The Do’s and Don’ts of Graduate Studies: Maxims from the Chair
“The Do’s and Don’ts of Graduate Studies: Maxims from the Chair, outlining the art and science of photography with prescriptive pragmatism, conceptual insight and a healthy dose of stern humor.”
The Do’s
- Do something old in a new way
- Do something new in an old way
- Do something new in a new way, Whatever works… works
- Do it sharp, if you can’t, call it art
- Do it in the computer — if it can be done there
- Do fifty of them — you will definitely get a show
- Do it big, if you cant do it big, do it red
- If all else fails turn it upside down, if it looks good it might work
- Do Bend your knees
- If you don’t know what to do, look up or down — but continue looking
- Do celebrities — if you do a lot of them, you’ll get a book
- Connect with others — network
- Edit it yourself
- Design it yourself
- Publish it yourself
- Edit, When in doubt shoot more
- Edit again
- Read Darwin, Marx, Joyce, Freud, Einstein, Benjamin, McLuhan, and Barth
- See Citizen Kane ten times
- Look at everything — stare
- Construct your images from the edge inward
- If it’s the “real world,” do it in color
- If it can be done digitally — do it
- Be self centered, self involved, and generally entitled and always pushing — and damned to hell for doing it
- Break all rules, except the chairman’s
The Don’ts
- Don’t do it about yourself — or your friend — or your family
- Don’t dare photograph yourself nude
- Don’t look at old family albums
- Don’t hand color it
- Don’t write on it
- Don’t use alternative process — if it ain’t straight do it in the computer
- Don’t gild the lily — AKA less is more
- Don’t go to video when you don’t know what else to do
- Don’t photograph indigent, people, particularly in foreign lands
- Don’t whine, just produce
from “The Education of a Photographer”. Charles H. Traub, Steven Heller and Adam B. Bell