Saturday 24 December 2022

Connections.

 It is important to have contacts in any industry especially the arts. Having contacts can be helpful in many ways such as promoting your work or giving you opportunities within the industry. They also help you gain other contacts and so on.

In my work, I am using the tutors for advice on which direction I am going and how to display my work in the future. They have also suggested I look at other artists and photographers who are interested in the same context as myself. I also speak to several professional photographers online who are either on Facebook or Instagram. They inform me of exhibitions in my area and give me feedback on my work. 


I have just joined Redeye in the last few weeks so this is another opportunity to expand my network. As well as this, I go to Blackpool Grundy Art Gallery and see the latest exhibitions and meet people in the industry. I am hoping here to lay the groundwork for one day exhibiting my work in the gallery.

I have recently updated my LinkedIn profile and adding professional content to all my social media platforms. I work 40 hours a week and sleep in the day due to working nights. This puts constraints in my path over what connections I can make. However, I am attempting to get out more in the spring and summer to meet new people. 



art exhibitions in blackpool - Bing images



Career Plan

 My plans for the future include finishing my degree her in Blackpool. During this time I am hoping to gain practical knowledge of how the photography industry works and find my part within it. I was told by my tutor in my first year that I will find my style and photographic identity in my second year. I was a bit incredulous to this because I was struggling in my first year. However, I have began to find my identity through appropriation of images and creating photomontages which are of a political nature. 

Now that I have found my identity and I am becoming more confident in expressing myself through my images, I feel more reedy to consider my career as a photographer. I have been busy buying things for a studio such as lighting, flashes, back drops and lenses for the future. I hope to do my masters at Preston in the coming years and understand the world of curation. I am interested in history as a subject and i enjoy photography. It seems a good idea to use the two.

A handy way of realizing your strengths, weaknesses, limitations of the market is to use a Swot Analyses of your sector to realize possible avenues you can explore. 





A resource like this is a useful way of achieving success in the business. 

I intend to finish my degree and take part in some competitions at a local and national level to hopefully gain some experience of the process and hopefully win. I intend also to promote my work online using free platforms such as Instagram and LinkedIn. I am also going to find a way to disseminate my work for others to see. I am currently working on creating a zine with a concept in which all my images adhere too. I also hop to create more in the future and one day, get a website with my images included. 

The hope is that this will give me exposure for perspective clients to see. 




Redeye Photography (Joined)

Redeye is a  non for profit Community Benefit Society set up to support photographers, from armatures to the more experienced. Redeye assist photographers to gain confidence in the field and create networking opportunities. As well as this, Redeye hosts events and gives an insight into trends in the market. 

Redeye also offers a critiquing service for aspiring photographers to receive advice and feedback on any images submitted. 

I joined Redeye a few weeks ago and I have set up a direct debit which is only £2:50 a month. The next critiquing service is on 30th January. I am hoping to enter this and gain some feedback on my work from professionals.

https://www.redeye.org.uk/


I chose the Student membership which works out at £30 a year. 

"A Redeye membership offers opportunities designed to help you advance your photography and your career. It's aimed at anyone who is serious about photography, whether or not you are a full time or part time photographer, artist, collector, lecturer, tutor, gallery owner or curator. Membership runs for one year and is renewable and paid online annually through PayPal"



Advantages include. 


 SubscriberMember
 https://www.redeye.org.uk/joinSubscribe
Free
Join Redeye
£50 per year
(or £4 per month)
£30 for students
(or £2.50 per month)
Monthly email newsletter with latest news
Submit events, exhibitions, opportunities and news to include on the site
Discounts on all Redeye activities (up to £320 last year)
Up to 25% off equipment rental, studio hire and other services
Member-only events
Member-only commissions, bursaries and work opportunities
Showcase your work with free online profile page
Priority notice of all our events
Member newsletter with offers, invitations and opportunities
Advantages  to joining Redeye are above. 

I'm hoping to have a critical analyses of my work before 

Friday 9 December 2022

Networking

 Networking is expanding a circle which will give you advantages in the industry. Examples one might try at first are Facebook, Instagram and Pinterest-these platforms get your work noticed. Other ways include, expanding your social network by joining photographic groups which are local and going out with set briefs. 

Other avenues to use are Redeye and Doom I joined Redeye and took advantage of the student offer of £2:50 a month. I have both a Facebook and Instagram account where my work can be accessed by others. Most of my work is accessible for others to see on both these platforms. I also put my work in local photographic groups on Facebook for others to see. 






I have just joined Redeye to expand my opportunities in the photography sector. This gives me  opportunities such as events, work showcased online and blogs with member of the Redeye community. These opportunities, I intend to explore next year. 

Copyright, the law and appropriation of art and photography.

 Copyright is vital for anybody in the creative sector. It means that those who create, don't have their intellectual property stolen or reused without permission. A good source of information is Copyright notice: digital images, photographs and the internet - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

A user of imagery will require permission from the person who took the image to use them. There are exceptions to this such as if you work for a company and the images where shot in their time. This especially applies to myself. Images I may take at college, can be used up to 3 years after I leave. This would be used for such things as promotion of the arts department. 

Direct Gov states...

"The person who creates an image (“the creator”) will generally be the first owner of the copyright. However, there are various situations in which this is not necessarily the case. For photos, it may depend on when the photo was taken, as different rules may apply if the photograph was taken before 1989. Creators also have what are known as moral rights (see example below on stopping the use of an image if you disapprove).

If an image was created as part of the creator’s employment, rather than by a freelance creator, the employer will generally own the copyright. It is also possible that, in instances where a person has arranged equipment and made artistic decisions prior to taking a photo, but wasn’t the one to press the trigger, the person making the arrangements could own the copyright. An example of this could be where a photographer has made the creative choices in setting up a shot, but got an assistant to actually press the trigger.

The creator of an image may choose to allow a person or organization to license the work on their behalf, license the copyright directly themselves, or “assign” (transfer) the copyright to another person. The term ‘licensing’ means giving another person or organization permission to use a work such as an image, often in return for payment and/or on certain conditions for a specific period of time. A Copyright Notice on assigning copyright is available"


Sometimes permission is not required...

Is permission always required to copy or use an image?

Sometimes permission is not required from the copyright holder to copy an image, such as if the copyright has expired. Permission is also not required if the image is used for specific acts permitted by law (“permitted acts”, or sometimes referred to as “exceptions to copyright”). People can use copyright works without permission from the copyright owner, such as for private study or non-commercial research, although some exceptions are not available for photographs.

If permission is required to use an image, permission will need to be obtained from all the copyright owners, whether it is a single image with numerous creators, a licensed image, or an image with embedded copyright works. Sometimes there will be one person or organization that can authorize permission for all the rights in that image; in other cases separate permission may be needed from several individual rights owners.

The creator of a copyright work such as an image will usually have right to be acknowledged when their work has been used, provided they have asserted this right. If you are unsure whether or not the creator has asserted this right, then it is recommended that you provide a sufficient acknowledgement when using their work.

Often, copyright images have a name, a C and a year. However, this is not always the case. Ownership is seen in the metadata seen within the image. It is important you always get permission. 






AOP how to join (the-aop.org)

I recently created images which used appropriation as a theme. This involved using images such as painting such as The Mona Lisa and recontextualization of their meaning by adding elements to the image to give them a contemporary meaning. This is not illegal (in some cases) as the creators original meaning is still evident on the image. However, the recontextualizing of the image has given the image a second meaning also. However, this usually applies to older photographs or works of art where there is no copyright. More modern images and works of art are open to recent copyright laws. 



My 3 examples of appropriation Mona Liza ,American Gothic and Turner with elements added by myself. This is recontextualizing the image. 

According to Appropriation | Tate

"Appropriation art raises questions of originality, authenticity and authorship, and belongs to the long modernist tradition of art that questions the nature or definition of art itself. Appropriation artists were influenced by the 1934 essay by the German philosopher Walter Benjamin, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, and received contemporary support from the American critic Rosalind Krauss in her 1985 book The Originality of the Avant-Garde and Other Modernist Myths"

Appropriation art has been no stranger to controversy by those claiming copyright. According to The tension between copyright law and Appropriation art: where is the line between artistic innovation and stealing? (theartnewspaper.com)

"

 On 9 December 2021, the Andy Warhol Foundation filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with the United States Supreme Court, asking the nation’s highest court to take up an appeal challenging the Second Circuit’s decision that a series of portraits by Warhol of the musician Prince were not transformative and did not make fair use of Lynn Goldsmith’s relevant photograph. Goldsmith’s response to the Foundation’s petition is due in January 2022. It will take a few months before we know whether the Supreme Court grants or denies the petition. It should be noted that Cariou filed a petition for a writ of certiorari before the US Supreme Court in the Cariou v. Prince et al. litigation, which the Supreme Court denied. It will be interesting to see what the Supreme Court decides with regards to the Foundation’s petition. We will be closely following the developments"

Qualities required for employment and attributes.

 Universities and colleges promote attributes the employers require for employment in their sector. Pretty much all sectors are the same with a few distinctions. There are what are required by the employee to maintain a job in any organisation. The university states that graduates will be prepared for the work environment in the C21. 

                            Graduate Attributes | Blackpool and The Fylde College

The university is confident that students will be "committed to lifelong learning and development"

This is very important in a fluid sector of technological advances such as photography. It demonstrates graduates can be flexible. Other attributes include-

Teamwork-working in teams and independent is vital for any company.

"Personal and intellectual autonomy" the ability to work on ones own initiative is important in any job.

"Communication, information and digital licence" understanding all aspects of IT and copyright is essential.

"Global citizenship" the ability of graduates to understand society in a local context and global context

"Research, scholarship and enquiry skills" The ability to research relevant information and be inquisitive.  

"Enterprise and Entrepreneurial awareness and capabilities" Ability to exploit opportunities which are available in the marketplace. 

"Ability to solve complex and unforeseen problems with creative imagination" Finally, the ability to adapt and overcome problems at work in an innovative way. 


Such skill are seen as transferable skills that can be taken into any sector of work. Since doing Photography at Blackpool and the Fylde College, I have had to adapt through some difficult briefs. This has made me understand different digital platforms. Such as Photoshop and other Adobe products. I was able to bring a lot of the qualities I have learned in social care to college. Such as working under pressure, flexibility, lone working and communication in various ways-written and verbal.  


Saturday 3 December 2022

Competitions

 Getting involved in competitions can be a way of breaking into the industry through both recognitions and experience of competing. The process of getting involved in competitions also is beneficial because it gives you experience even if you lose. The competing process helps us to improve our practice and we gain experience in other technical processes which benefit us in the future. IF you win, then your options are increased through prize money and recognition. 

Companies which conduct competitions can vary from local newspapers, local photography groups to bigger organisations such as AOP and Sony-a rule of thumb being, the bigger the industry hosting the competition, the greater the reward due. 

Examples such as-

Photo Contest, Photography Contests & Photography Competitions (photocontestinsider.com)

Student competition | World Photography Organisation

AOP find a photographer (the-aop.org)

Join Redeye | Redeye


Many offer also tips in competing for photographers and different categories to compete in. As well as online competitions, local photographic society's offer competitions to members. This gives you an opportunity to gain some valuable feedback and meet people with similar interests in your area. 

Blackpool Photography Group


It is advisable to do research into the competitions and to understand rights of photographic property. For example, intellectual and property rights need to be established before entering. 

I am going to enter a few competitions in 2023 to test the water. 




                                                     photography competitions - Bing images


Update. 
I have entered 12 competitions this year in total. I am enjoying the experience and noticing what judges want from the winning images. I am also getting good at having a stock of images which I can use for competitions. For example, if a competition comes up for night photography, i can use images taken this year of Blackpool at night. I will carry on taking part in competitions. 



Culture-how it is determined by the internet. Music and photography examined.

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