The photographer William Eggleston has famously made a career out of democratizing photography. He calls it photographing the ordinary. We know him for his color photographs of Memphis, TN - fields, roads, tricycles, parking lots, homes, churches, funerals, people, trash bins, store fronts, cars, gas stations, light poles, and dolls, the list goes on and on. But if you have ever lived in the south, you will recognize this world. It’s a place and a time, similar to others in America, but still somehow different. That’s the mark of a good photographer, something that makes you recognize a style, something that makes you want to say “That looks like an Eggleston.”
And yet…and yet… people want to take photographs more than ever. Technology drives the desire, and makes it easy to snap the photo. Who doesn’t take photographs? For the amateur, the biggest problem is what to do with them. In the past, we pasted them into albums, and passed the albums around. Today, we put them on ipads and pass the ipads around. But still, there are so many of them. And how do you pass the ipad around to everyone? And what do you do with the rest? And, just as important, do people really want to look at your photos?
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The photographer William Eggleston has famously made a career out of democratizing photography. He calls it photographing the ordinary. We know him for his color photographs of Memphis, TN - fields, roads, tricycles, parking lots, homes, churches, funerals, people, trash bins, store fronts, cars, gas stations, light poles, and dolls, the list goes on and on. But if you have ever lived in the south, you will recognize this world. It’s a place and a time, similar to others in America, but still somehow different. That’s the mark of a good photographer, something that makes you recognize a style, something that makes you want to say “That looks like an Eggleston.”
And yet…and yet… people want to take photographs more than ever. Technology drives the desire, and makes it easy to snap the photo. Who doesn’t take photographs? For the amateur, the biggest problem is what to do with them. In the past, we pasted them into albums, and passed the albums around. Today, we put them on ipads and pass the ipads around. But still, there are so many of them. And how do you pass the ipad around to everyone? And what do you do with the rest? And, just as important, do people really want to look at your photos?
Sections