All posts by Jeff Curto

Camera Position 128 : Carol Golemboski’s Psychometry App

Photographer Carol Golemboski has taken the idea of an electronic book – or any sort of electronic presentation of photography, farther than any I’ve yet seen. Her iPad app Psychometry combines images, text, video, interactive panoramas, extensive background on how the images were produced, a virtual darkroom experience and myriad other amazing details. It is like a book in that it’s a presentation of Carol’s work, but it’s unlike any book you’ve ever seen because it’s so comprehensive, engaging and filled with so many different ways of showing us the photographs and helping us interact with and learn about them.

Many photographers who grew up in my generation understood the monograph to be one of the solid culminations of a photographic project. In today’s world of publishing, we are confronted with an interesting yet challenging landscape where anyone can produce a print-on-demand book of their work on their own, even as hard copy books seem to be less popular than they were in the past. Electronic books have arrived, yet are often one-dimensional; a simple screen-rendering of the hardcover book that came before.

What’s even more interesting is that Carol’s photography is completely darkroom based. The Psychometry series of images is completely dependent on the darkroom process to make the images look and feel the way they do. What the app presents, then, is a completely digital-age way of looking at the old-world method of making photographs using silver-based materials. The app’s design takes advantage of the tactile nature of the images themselves, giving us a sense of a hand-made environment, even as we interact with it on our glossy-screened iPads.
If you have an iPad, this app might be one of the most inspirational and engaging apps you can find.

Check it out here: Psychometry – Photographs by Carol Golemboski

 

Title Screen for the Psychometry iPad app - Carol Golemboski
Title Screen for the Psychometry iPad app – Carol Golemboski

Camera Position 127 : Monochrome Followup

I had lots and lots of great ideas from podcast listeners about Camera Position 125, “Thinking in Monochrome.” Several listeners suggested a digital tool that I’d not thought of before and that was to set the camera for B&W, but to also set “Raw + JPEG” as the file format. Other listeners talked about the great options provided by electronic viewfinders on some cameras that allow you to actually see the framed scene in black and white. And that reminded me of the monochrome viewing filter I recently unearthed as I was packing up my office for a move.

Italy_2012_ 53 - Version 2
Boat, Burano, Venezia, 2012 – Photograph by Jeff Curto

Camera Position 126 : Arno Says “Stay On The Bus”

We all try to spend time with photographs by photographers whose work we admire. We spend time trying to figure out how to emulate their work, then produce work that is similar in style to what they do. But here is the rub; our problem is that once we get to a point where those photographs are good, solid derivatives of what our photographic influences are, what’s next? How do we make our pictures so that they are different in style and substance from those who came before us?

My friend, the great contemporary photographer Arno Rafael Minkkinen, has nicely wrapped up a set of ideas about this problem in this transcription of a talk he gave called “Stay On The Bus”

Links for this episode:

1976 - Kuusamo, Finland - photograph by Arno Raphael Minkkinen
1976 – Kuusamo, Finland – photograph by Arno Raphael Minkkinen

 

Camera Position 125 : Thinking in Monochrome

I grew up making black and white photographs. It’s what I love the most about photography and the way I have long thought about the photographic image. But the digital revolution has spawned a dilemma; the digital camera sees in color, and I have to shift my mind to think in black and white.

I’m intrigued by the difference in mindset that happens when you have a camera that you know can only take black and white images and when you have one that you know can make both color and black and white.

Post some of the images you make in black and white at the locations below.

Matera, Basilicata, 2010 - Photograph by Jeff Curto
Matera, Basilicata, 2010 – Photograph by Jeff Curto

Camera Position 124 : Light and Shadow

The word “photography” comes from a combination of two Greek words; “photos” (light) and “graphos” (writing or marking). So, “photography” means to “write with light” and light has a counterpart, shadow, something for light to play off of.

I’m giving Camera Position listeners an “assignment” to work with these two fundamental building blocks of photography. Go out, shoot some images with this idea in mind and, if you’d like, upload some to either the new Jeff Curto Podcasts Facebook Page or the Camera Position Flickr group so we can all take a look.

Links for this episode:

Alberobello 2012, Photograph by Jeff Curto
Alberobello 2012, Photograph by Jeff Curto
Roma, 2012 - Photograph by Jeff Curto
Roma, 2012 – Photograph by Jeff Curto