Sunday, January 5, 2014

Lefty Loosey, Righty Tighty


All art forms have “tight” and “loose” styles.  It’s the difference between classical music and jazz, sonnets and poetry slams, photo-realism and abstract expressionism.  
And of course photography does, too.  Tim Walker’s work is a lot more planned and orchestrated than, say, Annemarieke van Drimmelen's, and is done with a lot more attention to technical things like lighting and exposure and composition.

 (O’2ND Spring 2011 Campaign | Sigrid Agren, Julija & Molly by Tim Walker)



(The Libertine Magazine.Silver Angel.Dorothea Barth Jorgensen By Annemarieke Van Drimmelen For Lula Magazine #15.Fall 2012.8)

 


But the thing is, Walker’s work isn’t JUST about these technical things.  He’s not a musician on stage perfectly playing scales.  The technical quality supports a creative vision that’s far, far grander than nailing the exposure.  And van Drimmelen’s work isn’t merely about lack of technical “correctness.”  The loose, moody style supports a much grander creative vision, too.  What lurks in those “underexposed” shadows—wouldn’t we all like to know?
Today, technical execution is a creative element like any other, and needs to be chosen as such.  “Perfect” has no value in and of itself, and really has no meaning, anyway.  Doing something like lighting a 70s themed shoot in a way considered perfect in the 1950s makes no sense at all. 

“Perfect” is, today, a variable, not a constant. 
With this in mind, the most important bag of tricks you can have is a flexible bag that, like a screw, can turn left and right, to loosen or tighten your technique as required.  No more hammering a screw into a hole that doesn’t fit.