Formats, Formulas and Publishing Photography on the Web 9

Posted by Bryan Formhals on February 06, 2010

(Please note I’m fully aware this blog is guilty of some of the things I’m questioning)

I’ve been thinking about how to go about publishing photography on the web since the day I started la pura vida.  So I was very much interested in Brian Ulrich’s post about blogs and publishing photography. He makes several good points and hit upon some ideas I think have been swirling around for awhile now.  My objective with this post is to provide some thoughts and observations on the formats and formulas I’ve observed.  This ground was covered last year around this time by DLK Collection in their insightful post Comment, Curate and Promote: The Art Blog Triangle. Definitely check that out if you haven’t already.  I plan on focussing outward with this post, and will follow up with a post about my plans for this blog and la pura vida.

Expose, Promote, Curate, Share

“Our objective with this blog is to expose and promote photographers that we love and think you should know about.”

This is the default ABOUT template I attach to many curatorial type blogs. It could easily be applied to this blog as well.  For me, I think you need a clearer objective than to simply promote and expose photographers. Even if you ‘expose’ a photographer on a popular blog, that doesn’t often mean much more than a spike in traffic for them that day.  It can be tricky but I think you need to cultivate an editorial objective and think about why you feature the type of work you do on your blog or website, and then make that clear to your audience.

The challenge with curatorial blogs is presentation.  The standard format is to select a series of photographs, often with a short blurb, and always with a link back to the photographers work.  What is important for me here is that the blogger/editor/curator selects more than a single photograph.  Adding one photograph and a short blurb along the lines of ’some very nice portraits/landscapes/work from XYZ photographer’ with a link to a project or site is uninspiring, outdated and lazy. Show me what you see in the work. Show me a series.  If you’re going to add text, make it thoughtful and well written.

A blog that mixes writing with a series photographs well is Urbannautica.  Aline Smithson of lenscratch is another good example of making a selection with excellent writing.  Because photography writing is often uninspiring, I tend to gravitate to blogs that just show me a series of photographs, like ThisPhotoThat and LOZ.  There are countless other examples, and which blogs you choose to follow will depend of on your sensibility of course.

And that’s the key word, sensibility.  The blogs that are strongest in this area have a rather well defined sensibility, and make a thoughtful selection.  Something I think all bloggers should work on (including this one), are headlines. For the most part, everyone uses the photographers name and that’s it.  There are so many photographers out there that we may as well just put up garbled text.  We should use informative, descriptive headlines. For example, and this isn’t a home run by any means, but something like “Surreal LA Streets From Parisian Raoul Gatepin.”  I know some don’t want to editorialize and think the work should stand on it’s own, but with the glut out there, I think you really need to sell it to the audience.  Add some zing and spice, grab our attention.

Most photographers have a personal blog, and many feature work by photographers they find interesting on it. This a practice that I have some reservations about.  I’m a firm believer in the separation of curating/editing and marketing one’s own work.  It’s a fine line, and many will argue that they are using their blog to reflect on work that informs and inspires their own photography.  This is a valid point. For me though, if you do this regularly, you should open up a blog dedicated to others work.  Save your personal blog for your work and thoughts. I find that more interesting anyway.  Why do I find this problematic?  Well, because you’re associating a certain visual style with your brand and I think it can be deceiving, not to mention you are using the work of others to drive traffic to your own website.  In the grand scheme of things this isn’t a big deal, but I do think it’s best to make a clear separation between curating and self-promotion.

The Photographer Interview

But an interview is not a questionnaire and all too many of these interviews are distilled down to a manufactured series of questions where it may even be obvious that the person asking the questions hasn’t even looked to see if those questions were answered somewhere else before. - Brian Ulrich

I find it hard to read interviews unless I’m already familiar with the photographer.  Most of the time I’m just getting the facts, and not insights.  An interview should be illuminating, insightful and give the audience something to think about.  Every time I read an Alec Soth interview I’m end up highlighting quotes and pulling out ideas to think over.  He’s clearly thinks deeply about photography and life, and knows how to articulate those thoughts.  Younger photographers and artists haven’t necessarily formulated a strong philosophical point of view, so often come across as aloof and not really caring that much.  Not all of course.

However, there is one point about the standard photographer interview that I think some of us are missing.  For a younger generation, these interviews are often more about networking, connecting and sharing than trying to give the audience something to talk about.  The way a ‘digital native’ approaches the web is often dramatically different than older generations. It’s less about publishing, and more about connecting and building relationships.  So, I’m hesitant to really be too judgmental on this formula because I think they might have different motivations.

Reviews, Commentary and Criticism

This is treacherous territory, and a place I don’t often visit.  If you’re going review books, write criticism, or comment on art, you need to be a damn good writer, and being a damn good writer, is damn difficult.  Not to mention you really need to know what you’re talking about.  More often than not, you end up sounding like a babbling, self-involved blowhard preaching from a podium.  Everyone’s a critic, everyone has an opinion, everyone has a blog.  But few are knowledgeable, insightful writers. The aforementioned DLK Collection writes exceptional reviews as does Jeffrey Ladd at 5B4.  I often enjoy Blake Andrews reflective, casual writing as well as Colin Pantal’s musings and acerbic sense of humor.  Mrs. Deane is wry, often insightful and blends commentary and curating perfectly.  The guys at insig.ht have carved out a nice space for reflective writing on the photographic process, which I prefer to reviews and commentary. And if you think you’re going to make a living as a photography critic, reviewer, or commentator on the web, well, good luck to you.  I think photography criticism relevant and has it’s place, but it’s never going to be widely embraced or consumed.

The Online Magazine, Photoessays and the Slow Web Movement

At the moment I’m very interested in these type of websites.  There are many that are doing it right: Fraction, Daylight, Ahorn, Deep Sleep, Burn, Too much chocolate, SEESAW, HUH., The Black Snapper and several others. With these type of sites you have editors working with photographers to create unique, thoughtful features that require your time and attention to consume.  These type of websites force us to break free from the single image paradigm that plagues the web and often creates meaningless consumption.

However, there are a few challenges. First, presenting multiple features at once on the web is difficult because of our short attention spans.  You’re lying if you don’t find it challenging to spend more than a few minutes browsing a website.  Second, since they don’t publish as frequently, they’re often not as visible.  Some run blogs as well, which is a good idea, but then it becomes a balancing act.  How frequently do you publish? What goes on the blog? What do you feature in the magazine? Also, the tendency to mimic print magazines often leads to disastrous presentation but I feel we’re evolving beyond that mentality.

I’ve heard the term “slow web or blogging” passed around by Jen Bekman, and Laura Brunow Miner, and I think it’s appropriate for this discussion.  These online magazines certainly abide by this philosophy and in the era of Twitter, status updates and microblogging, I’m not sure why someone needs to be blogging multiple times a day.  Certain people will take offense to this because they hate Twitter/Facebook/Tumblr, but I think they’re on the wrong side of progress in this instance.

Conversations, Community and Microblogging

Twitter is my hub for conversation and information.  I know it has it’s detractors, but I feel that microblogging and short conversations are important elements to the web experience.  For example, sharing photographers and articles over Twitter can cut back on the necessity of blogging. If you’re going to just show one photograph and a link, why do you need to blog it?  Again, this will be contentious, but I just think that Twitter and to Tumblr are perfect for aggregating, conversing and sharing.  Save the important features and items that can’t be communicated quickly, or paraphrased for the blog.

I find it mind boggling that a writer, curator or editor wouldn’t interact and converse with their readers in a public forum.  No comments, no Twitter, no participation, essentially preaching from a podium.  Yes, comments and chatter can be annoying and time consuming, but the benefits of interaction and engagement far out weigh the drawbacks.  There will be people that are set in their ways, but I think they’ll eventually be marginalized if they can’t adapt.

Conclusion

Within the photography community I often sense a displeasure with photography on the web. Image overload, viewing photographs on a screen and many other annoyances make people just want to give up. I certainly feel that way at times, but being an information junkie, I find it impossible to stay away.  However, I do think that bloggers and publishers should always be looking for ways to evolve, and make their content more relevant.  I think there’s a big divide between people that feel the web is best used for commentary, discussion, reviews and criticism as opposed to actually displaying and presenting photographs.  It’s a worthy debate, but I think the web gives us opportunities to present work in different ways than we can in the physical world.  The web is great for mashing up, interacting, collaborating, and experimenting.  I know I’ve opened myself up for criticism with some of what I’ve written, and there’s no question I’m guilty of many things I’ve mentioned.  In part two, I’ll lay out my plans for la pura vida and this blog.

p.s. – Yes, I know it’s your blog and you can do whatever the hell you want with it. Point taken.

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Thoughts on the Hetherington/Stein Presentation on Blogging 2

Posted by Bryan Formhals on March 12, 2009

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Jorg Colberg/Andrew Hetherington-  photograph©Andrew Hetherington

Andrew Hetherington and Amy Stein presented their work and discussed ‘Photographers Who Blog‘ last night at the Apple store in SoHo.  By the size of the crowd, I’m guessing there are more photographers who blog than we can all probably imagine.  It was a rather straight forward presentation.  Amy talked about her ‘Domesticated‘ and ‘Stranded‘ projects as well as her popular blog

She said she primarily uses her blog as a promotion tool for her work and the work of photographers she admires, which is probably the most common function for photographers.  She mentioned she also uses it as a type of visual diary, a place to store photographs and ideas that she may want to come back later.  She tries to keep it visually oriented, but also features some interviews, as fans of her blog already know. 

Andrew Hetherington discussed his photographic journey, from the days as an aspiring fashion photographer in Dublin to his days as an in demand editorial photographer in New York.  It’s always interesting to hear how artists climbed the ladder.  As much as I appreciate his work, I was more interested in his thoughts on blogs.  

He started ‘What’s the Jackanory’ after stumbling upon a photographer’s blog while researching self-publishing options for his ‘Made in Ireland‘ project.  He quickly found ‘Conscientious’ and mentioned that he spent 15 hours browsing the site the first night he found it.  After that, he was hooked and decided to give it a go himself. 

Like Amy, he primarily uses his blog for promotion but mentioned that he really started to enjoy the writing element because it was something that was new to him.  If you’re familiar with his blog, I’m sure you’ve read his more personal, journal type entries. 

The most memorable fact of the night for me came when Andrew mentioned the traffic Conscientious can generate for a photographer.  Andrew recommended the work of one of his friends to  Jorg, who liked it and posted it the next day.  Andrew was curious about the traffic the post generated and what impact it had getting new work noticed.  How many hits did his friend receive after after the mention on Conscientious? 100,000.

Whether this is accurate or not, I obviously can’t confirm but it certainly shows the amount of influence one blogger can accumulate.  While I think this is great for photography in general, I also think it creates some new challenges that bloggers and photographers will need confront in the future. 

Whether or not the popular bloggers want the role or not, they’ve become the new gatekeepers.  If these blogs are the first point of entry for many photographers, fans and collectors, what kind of responsibility does this create for the authors?

The online photography community is becoming more diverse and new voices are constantly emerging.  With this trend I think the influence of the prominent, first generation photography bloggers will probably wane a bit as more options emerge.  However, I do think as thought leaders these bloggers have the responsibility of pushing the dialogue and innovation forward.  A Photo Editor is a great example of a blog that continues to evolve and develop new content ideas.  Rob is also incredibly savvy when it comes to social media, content distribution and emerging trends.  

So, what’s next for photography blogs?  My guess?  Bloggers will become more ambitious, brand aware and will attempt to develop multi-dimensional publishing platforms (some already are.)  But who is developing the great photography portal?  Where is the one-stop shop for catching up on photography news and buzz?  Of course, like newspapers and the rest of the publishing industry, the major obstacle is monetization.  If you can crack that equation, you’ll be one wealthy and influential individual.   

INFO

Andrew Hetherington Portfolio
What’s the Jackonary?
Amy Stein Portfolio
Amy Stein Blog
A Photo Editor
Conscientious

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