me, there's a sort of randomness which you cannot plan which is intrinsic to photographs which work." --Patrick Sutherland, 1/17/02

"There's a view that says that painting is synthetic and photography is analytical. To paint something, you start with a blank canvas and add to it. Everything comes from you. Photography is the opposite. You start with a world of complexity and you need to decide what to remove from it, or what not to show, in order to emphasize what you want people to see." --Michael Burns, 5/9/02

"I used to worry about things like the edges and if there were dust specs. Now I just look for little fragments that capture my eye and I forget about the rest of it." --Marsha Burns, 6/13/02

"Typically I make one photo when I first come on a scene. Then I explore different perspectives of the scene and make several more exposures from different vantage points. I almost always wind up choosing the first photo." --Michael Kenna, March 2003

"I use an 8 x 10 view camera. All other cameras are just toys." --Jock Sturges, April 2003

"Shooting flowers is just like making a portrait of a person. You have to be ready to catch the moment or the flower's expression will change and you will have lost it." --Ron Von Dongen, 5/15/03

"The introduction to one of Stephen Shore's books talks about the difference between Eastern and Western poetry. Poems in the West are about the sublime and the marvelous, whereas in the Orient poetry is about the commonplace. This Oriental way is how I view my own photography." --Stephen Hughes, 7/10/03

"I love the fact that a photograph can be both a factual description and a metaphor at the same time." --Shawn Records, 8/14/03

"My formation (as a photographer) was informal." --Julio Grinblatt, 10/1/03

"What if, say, Andre Kertesz had been born an hour later? His whole life would've been on a slightly different schedule and all those photos he made would've been slightly different somehow. Yet the totality of the work would've been just as impressive. Just different somehow..." -- Craig Hickman, 1/15/04

"I give names to my projects but I never name individual photos. I don't want to give them any associations that might effect the viewer's interpretation." -- Ken Rosenthal, 2/6/04

"Each day is a gift!" -- Jerry Uelsman, 3/11/04

"In my photographs there is a tension between abstraction and reality...I am not a documentary photographer. If I were out to change laws I would make a different type of picture." -- David Maisel, 6/6/04

"I think it's strange that more people are offended by my nudes, which are completely tame, than by my portraits of animal fetuses." -- Tamara Lischka, 9/9/04

"When I first began photographing, I had this idea that staging anything was bad and that things in the photo had to be just as I'd found them. Lately I find myself swinging toward the opposite. More and more I want to stage my scenes in order to have control over them." -- Ann Ploeger, 10/14/04

"The Bechers have been an influence on me and I think they've been misunderstood. People think their photographs are of Germany, but for me they are more about Germanness than Germany. Only two Germans would undertake such a project." -- Allen Maertz, 11/3/04

"A few days after Tony Ray-Jones died I went through my contact sheets to find photos I'd taken of him, to make a memorial to him. I only found one photo. It was because I'd been around him so much I'd taken him for granted and never photographed him. He was just always there, so I'd never considered him important enough to photograph. The lesson is, you should be photographing now the things that you really care about. That's the only thing you should be photographing, things you care about deeply." -- Bill Jay, 11/7/04

"I am interested in the human experience, what it means to be human. That is the only thing I've ever wanted to express as an artist." -- Adrain Chesser, 12/1/04

"I stopped doing documentary work when I found I was no longer connecting with my subject matter. My subject matter at the time was drunks with guns." -- Luis Delgado, 3/12/05

"For me, the central unit in art is not the actual art itself but the artist. Art is about the artist." -- Christoper Rauschenberg, 6/05

"One hundred percent of the shots you don't take don't go in." -- Paul Sutinen quoting Wayne Gretzky, 7/19/05

"I was following Cartier-Bresson's idea of the Decisive Moment, only since I was using a Widelux at a 15th it became the Decisive Mo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-ment." -- Abby Robinson, 11/2/05

"The reason I don't place people in my home interiors is that when I see a person in a photo I instantly begin making assumptions about that person, and I didn't want these assumptions coloring anyone's view of the rest of the photo." -- Susan Dobson, 12/2/5

"I'm a shy person. Before a photo shoot I get very nervous, sometimes almost physically ill. But I think this is sort of good. If you're bored or half asleep during a shoot, that's how the photos will look." -- Cherie Hiser, 12/7/5

"The man who really showed what could be done with a 35 mm is Henri Cartier-Bresson. I don't think anybody has added to that since. I don't think anybody has done anything with 35 mm that he didn't do." -- Paul Strand, quoted in "Snapshots" (Aperture, 1974)

"With the subway series, sometimes I would walk around the same block five times and think, 'There is absolutely nothing to photograph here.' But on the sixth time around the block, walking by the exact same subject matter, suddenly a wonderful photograph would jump out and present itself." -- Lisa Gidley, 2/16/06

"I think some mining executives when they see these pictures will wonder, 'How did this guy get into our mines to take these?'" -- Louie Palu, 3/3/6

"After looking around a while, I finally found a house that would be perfect for what I had in mind. I knocked on the door and explained what I wanted to do. I needed to pour a perfect circle of fresh soil in the center of their yard, close their street, and park a giant cherry-picker in front of their house to support me and the 8 x 10 camera eighty feet above the scene. The woman thought about it a moment before replying, 'Do what you have to do.'" -- Gregory Crewdson, 4/25/6

Bruce Hall was standing next to me with his Leica last week when someone walked up to him and asked, "Hey I thought you.....uh....oh wait, sorry.... I thought you were another person." Without missing a beat, Bruce answered, "Maybe I am." -- 5/8/6

"Cartier-Bresson roamed the whole world years and years and came back with thousands of photos that don't give you the foggiest idea what he felt about any of it." -- Robert Frank, paraphrased by Bobby Abrahamson, July 2006

"I am only attracted photographically to certain parts of cities. There is a word in Japanese which describes them well, and I think in English the translation is something like Nasty. I like nasty parts of cities." -- Daido Moriyama, 11/18/06

"I can't take photographs on a bicycle. It moves too fast. Most of what I photograph is such insignificant crap that I easily miss it unless I am on foot." --Christopher Rauschenberg, 12/4/06

"There are two prominent myths about photography: The myth that it tells the truth and the myth that it doesn't," -- Jeff Wall, quoted at http://landscapist.squarespace.com 2/20/7

"I am drawn to photographing real things rather than setup situations. I am more interested in what is than what isn't." -- Elliott Erwitt, 3/17/7

"I'm drawn to desolate spaces. That beautiful forest over there would be great if someone clearcut it, paved it, and left it unmaintained for 20 years. Then it would interest me photographically." -- Frank Miller, 9/30/7

"When I press the shutter on my Leica it's like sending a prayer to the heavens. I don't know what the result will be. I'm sending a spaceship to the moon, to outer space, to see what's out there. Maybe there will be a reply and maybe not." -- Bobby Abrahamson, 12/13/7

"There is no such thing as chance in good photography" -- Roger Ballen, 5/7/8

 


TEN MUSIC ALBUMS I WILL NEVER GET TIRED OF

1. Heavy Vegetable -- Frisbie
2. Miles Davis -- Kind of Blue
3. Minutemen -- Double Nickels on the Dime
4. Talking Heads -- More Songs About Buildings and Food
5. Orchestra Baobob -- Pirate's Choice
6. Grievous Angel -- Tribute to Gram Parsons
7. Getz/Gilberto
8. REM - Chronic Town
9. Olu Dara -- From Natchez to New York
10. Digable Planets -- Blowout Comb