Wednesday 18 June 2014

Vice: Ryan McGinley's Advice to Young Photographers: Don't Compete

I thought I would post this because I found it very influential. 

Ryan McGinley's Advice to Young Photographers: Don't Compete




He opens, "Everyone always says it helps to picture [the audience] naked to calm my nerves. Unfortunately, that’s another day at work for me. By my fourth year in school, I was shooting every day and every night. I photographed every little thing – all my food, doorways covered in graffiti and my friends and roommates. I tortured my first boyfriend, Marc, by capturing each moment of our relationship. I was obsessed with documenting my life. So that’s my advice to you: Find something to be obsessed with, and then obsess over it. Don't compete; find what's uniquely yours. Take your experience of life and connect that with your knowledge of photographic history. Mix it all together, and create an artistic world that we can enter into. 
If you only like shooting cell phone photos, then do that. If your dad works at a construction site that looks cool, use it. If your mum breeds poodles, then put them in your photographs. Use the camera to take what you know that others don’t, what you can access that others can’t, and the people or things you connect with, to construct your own world.
Be busy. Seek and find a way to do what it is you want to do. Identify what that thing is and do it. Don’t stand around too long having conversations about it. Do it. Refine it. Do it more. Try it a different way. Keep at it until you break through to the next level. Don’t talk or think yourself out of doing it. Put one foot in front of the other and let it happen organically.
I realised I could make intimate pictures of strangers. It was a breakthrough for me. I found that most people liked being photographed; they like being paid attention to and being told to do things they normally wouldn’t do. I learned that all I needed to do was ask.
Say yes to almost everything and try new things. Don’t be afraid to fail, and don’t be afraid to work hard. Do your pictures – don’t try and do somebody else’s pictures. Don’t get lost inside your head, and don’t worry what camera you’re using.
I once heard the legendary indie director Derek Jarman had three rules for making his art films: 'Show up early, hold your own light and don’t expect to get paid.' That always stuck with me. Approach art like it’s your job. Show up for photography every day for eight hours. Take it as seriously as a doctor would medicine.

Remember, it’s romantic as hell what we do.

Source: http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/ryan-mcginleys-advice-to-young-photographers