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Jan 17 2019

Master Profiles: Susan Meiselas

* “Master Profiles” is a series profiling all the great photographers of uncontrolled life. Unlike the rest of the blog, I’m doing these in a straight profile format to make it easy for quick access to facts, quotes and knowledge on all the masters. I’ll also group them together here every time I add a new one.

Profile:

Susan Meiselas (1948-Present)

American photographer known for her coverage of the insurrection in Nicaragua and documentation of human rights issues in Latin America, among other subjects.

[Read more…] about Master Profiles: Susan Meiselas

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Featured File, Files, Master Profiles, Master Shooters, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography

Jan 08 2019

A Photo A City in 2018 (on the Major City Project)

Time for the New Year’s tradition here and share some photos from the old year to bring in the new

While 2017 had been my busiest, non-stop year on the Major City project, I was able to somehow beat it in 2018 by covering 31 major cities (33 cities in all). Once again, I clocked in just under 5,000 miles (7,500 km) on foot, while hitting major cities in 22 countries, from the Americas to Africa and Asia. I started in city #67 Santiago, Chile and finished in #97 Yangon, Myanmar, closing in on the 100+ major cities project goal. In 2019, I will work on wrapping up the photography part of the project while starting on the editing of the first book, which I hope to be ready for publishing by the end of the year.

While I really didn’t have any breaks from the project in 2018, I did guest speak and judge at the StreetFoto Festival while covering San Francisco and fit in teaching a few workshops, including Las Vegas and Sydney (with Sam Ferris). In 2019, I plan on making more time for workshops and will announce the schedule here very soon. All in all, it was an extremely busy, challenging year and while this project and obsessive focus is really taking its toll on me, it was my most satisfying year for photography. I covered some of the more dangerous regions, like Central America and Africa, but didn’t change a thing about my approach of going everywhere alone on foot, including many places that even locals don’t go, let alone photographers or non-locals. But while some negative situations did occur, which I’ll share here later, overall it was my most rewarding year when it comes to challenges. As for the blog, I will be able to focus on it more this year and make some changes, making it less travel focused and more project, story and community focused (the guides won’t stop, though). 

Even more than last year, I’m holding back many of my favorite photos to prepare for the editing on future publications, as I want the future books to be at least a third never seen work. Still, with such a busy year of photography, walking an average of 15 miles/22km per day year-round, I have plenty to share now too. So, here’s a photo a city from the year to take you through all 33 cities I photographed in 2018. It’s not a favorite photo from each city, but some selections to share for now in bringing on 2019. And as always, all candid and unposed.

Happy New Year to all and Cheers to 2019!

– Forrest Walker

 

A Photo A City in 2018

(in order of capture date)  [Read more…] about A Photo A City in 2018 (on the Major City Project)

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: 100 Cities, Featured File, Major Cities, Photos, Street Photography, Travel Photography

Jan 08 2019

3-Day Street Photography Workshop in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

3-Day Street Photography Workshop

in Ho Chi Minh City

  • FEBRUARY 9TH-11TH : HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM
  • ADVANCED STREET PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP WITH FORREST WALKER

I’m excited to announce a 3-Day workshop I’ll be leading this February 9th-11th in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Read on for more details and how to sign up…

  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam ©Forrest Walker

This intensive three-day workshop will focus on finding yourself in your photography and seeing the photos you want to make through lessons covering a variety of work, reviews of your own work, editing, activities and plenty of shooting throughout the streets of Ho Chi Minh City. Led by international photographer Forrest Walker, this workshop will be an immersive and educational experience.

*ONE SPOT LEFT!*

Full 3-Day Workshop Fee – €500

Reserve Spot

ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR

FORREST WALKER

Forrest Walker (aka F.D. Walker) is an internationally acclaimed photographer from Portland, Oregon, USA. He is also the sole creator of this blog and member of The Street Collective. His work has been awarded and exhibited across multiple continents and expresses his interest in capturing the world candidly in vibrant colour, along with a passion for exploration and adventure. He has been an invited speaker and judge at multiple major street photography festivals, including MSPF 2017 and was recently interviewed for the immensely popular ‘The Candid Frame’ podcast.

Currently, Forrest is in the final stages of photographing a five year project taken in 100 major cities, where he strives to capture the diversity and connections found in daily life across all regions and cultures. His images distil the layers of life within major cities and reveal the commonalities of human experience. This project is documented on his popular blog ShooterFiles.com, where he provides street photography city guides, tips, photography, stories, local photographer interviews and more.

SEE MORE OF FORREST’S WORK ON INSTAGRAM & HIS WEBSITE

*ONE SPOT LEFT!*

Full 3-Day Workshop Fee – €500

Reserve Spot

Places are strictly limited, sign up early to avoid disappointment

WHERE: Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

WHEN: February 9-11, 2019 (3 Full Days)

Daily Schedule (Detailed itinerary will be emailed to participants):

  • Saturday February 9th: 10am-6pm 
  • Sunday February 10th: 9am-6pm
  • Monday February 11th: 9am-6pm

*We will break for lunch daily and all are invited to dinner and drinks afterwards for more interaction

Workshop Description:

Ho Chi Minh City, or Saigon as many locals still call it, is not only one of my favorite cities in the world, but also one that I’ve lived in and know well. That especially goes for street photography. For more info on this amazing city, you can look through the Street Photography Guide I created for Ho Chi Minh City.

The workshop will include a mixture of daily photo walks, photo and editing critiques, portfolio reviews and interactive lectures. This is an intensive workshop with an emphasis on helping you fully immerse yourself in the city and find yourself through street photography, so you can learn, while also having a great time experiencing Ho Chi Minh City.

What’s Included?:

  • A variety of guided street photography walks giving a wide view of photo opportunities and exploration in Ho Chi Minh City.
  • 1-on-1 shooting with your instructor to provide feedback, tips, guidance, and allow you to observe how I work. You will also be allowed to work on your photography without distraction during the walks.
  • Multiple educational and inspirational lessons covering different aspects of street photography.
  • An initial portfolio review followed by daily critiques and a final editing lesson covering your work during the workshop.
  • Constant access to your instructor, including outside of the workshop’s scheduled time. 
  • Activities planned to give time for bonding with other photographers, while having a great time in Ho Chi Minh City.
  • A memorable experience not only improving your photography, but also enjoying one of Asia’s most amazing cities.

Additional Information:

  • The workshop will be very limited to keep the group small and give plenty of personal attention and quality interaction.
  • The workshop fee covers not only the time during the workshop schedule, but also the time spent on workshop preparation with each individual, and any time needed outside of the daily schedule while in Ho Chi Minh City.

WHAT TO BRING:

Good walking shoes, camera(s), lens – between 50mm and 21mm equivalents preferred, sunscreen, water bottle, cool and comfortable clothing, laptop with appropriate processing software installed (Lightroom, Capture One or Photoshop), spare batteries and memory cards, notepad, pen, and mobile/ smart phone.

*ONE SPOT LEFT!*

Full 3-Day Workshop Fee – €500

Reserve Spot

Places are strictly limited, sign up early to avoid disappointment

 

Terms and Cancellation Policy:

  •           Workshop fees include tuition ONLY. Participants are responsible for their own equipment costs, food and beverage costs, and travel expenses.
  •          Forrest Walker accepts no liability for any loss or damage of participants’ equipment or liability for injury, illness or misadventure during the course of the workshop. The public liability of the participants is their own responsibility as is conducting themselves safely and according to Vietnamese Law at all times.
  •           Forrest Walker reserves the right to cancel the workshop at any time, for any reason. In this event, participants will receive a 100% refund on any fees paid.
  •          Forrest Walker is not responsible for reimbursement of travel expenses in the event of a cancellation. We recommend that you buy refundable air tickets and/or travel insurance. Cancellations: More than 21 days before workshop begins, participant will receive a 100% refund. Between 7-21 days before workshop begins, participant will receive a 50% refund. Within 7 days of workshop, participants will receive NO refund.

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Featured File, Files, Ho Chi Minh City, Saigon, Street Photography, Travel, Travel Photography, Vietnam, Workshop

Jan 03 2019

25 Top PhotoBooks of 2018

I love photo books. There’s nothing like them, especially in the days of computer screens and phone feeds. It’s the best way to share and view work, but traveling away from home all year during my Major City project makes it difficult to pick up many new ones. Still, I make sure I stay on top of the all the new releases, while also having a few purchased online waiting for me each time I make it back home. So, in honor of it being a new year once again, here’s a list of some of the best photo books published in 2018 that should appeal to any photographer, but especially street and documentary photographers. (Click here to check out the lists from 2016 and 2017)

25 PhotoBooks from 2018

(Selection information quoted from links)

1. Lars Tunbjörk : Lars Tunbjörk

Initially inspired by Swedish masters such as Christer Strömholm, as well as Stephen Shore and William Eggleston, Lars Tunbjörk (1956–2015) was one of the great and truly original European photographers. Tunbjörk’s international breakthrough came in 1993 with the photobook Country beside Itself. Celebrated by Martin Parr and Gerry Badger as “an acute observer of modern life,” Tunbjörk’s color images amplified the mundane and the absurd in a quietly surreal fashion using the hard light of flash photography, which became his signature style and influenced a subsequent generation of photographers. His best-known photobook series include Office (2001), which depicts office workers in bizarre chance positions, and Home (2003), in which everyday items such as flowers or armchairs are made to reveal a quiet absurdity in Swedish suburbia. With more than 250 images, this volume constitutes the most substantial overview of his work.”

Purchase/View

2. Joel Meyerowitz: Where I Find Myself: A Lifetime Retrospective

Where I Find Myself is the first major single book retrospective of one of America’s leading photographers. It is organized in inverse chronological order and spans the photographer’s whole career to date: from Joel Meyerowitz’s most recent picture all the way back to the first photograph he ever took. The book covers all of Joel Meyerowitz’s great projects: his work inspired by the artist Morandi, his work on trees, his exclusive coverage of Ground Zero, his trips in the footsteps of Robert Frank across the US, his experiments comparing color and black and white pictures, and of course his iconic street photography work. Joel Meyerovitz is incredibly eloquent and candid about how photography works or doesn’t, and this should be an inspiration to anyone interested in photography.”

Purchase/View

3. The Street Philosophy of Garry Winogrand

Garry Winogrand—along with Diane Arbus and Lee Friedlander—was one of the most important photographers of the 1960s and 1970s, as well as one of the world’s foremost street photographers. Award-winning writer Geoff Dyer has admired Winogrand’s work for many years. Modeled on John Szarkowski’s classic book Atget, The Street Philosophy of Garry Winogrand is a masterfully curated selection of one hundred photographs from the Winogrand archive at the Center for Creative Photography, with each image accompanied by an original essay.

Dyer takes the viewer/reader on a wildly original journey through both iconic and unseen images from the archive, including eighteen previously unpublished color photographs. The book encompasses most of Winogrand’s themes and subjects and remains broadly faithful to the chronological and geographical facts of his life, but Dyer’s responses to the photographs are unorthodox, eye-opening, and often hilarious. This inimitable combination of photographer and writer, images and text, itself offers what Dyer claims for Winogrand’s photography—an education in seeing.”

Purchase/View

4. Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings

For more than 40 years, Sally Mann (b. 1951) has made experimental, elegiac, and hauntingly beautiful photographs that explore the overarching themes of existence: memory, desire, death, the bonds of family, and nature’s magisterial indifference to human endeavor. What unites this broad body of work—portraits, still lifes, landscapes, and other studies—is that it is all “bred of a place,” the American South. Mann, who is a native of Lexington, Virginia, uses her deep love of her homeland and her knowledge of its historically fraught heritage to ask powerful, provocative questions—about history, identity, race, and religion—that reverberate across geographic and national boundaries. Organized into five sections—Family, The Land, Last Measure, Abide with Me, and What Remains—and including many works not previously exhibited or published, Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings is a sweeping overview of Mann’s artistic achievements.”

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5. Masahisa Fukase

Among the most radical and original photographers of his generation, Masahisa Fukase was famous for The Solitude of Ravens (1991), in which these birds of doom, in flocks or alone, blacken the pages of the book in inky, somber, calligraphic clusters; in 2010 it was voted the best photobook of the past 25 years by the British Journal of Photography. Fukase also has a lesser-known corpus of collages, self-portraits, photographs reworked as sketches, black-and-white prints, Polaroids and more. This book brings together all of his work for the very first time.

Its editors, Simon Baker, director of the Maison européenne de la photographie, Paris, and Tomo Kosuga, director of the Masahisa Fukase Archives, Tokyo, have assembled 26 series from Fukase’s oeuvre, including Memories of Father; The Solitude of Ravens; his portraits of cats; his famous self-portraits taken in a bathtub with a waterproof camera; and many previously unpublished works. Fukase tried his hand at everything, and this essential volume, at more than 400 pages, at last reveals the full breadth of his imagination in an English-language publication.”

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6. Ralph Gibson : The Black Trilogy

An iconic American fine art photographer renowned for his highly surrealist vision, Ralph Gibson is a master of the photography book, which he considers an art form in its own right. In 1970, he founded Lustrum Press, a publishing house dedicated to photography books, and inaugurated it with three volumes—The Somnambulist (1970), Deja-Vu(1973), and Days at Sea (1974)—that showcased his own work in an uncompromisingly radical and demanding way. These books came to be known as Gibson’s “Black Trilogy” and are now considered classics of the twentieth-century photobook genre.

Making a clean break with the prior conventions of the photography book, “The Black Trilogy” created a new visual syntax—page layouts, the pairing of photographs face-to-face, graphic and thematic echoes—that provided a unique language for photographic communication. It soon became the model for a generation of young photographers, including Larry Clark, Danny Seymour, Mary Ellen Mark, Yves Guillot, and Arnaud Claass. “The Black Trilogy” volumes went out of print long ago and have become highly collectible. This reissue, with a new essay by the distinguished photographer and curator Gilles Mora, includes all three books in a single volume.”

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7. Dawoud Bey: Seeing Deeply

Recipient of a 2017 MacArthur Foundation “genius grant,” Dawoud Bey has created a body of photography that masterfully portrays the contemporary American experience on its own terms and in all of its diversity.

Dawoud Bey: Seeing Deeply offers a forty-year retrospective of the celebrated photographer’s work, from his early street photography in Harlem to his current images of Harlem gentrification. Photographs from all of Bey’s major projects are presented in chronological sequence, allowing viewers to see how the collective body of portraits and recent landscapes create an unparalleled historical representation of various communities in the United States. Leading curators and critics—Sarah Lewis, Deborah Willis, David Travis, Hilton Als, Jacqueline Terrassa, Rebecca Walker, Maurice Berger, and Leigh Raiford—introduce each series of images.

Revealing Bey as the natural heir of such renowned photographers as Roy DeCarava, Walker Evans, Gordon Parks, and James Van Der Zee, Dawoud Bey: Seeing Deeplydemonstrates how one man’s search for community can produce a stunning portrait of our common humanity.”

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8. Saul Leiter: In My Room

The fruit of fantastic recent discoveries from Saul Leiter’s vast archive, In My Roomprovides an in-depth study of the nude, through intimate photographs of the women Leiter knew. Showing deeply personal interior spaces, often illuminated by the lush natural light of the artist’s studio in New York City’s East Village, these black-and-white images reveal a unique type of collaboration between Leiter and his subjects. In the 1970s Leiter planned to make a book of nudes, but the project was never realized in his lifetime. Now, we get a first-time look at this body of work, which was begun on Leiter’s arrival in New York in 1946 and honed over the next two decades. Leiter, who was also a painter, allows abstract elements into the photographs and often shows the influence of his favorite artists, including Bonnard, Vuillard and Matisse. Leiter, who painted and took pictures prolifically up to his death, worked in relative obscurity until he entered his eighties. He preferred to be left alone, and resisted any type of explanation or analysis of his work. With In My Room, Leiter ushers viewers into his private world while retaining his strong sense of mystery.
Saul Leiter was born in Pittsburgh in 1923. In 1946 he moved to New York to become a painter, but was encouraged to pursue photography by the photographic experimentation and influence of his friend, the Abstract Expressionist Richard Pousette-Dart. Leiter subsequently enjoyed a successful career as a fashion photographer spanning three decades, and his images were published in magazines such as Esquire, Harper’s Bazaar, Elle and British Vogue. His work is held in many prestigious private and public collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Victoria and Albert Museum. Leiter died in November 2013.”

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9. Luigi Ghirri: It’s Beautiful Here, Isn’t It…

Luigi Ghirri was an extraordinary photographer, as well as a writer and curator whose career was so rich and varied that it seems like a lesson in the contemporary history of the medium. Although well known in his native Italy, Ghirri does not yet have the international audience his work merits–perhaps because he died so young. “It’s Beautiful Here, Isn’t It…”–the first book published on Ghirri in the U.S.–will establish him as the seminal artist he was. Uncannily prescient, Ghirri shared the sensibility of what became known in the U.S. as the New Color and the New Topographics movements before they had even been named. Like his counterparts in Italian cinema, Ghirri believed that the local and the universal were inseparable and that life’s polarities–love and hate, present and past–were equally compelling. Not surprisingly, his interests encompassed all the arts: he worked in Giorgio Morandi’s studio and with architect Aldo Rossi, while influencing a generation of photographers, including Olivo Barbieri and Martin Parr. This dynamic new book includes a selection of Ghirri’s essays published in English for the first time, as well as a selected chronology.”

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10. Elliott Erwitt’s Scotland

In 2013, Elliott Erwitt was asked to be a part of the distinguished Macallan Masters of Photography series. Armed with his trusty Leica camera, he embarked on an exploration of Scotland in hopes of capturing its people’s particular spirit and allure, calling it his “great Scottish adventure.” Going beyond what is simply picturesque, this magnificent collection of photographs candidly reveals both the sum and its parts of the varied landscapes, the characters–and of course, the dogs!–that are unique to Scotland.”

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11. Guy Martin : Parallel State

After nearly losing his life documenting conflict in Libya, photographer, Guy Martin, turned his attention to a seemingly less dangerous project: documenting on set of Turkish soap operas. After a failed coup against the Turkish government in 2016 and the protests that ensued, Martin began photographing protesters taking part in the demonstrations. Parallel State alternates between images of TV set productions and pictures of street protests, resulting in a multidimensional body of work.”

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12. Dave Jordano : A Detroit Nocturne

In a continuation of Dave Jordano’s critically-acclaimed Detroit: Unbroken Down (powerHouse Books, 2015), which documented the lives of residents, Detroit Nocturne is an artist’s book not of people this time, but instead the places within which they live and work: structures, dwellings, and storefronts. Made at night, these photographs speak to the quiet resolve of Detroit’s neighborhoods and its stewards: independent shop proprietors and home owners who have survived the long and difficult path of living in a post-industrial city stripped of economic prosperity and opportunity.

In many rust-belt cities like Detroit, people’s lives often hang in the balance as neighborhoods support and provide for each other through job creation, ad-hoc community involvement, moral and spiritual support, and a well-honed Do-It-Yourself attitude. With all the media attention about Detroit’s rebirth and revival, it is important to note that many neighborhoods throughout the city have managed to survive against the odds for years, relying on local merchants and businesses that operate on a cash only basis who have stuck it out through decades of economic decline.

Determination and a strong sense of self-preservation: Detroit’s citizens manage to survive by maintaining a healthy sense of connection without the fear of giving up. All of these places of business and residences, whether large or small, are in many ways symbols representing the ongoing story that is Detroit, and a testament to the tenacity of those who are trying desperately to hold on to what is left of the social and economic fabric of the city. These photographs speak to that truth without casting an overly sentimental gaze.

These nocturnal images offer a chance to view the locations in an unfamiliar light, and offer a moment of quiet and calm reflection.”

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13. Vivian Maier: The Color Work

The first definitive monograph of color photographs by American street photographer Vivian Maier.

Photographer Vivian Maier’s allure endures even though many details of her life continue to remain a mystery. Her story—the secretive nanny-photographer who became a pioneer photographer—has only been pieced together from the thousands of images she made and the handful of facts that have surfaced about her life. Vivian Maier: The Color Work is the largest and most highly curated published collection of Maier’s full-color photographs to date.

With a foreword by world-renowned photographer Joel Meyerowitz and text by curator Colin Westerbeck, this definitive volume sheds light on the nature of Maier’s color images, examining them within the context of her black-and-white work as well as the images of street photographers with whom she clearly had kinship, like Eugene Atget and Lee Friedlander. With more than 150 color photographs, most of which have never been published in book form, this collection of images deepens our understanding of Maier, as its immediacy demonstrates how keen she was to record and present her interpretation of the world around her.”

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14. Stanley Kubrick Photographs: Through a Different Lens

Before becoming the critically acclaimed filmmaker responsible for such iconic films as Dr. Strangelove and The Shining, Stanley Kubrick spent five years as a photographer for Look magazine. The Bronx native joined the staff in 1945, when he was only 17 years old, and shot humanist slice-of-life features that celebrate and expose New York City and its inhabitants.

Through a Different Lens reveals the keen and evocative vision of a burgeoning creative genius in a range of feature stories and images, from everyday folk at the laundromat to a day in the life of a debutant, from a trip to the circus to Columbia University. Featuring around 300 images, many previously unseen, as well as rare Look magazine tear sheets, this release coincides with a major show at the Museum of the City of New York and includes an introduction by noted photography critic Luc Sante.

These still photographs attest to Kubrick’s innate talent for compelling storytelling, and serve as clear indicators of how this genius would soon transition to making some of the greatest movies of all time.”

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15. Stephen Leslie : Sparks: Adventures in Street Photography

A family is brought close to ruin by a pet python; an Icelandic advertising agency has a problem with a campaign involving a dead seagull; a chiropodist desperately wants to stop examining people’s feet and dreams of becoming a pirate… Stephen Leslie has always tried to capture images that hint at wider, hidden narratives – suggestive moments rather than decisive ones – and Sparks is a book that imagines the weird and wonderful stories behind his original street photographs. It is a love-letter to photography, pairing eighty beautiful colour images – shot on film – with these stories, as well as the author’s recollections of twenty years spent looking through the lens.”

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16. Mark Power : Good Morning America, Volume One

Magnum photographer Mark Power has travelled expansively throughout the United States. A UK native, Power’s perspective is that of an outsider. Observing the vast environmental and political landscape of the United States, Power has photographed the industrial heartlands of Appalachia, locations connected to climate change including one of the world’s largest solar farms, an earth systems research facility, a major dam on the Colorado River and a Navajo Native American reservation among other diverse locations”

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17. Jem Southam : The Moth

The Moth derives from one black-and-white picture that Jem Southam made in about 1983: a solitary man standing on Gwithian beach in St Ives, Cornwall. From this singular, meditative moment, the book of otherwise unpeopled, colour photographs unravels like a succession of memories, drifting back and forth through time. Over the course of 30 years, Southam intermittently returned to the west of Cornwall to explore a place steeped in marine and mining history, and in the mythology of Celtic saints who exiled to Cornish shores. His poetic sequence of images, inspired by the alliterative verse of the old English poems The Wanderer and The Seafarer, moves from vistas of meadows to water streams, forgotten homes and farm dogs awaiting their food. Now and then, Southam’s fluctuating current of pictures is punctuated by a sublime moment in the rural landscape, only to be eclipsed by the hazy memory of The Moth.”

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18. Gerry Johansson : American Winter

The Moth derives from one black-and-white picture that Jem Southam made in about 1983: a solitary man standing on Gwithian beach in St Ives, Cornwall. From this singular, meditative moment, the book of otherwise unpeopled, colour photographs unravels like a succession of memories, drifting back and forth through time. Over the course of 30 years, Southam intermittently returned to the west of Cornwall to explore a place steeped in marine and mining history, and in the mythology of Celtic saints who exiled to Cornish shores. His poetic sequence of images, inspired by the alliterative verse of the old English poems The Wanderer and The Seafarer, moves from vistas of meadows to water streams, forgotten homes and farm dogs awaiting their food. Now and then, Southam’s fluctuating current of pictures is punctuated by a sublime moment in the rural landscape, only to be eclipsed by the hazy memory of The Moth.”

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19. William Eggleston: Black and White

     

Black and White is an updated and expanded edition of William Eggleston’s (born 1939) Before Color (Steidl, 2012), the first publication to comprehensively present Eggleston’s early black-and-white photos and explore his artistic beginnings.

In the late 1950s Eggleston began photographing his hometown of Memphis, discovering many of the motifs that would come to define his seminal work in color: the diners, cars, gas stations, supermarkets, domestic interiors and the seemingly mundane gestures and expressions of his fellow citizens. Also here are his unconventional, sometimes tilted croppings, and above all his emphasis on the beautiful in the banal. In the mid-1960s Eggleston began working with color and after experimenting with different exposure settings he was soon pleased with the results―“And by God it all worked. Just overnight.” He subsequently abandoned black-and-white photography but its influence on his original vision of the American everyday remains fundamental.”

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20. Lynsey Addario : Of Love & War

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and New York Times bestselling author, a stunning and personally curated selection of her work across the Middle East, South Asia, and Africa

Pulitzer Prize–winning photojournalist and MacArthur Fellow Lynsey Addario has spent the last two decades bearing witness to the world’s most urgent humanitarian and human rights crises. Traveling to the most dangerous and remote corners to document crucial moments such as Afghanistan under the Taliban immediately before and after the 9/11 attacks, Iraq following the US-led invasion and dismantlement of Saddam Hussein’s government, and western Sudan in the aftermath of the genocide in Darfur, she has captured through her photographs visual testimony not only of war and injustice but also of humanity, dignity, and resilience.
 
In this compelling collection of more than two hundred photographs, Addario’s commitment to exposing the devastating consequences of human conflict is on full display. Her subjects include the lives of female members of the military, as well as the trauma and abuse inflicted on women in male-dominated societies; American soldiers rescuing comrades in the Korengal Valley of Afghanistan, and Libyan opposition troops trading fire in Benghazi. Interspersed between her commanding and arresting images are personal journal entries and letters, as well as revelatory essays from esteemed writers such as Dexter Filkins, Suzy Hansen, and Lydia Polgreen. A powerful and singular work from one of the most brilliant and influential photojournalists working today, Of Love & War is a breathtaking record of our complex world in all its inescapable chaos, conflict, and beauty.”

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21. Matthew Genitempo : Jasper

Inspired by the life and work of the poet and land surveyor, Frank Stanford, these photographs of hermetic homes and men living in solitude were taken in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas and Missouri. By capturing the foggy landscapes, cluttered interiors, and rugged men that are tucked away in the dark woods, Jasper explores a fascination with running away from the everyday. The work bounces between fact and fiction, exhibiting the reality and myth of what it means to be truly apart from society.”

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22. Michael E. Northrup : Dream Away

Dream Away by Michael E. Northrup is a love story about life, vision, and love itself. The 66 images in the book present a developing portrait of both an artist and his subject.  It’s about Northrup’s obsession with “the photograph”, his vision, and the significant, funny, and unique images he’s able to make from life itself. 

“We met in 1976, got married in 1978 and divorced in 1988. She was both wife and muse. For me, creating images is all about my daily life, those meaningful pictures I’m able to extract from it, and the personal vision I bring to those visual narratives.” – Michael N. Northrup”

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23. Steven Bollman: Almost True

Thirty years in the making, but covering just a few seconds in real time, Almost True is Steven Bollman’s highly anticipated new photobook.

Almost True, draws from over three decades of work from many different projects. 81 black and white photos in nine groups that tell their own story but, through the magic of sequencing, offer new stories.

The diverse images included in Almost True were taken in Cuba during Fidel Castro’s time, at religious processions in Sicily, and during the elections in Haiti in 1987, plus street photos from  Mississippi, New York, Oakland, Portland, Santa Fe, Seattle, Italy, Portugal, and Spain.”

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24. Tavepong Pratoomwong : Good day Bad Day But EveryDay

GOOD DAY BAD DAY BUT EVERYDAY represents the first Photobook of internationally-acclaimed photographer, Tavepong Pratoomwong. The photobook encompasses the curation and compilation of Pratoomwong’s most outstanding photos during his daily street jaunt since 2014. Several eye-struck photos have experienced award after award. Pratoomwong, therefore, drapes the refined continuation of the self-categorized photos into this limited-hardcover photobook.”

Purchase/View

25. Charalampos Kydonakis (Dirtyharry) : WARN’D IN VAIN

‘Warn’d in Vain’ is a is a NYC story inspired by the Argonautic myth. It is a twin book of ‘Back to Nowhere’, a parallel Minotaur tale from Crete, hopefully to be out soon in the future. ‘W.I.V’ is a stranger’s questionmark inside the world’s most photographed city; made between the years 2014-2017 that I spent 7 months on the other side of the ocean. ‘B.T.N’ was made between 2009-2017 on my island;  the only place I‘ll never have the chance to see how it looks in the eyes of a stranger.”

Purchase/View

Bonus: Compilations

Magnum China

This lavishly illustrated book is the history of China, spanning the pre-revolutionary years to China’s present day rise as a global power as told through the Magnum photo agency’s legendary photographs. 

Magnum Photos first covered China on assignment in the 1930s, when Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson established what has become a long-standing cultural engagement with the ever-changing country. Magnum’s long history with China puts the agency in the unique position of being able to provide an in-depth photographic account of China, its people, and the changes they have witnessed over the last nine decades.

Featuring an outstanding selection of photographs, Magnum China is a thorough illustrated history of a vast, enigmatic country, fascinating for China-watchers and novices alike.

Chronologically organized into four parts, charting the history of China from 1933 to the present day, Magnum Chinapresents in-depth portfolios by individual photographers, accompanied by introductory commentaries on the featured work and group selections that curate individual photographs to illustrate the diverse state of China. Each part also features an introduction by respected scholar Jonathan Fenby, as well as “key dates” timelines and lists of the photographers’ travels, setting the socio-political and historical context for the photography on show.”

Purchase/View

 

Hopefully, you all can find something to add to your photo library, or someone else’s. And if you have any recommended books from 2018 to add to the list, please comment them below.

 

NEXT WORKSHOP : HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM FEBRUARY 9TH-11TH SIGN UP HERE

 

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Books, Documentary Photography, Featured File, Files, Lists, Street Photography

Dec 27 2018

7 First Impressions of Riga, Latvia
(From a Street Photography Perspective)

After Seoul (and return stop in one of my favorite cities, Saint-Petersburg) it was time for major city #55 Riga, Latvia on the 100 City project. I might include other Baltic capitals in the future, but Riga was my first pick mainly because it’s the region’s largest. I wanted a city big enough to really explore in the Baltics, with more than the touristic areas. With Riga, I got even more than I’d hoped for. Most visitors spend their time in the old town, but Riga has so much more interest to offer, especially for street photography. Starting with the most Art Noveau architecture in the world, you can also find the unique Moscow district, providing an edgier atmosphere filled with character. There’s a mix of interest here and a relaxing vibe made for walking with your camera. I enjoy Eastern European cities for their authentic atmosphere, but Riga brings its own characteristics with it too. If you like some unique character in your photography, Riga is a great spot to visit.

So here are my first impressions of Riga, from my personal Street Photographer perspective…

[Read more…] about 7 First Impressions of Riga, Latvia (From a Street Photography Perspective)

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Eastern Europe, Europe, Featured File, Files, First Impressions, Latvia, Riga, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Travel

Dec 24 2018

Street Light : Photo Books and Zines (December 2018)

Street Light is a bi-monthly series where I showcase photography work to purchase that might not have as much visibility or large production numbers. From smaller run-offs and zines to books and crowdfunding campaigns, I’ll try to feature selections of mostly newer work that you’re not as likely to find in bookstores everywhere. Hopefully, this can be a way to help talented photographers get their work seen for purchase, while also helping readers find great work they didn’t know was available. So, check here to find what’s out there, much of it before it’s gone. (All bi-monthly selections will be added to a permanent page, organizing them together so you can come check anytime)

And if you have a new photo book, zine or crowdfunding campaign, or if you’d like to recommend another photographer’s, please comment it below. (no e-books/e-zines, please)

Photo Books & Zines : December 2018

(Selection information quoted from links)

Books

Feng Li : White Night (2nd edition)

This is photographer Feng Li’s (generally known as “free pig” in China) first monograph, with a selection of his color works shot from 2005 to 2015. The title comes from a sentence in the Holy Bible, “By day they meet with darkness, and grope at noon as in the night.”

“I don’t know whether they are photographic works, but they do present another side of our reality. I can’t explain them specifically, as I can’t understand the world. The only thing I can tell is my questions. Most of the time I am the person who asks, and answers a question in front of me by asking a new. There is always a question mark following the answers. I can ask at any time with my camera. The seemingly calm world is torn by sharp flash, and deep shadows are left in the souls. The night outside my window is white as the day when the passengers walk in a hurry. This is my world, of white night.” — Feng Li

2018 2nd edition.

View/Purchase HERE

 

View/Purchase HERE

___

Uli Kaufmann : “Einszweidrei, im Sauseschritt läuft die Zeit; wir laufen mit”

Translated:

“one two three, the time is running, we run with”

Edition 100
30 € + 5 € shipping

Stiff stitching, 21 x24cm, open Thread Bond, 56 pages

PM for book inquiries: instagram @ulikaufmann86

View/Purchase HERE

View/Purchase HERE

___

Edas Wong : RE-FORM

Edas WONG is an amateur street photographer from Hong Kong. The public may find his name a bit unfamiliar. However, he has been working hard in photography. Besides keeps publishing his photographs on the web, he has also won many international awards and participated in exhibitions overseas.

The collection of photographs in “RE-FORM” for pre-sale this time is a series of photographs that Edas started taking in 2012. These photographs are different from street photographs taken casually or those that pay much attention to the composition of images. Edas intended to discard all known understandings and restrictive assumptions and use the way of child’s thinking to re-comprehend the world in front of him. Then he reformed all the elements with unlimited imagination and formed all the interesting photos.

This publication will be pre-sold at a discount price of HK$198. Oversea readers can order by email at info@brownie.com.hk.

Book Size:W215mm x H152mm (TBC)
Pages: 112 pages (TBC)
Printing:Color
Language: Chinese, English
Publisher: brownie publishing ltd.

Estimated publication date: Mar. 2019

View/Purchase HERE 

 

View/Purchase HERE 

___

Charalampos Kydonakis (Dirtyharry) : WARN’D IN VAIN

*This book was listed in the October edition of Street List as a crowdfunding campaign. It has since reached its funding goal and is now a published book ready for purchase. 

‘Warn’d in Vain’ is a twin book of ‘Back to Nowhere’, a parallel Minotaur tale from Crete, hopefully to be out soon in the future. ‘W.I.V’ is a stranger’s questionmark inside the world’s most photographed city; made between the years 2014-2017 that I spent 7 months on the other side of the ocean. ‘B.T.N’ was made between 2009-2017 on my island;  the only place I ‘ll never have the chance to see how it looks in the eyes of a stranger.

  • Photographs & design by dirtyharrry
  • A5 size
  • 116 color images from NYC in 160 pages
  • Edition of 950 copies + 50 special edition copies

View/Purchase HERE


View/Purchase HERE

___

Tavepong Pratoomwong : Good day Bad Day But EveryDay (Second Edition)

*This was also also listed in the October edition of Street List, but after selling out has been reprinted under a second edition

GOOD DAY BAD DAY BUT EVERYDAY represents the first Photobook of an internationally-acclaimed photographer, Tavepong Pratoomwong. The photobook encompasses the curation and compilation of Pratoomwong most outstanding photos during his daily street jaunt since 2014. Several eyes-struck photos have experienced awards after awards. Pratoomwong, therefore, drapes the refined continuation of the self-categorized photos into this limited-hardcover photobook.

Foreword: David Gibson
Book design: Happening
Cover: hard
Dimensions: 248 x 313 mm
Number of pages: 120
Number of photographs: 52
Language version: English
Publisher: Tavepong & Happening
First Edtion : June 12, 2018
Second Edition : October 17, 2018

View/Purchase HERE 

View/Purchase HERE 

___

Zines

Sven Kräuter : The World Is A Strange Place To Look At

“What is it that holds the world together? What is the secret red thread that connects every place on earth despite all the differences? What are the similarities between everyday life in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Neukölln, Shimokitazawa and Karakoy? Potentially quite some things, and in Sven Kräuter’s “The world is a strange place to look at” the global parallels that fascinate him the most are the movement of the people and the light they are dancing through. That, and the absurdities that lie hidden in everyday life. Hidden moments until you uncover them with photographs.”

Check the whole zine in this video

60 A5 pages, 31 photographs. Printed and staple bound in Berlin for your delight. 2nd Edition.

Available editions:
– Standard 15,- EUR
– Including an A6 print*, both signed 25,- EUR
– Including an A5 print*, both signed 45,- EUR

Shipping:

Germany 2,50 EUR
Worldwide 4,00 EUR

Published by снесжpоiит еdiтiоиs 2018

* The prints are archival quality pigment prints. They are printed on the 300 gsm fine art paper “Calumet Brilliant Museum Silver Gloss”

View/Purchase HERE

View/Purchase HERE

___

Joe Aguirre : I Spent A Year Here, One Night

I Spent A Year Here, One Night.
Photographic diary 2014-2018.
Landscape, portrait and nude.

44 page zine printed size 8×11 true black and white on 130gsm coated silk paper with a laminated 300gsm TruCard cover.
Wire stitched.

Edit and design by Trey Micheal Derbes and Joe Aguirre

Edition of 200

Published by снесжpоiит еdiтiоиs 2018

View/Purchase HERE 

View/Purchase HERE 

 

If you have a new photo book, zine or crowdfunding campaign, or if you’d like to recommend another photographer’s, please comment it below…

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Books, Featured File, Files, Street Light, Street Photography, Zines

Dec 06 2018

City Street Guides by f.d. walker:
A Street Photography Guide to
Kolkata, India

*A series of guides on shooting Street Photography in cities around the world. Find the best spots to shoot, things to capture, street walks, street tips, safety concerns, and more for cities around the world. I have personally researched, explored and shot Street Photography in every city that I create a guide for. So you can be ready to capture the streets as soon as you step outside with your camera!

Kolkata

[Read more…] about City Street Guides by f.d. walker: A Street Photography Guide to Kolkata, India

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: City Street Guides, Featured File, Files, Guides, India, Kolkata, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Travel, Travel Photography

Nov 06 2018

Two-Day Workshop in Sydney (with myself and Sam Ferris)

 

2-Day Aussie Street Workshop in Sydney (Developing Your Vision)

  • DECEMBER 1ST-2ND : Sydney, Australia
  • ADVANCED STREET PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP WITH FORREST WALKER AND SAM FERRIS

I’m excited to announce an upcoming 2-Day workshop I’ll be leading this December 1st-2nd in Sydney, Australia. The workshop will be run through Aussie Street and also led by talented photographer and member Sam Ferris. Read on for more details and how to sign up!

This intensive and practical two-day workshop will focus on the development of photographic ‘vision’ through the processes of discovery and reflection. It is designed to give students who already have a grounding in the fundamentals of street photography the necessary tools to develop their own ‘vision’ by building skills in their shooting, editing, and sequencing of work over two full days of instruction and activities. Led by international photographer Forrest Walker and AUSSIE STREET’s Sam Ferris, this workshop is sure to be an enjoyable, immersive, and insightful experience not to be missed.

EARLY BIRD SIGN UP – $400 UNTIL NOV 11TH / $500 AFTERWARDS

ABOUT THE INSTRUCTORS

SAM FERRIS

Sam Ferris is a professional teacher from Sydney, Australia. He is an organiser and co-founder of the AUSSIE STREET exhibition and competition, and is a member of SlowLight international collective. His award-winning work has been published widely and exhibited in Australia, Europe, the UK and the US. A highly experienced teacher and presenter, Sam has held workshops for the HEAD ON Photo Festival and for NYCSPC in New York City, as well as around Australia for AUSSIE STREET.

Recently, alongside Trent Parke and Jesse Marlow, Sam was one of three Australian street photographers selected for the book ‘100 Great Street Photographs’ (2017), edited by David Gibson and released by Prestel Publishing.

Sam holds an Honours degree in Arts and a Masters of Teaching. He is represented by Black Eye gallery, Sydney.

SEE MORE OF SAM’S WORK ON INSTAGRAM & HIS WEBSITE

FORREST WALKER

Forrest Walker (aka F.D. Walker) is an internationally acclaimed photographer from Portland, Oregon, USA. He is also the sole creator of this blog and member of The Street Collective. His work has been awarded and exhibited across multiple continents and expresses his interest in capturing the world candidly in vibrant colour, along with passion for exploration and adventure. He has been an invited speaker and judge at multiple major street photography festivals, including MSPF 2017 and was recently interviewed for the immensely popular ‘The Candid Frame’ podcast.

Currently, Forrest is in the final stages of photographing a five year project taken in 100 major cities, where he strives to capture the diversity and connections found in daily life across all regions and cultures. His images distil the layers of life within major cities and reveal the commonalities of human experience. This project is documented on his popular blog ShooterFiles.com, where he provides street photography city guides, tips, photography, stories, local photographer interviews and more.

SEE MORE OF FORREST’S WORK ON INSTAGRAM & HIS WEBSITE

EARLY BIRD SIGN UP – $400 UNTIL NOV 11TH / $500 AFTERWARDS

Places are strictly limited, sign up early to avoid disappointment

ITINERARY

DAY 1

INTRODUCTIONS AND PORTFOLIO REVIEW:

Sam and Forrest will facilitate a number of introductory activities and conduct a brief portfolio review of participants’ work that will focus on constructive feedback and goal setting for the workshop.

OUR WORK/ OUR ‘VISION’ – HOW TO FIND YOURS: A PROCESS OF DISCOVERY AND SELF-REFLECTION:

Sam and Forrest will present their respective bodies of work and projects, offering insights into the process of developing an individual ‘vision’ for their street photography. They will go into depth about the processes of discovery and self-reflection that have allowed them to realise their ‘visions’.

STREET PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECTS – SHOWING AND TELLING. CASE STUDIES:

After the overview of their own projects and individual ‘visions’, Sam and Forrest will deconstruct a number of projects, books and bodies of work from the masters of street photography in order to teach the process of developing a long or short term project from conception to presentation.

LUNCH:

Sam and Forrest invite participants to join them for lunch. Participants are free to commence shooting or make their own plans for lunch.

SHOOTING SESSION 1:

Participants will join Sam and Forrest on the streets of Sydney for a hands on and practical session on photographing and technique. They will specifically focus on skills such as identifying strong content and form in street photographs, working a scene, and creating layers and depth in an image. This session will involve activities and shooting in small groups and one-on-one tutelage.

DEBRIEF/ DRINKS:

Sam and Forrest will meet all students again at the end of the session for an informal debrief, to answer any questions, or clarify skills and concepts from throughout the day. Participants are invited to join Sam and Forrest for a post-workshop drink and dinner at a venue TBA.

DAY 2

SHOOTING SESSION 2:

Participants will meet at a location TBA before embarking on the second shooting session of the workshop. Students will have the opportunity to develop and hone their skills learned during day 1, experiment, and be encouraged to take risks and push themselves. Students are to shoot independently during this session and given space to work; however, Sam and Forrest will be nearby to offer assistance and guidance when needed. Meeting spots will be nominated every two hours for students to regroup with the instructors and have the opportunity to ask questions and seek feedback.

LUNCH:

Sam and Forrest invite participants to join them for lunch. Participants are free to continue shooting or make their own plans for lunch.

RETURN TO CLASSROOM FOR EDITING, SEQUENCING, AND DEVELOPING YOUR ‘VISION’:

Participants will return to the classroom to edit and sequence their work from days 1 and 2. Sam and Forrest will provide an overview of editing workflows and techniques for sequencing images. This session is designed to help students reflect on develop their ‘vision’.

PRESENTING AND PUBLISHING YOUR PROJECT:

Participants will present their work in a slide show to the workshop class and invited guests. A question and answer will follow where students will receive constructive advice on publishing, exhibiting or developing their work further.

DRINKS AND POST WORKSHOP CELEBRATION:

Informal celebratory drinks and food at a venue TBA

WHAT TO BRING:

Good walking shoes, camera(s), lens – between 50mm and 28mm equivalents preferred, sunscreen, hat, water bottle, ‘sun-smart’ and comfortable attire, laptop with appropriate processing software installed (Lightroom, Capture One or Photoshop), spare batteries and memory cards, notepad, pen, and mobile/ smart phone.

EARLY BIRD SIGN UP – $400 UNTIL NOV 11TH / $500 AFTERWARDS

Places are strictly limited, sign up early to avoid disappointment

Terms and Cancellation Policy:

–          AUSSIE STREET and the instructors reserve the right to cancel the workshop at any time, for any reason. In this event, participants will receive a 100% refund on any fees paid.

–          AUSSIE STREET and the instructors reserve the right to reject the application of any participant for any reason.

–          Workshop fees include tuition ONLY. Participants are responsible for their own equipment costs, food and beverage costs, and travel expenses.

–          AUSSIE STREET and the instructors accept no liability for any loss or damage of participants’ equipment or liability for injury, illness or misadventure during the course of the workshop. The public liability of the participants is their own responsibility as is conducting themselves safely and according to Australian Law at all times.

–          AUSSIE STREET and the instructors are not responsible for reimbursement of travel expenses in the event of a cancellation. We recommend that you buy refundable air tickets and/or travel insurance. Cancellations: More than 30 days before workshop begins, participant will receive a 100% refund. Between 29-8 days before workshop begins, participant will receive a 50% refund. Within 7 days of workshop, participants will receive NO refund.

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Featured File, Files, Workshop

Oct 29 2018

33 Street Photography Photos from Seoul, South Korea

After a quick stop back “home” in Ho Chi Minh City, I was back on the road working on my 100 City project in major city #54 Seoul, South Korea. It doesn’t get much bigger and sprawling as Seoul so there was a lot to explore within its mix of urban atmosphere, old traditions and new trends. With the help of an excellent metro system and a ton of walking, I was able to see a large variety of neighborhoods that not many cities can provide, where you’ll find old markets and villages not far from trendy shopping streets and k-pop street performers. It’s an enjoyable city to explore with your camera from day to night, and the first city I finally broke the 50 kilometer barrier in a day on foot doing just that. It’s also a city I’ll likely return to so I can discover even more of Seoul.

So here’s 33 photos that I was able to capture during my time in Seoul…

[Read more…] about 33 Street Photography Photos from Seoul, South Korea

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: 33 Street Photos, Featured File, Files, Korea, Photos, Seoul, Shooter Files Series, South Korea, Street Photography, Travel Photography

Oct 15 2018

7 First Impressions of Seoul, South Korea
(From a Street Photography Perspective)

After a very short break from the project to stop back “home” in Ho Chi Minh City, I was back on the road in major city #54 Seoul, South Korea. Seoul is a massively sprawling metropolis mixing industry and urban atmosphere with old traditions and new trends. While some cities you can quickly explore, Seoul is just too big to truly explore all of in one visit. Luckily, though, it does have one of the more expansive and efficient metro systems around to help you fill your time with a variety of neighborhoods that not many cities could rival. While it receives comparisons to Tokyo, to the annoyance of many locals, Seoul brings a different culture and atmosphere the more you get a feel for it. It’s one of the most populated cities in the world, where you can find old markets and villages not far from trendy shopping streets and k-pop street performers. It’s a fun city to explore with your camera from day to night, and one that you’ll want to keep coming back to truly get to know.

So here are my first impressions of Seoul, from my personal Street Photographer perspective…

[Read more…] about 7 First Impressions of Seoul, South Korea (From a Street Photography Perspective)

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Featured File, Files, First Impressions, Korea, Seoul, Shooter Files Series, South Korea, Street Photography

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