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Photographers' Think Tank: The Brooks Institute Focuses on the Mind Behind the Camera


Article # : 12437 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 7 / 1987  2,008 Words
Author : Peter Skinner
Peter Skinner, an Australian journalist and photographer, lives in Santa Barbara, California. He contributes to photographic and general interest publications.

       Photography, in its many applications and facets, ranks as the most powerful of visual communications, and if the adage that a picture is worth a thousand words is true, then photography's influence is even greater.
       
        Literally, photography is writing with light, but more recently it is often referred to as painting with light, because in essence this is what the photographer does. He uses light as a painter does a brush, gently applying it here for subtle colors, more heavily and with greater color saturation elsewhere for dramatic effect.
       
        Photography is a blending of art, science and, if you want to make it your profession, business. Many aspiring photographers forget that for every hour spent behind the camera there are three or four spent attending to business matters - marketing, accounting, establishing a rapport with clients, and developing all the other intricacies of a successful business.
       
        Historically, photography is a young science and, like most sciences, it has been dramatically affected by sweeping technological advances. Gone are the days of coating glass plates with light-sensitive emulsions and of lugging around boxes of plates and cartloads of equipment for a relatively simple assignment.
       
        The Modern Photojournalist
       
        The great Civil War photographer Matthew Brady would envy the modern photojournalist with his motorized 35-mm cameras, the array of optically superb lenses, sophisticated portable lighting equipment, and extremely ... (1996 of 12636 Characters)
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