Well I've done it
again, sold all my cameras.
I usually do this when
I get a bit disillusioned with my photography. The last time was in
1990s after I had moved back to Lincoln and work from London was
drying up, remember there was no internet back then and photography
was a wet process.
Communications from
Lincoln to London were tricky. It would take a long day to shoot a
story, drive to Nottingham and get it processed, then pre-edit it,
package it, get it to the train station and organise a bike to pick
it up at the other end to take it to the editorial office.
In an effort to attain
more work from London I built a website on this new thing called the 'webbynet'. Trouble was no one in the editorial offices was online yet.
However, I now had a lifeline and having built a few websites for
other people I landed the job of Website Manager at the University of
Lincoln. I sold my cameras and didn't take a serious picture for 15
years.
5 years ago I left
the Uni with enough cash to be independent and pursue my own
photographic project (details and pics in this blog). I had an
exhibition and published a couple of books. All well and good...
I now face another
'photostential' crisis, where do I go from here? Though, this time
it's more of a move in a different photographic direction. Photography
for me has never been about producing pretty or spectacular pictures.
They have their place but for me a picture has to have some meaning
or be more informative than “isn't that amazing!”
The way people consume
photography these days has also changed. If I send an email out to my mail
list, 90% of those who look at my blog or website do it on a mobile
device so, what's the point of me shooting a 40MP image if it's
going to be viewed at the size of a credit card? These days an iPhone
camera is quite capable of producing the quality needed for a
sizeable print or projection. An iPhone is also considerably more
convenient. If you pull out a big SLR these days it marks you out as
a professional and people start to get suspicious, no one bothers if
you pull out a phone. Strange how it used to be the other way around.
I have sold my cameras
and am awaiting the release of the new iPhone.