Late last year I started a photo project titled Blurry Days, which has been completed and can be found here.
My previous projects have been more documentary-style -- I wanted to try something more overtly stylistic. Something less serious with a bit more pop.
With the exception of one set, these photos were shot on digital (a number of them on my iPhone). That year I had become quite comfortable with the way I've been doing color correction and I needed to push myself to try something different. Blurry Days was the perfect exercise.
This project focuses mostly on color and the relationship an image has on the other when viewed together.
Curation is something I've been finding to be more and more crucial, especially while working on this project and at the same time redesigning this website - the effect a neighboring photo has is significant. For this project, I felt like having each set of images as a pair enhanced the overall experience compared to if each photo was standalone.
Each set required some sense of order or proper contrast. Unlike my previous projects, I feel like the bulk of the work in this project was in post-process and curation. I'd go as far to say this project was born out of the question - is curation an art form in itself?
Neighboring photos have the ability to make or break a photo viewing experience.
When it comes to social media platforms such as Instagram, you only have so much control over how your audience is going to consume your content. A post is viewed alongside all the other things that could possibly make their way onto someone's home page. Yes, you’re gaining exposure for your content, but is this actually the kind of exposure you want? Do you really want your work to be presented in this sort of nondeterministic fashion? There's this emphasis on selling a single post or photo as a standalone, maximizing engagement. It makes sense though - shorter attention spans, less expectations. No context needed.
As a creative, this just seems like an unhealthy mindset to be in -- compromising your ideas for exposure (where people still aren't even giving your work full attention). Do the likes and views actually add value and meaning to your work?
For an image to be viewed either in isolation or as a part of a whole, that requires intentionality. I genuinely believe that photos can be enjoyed on a deeper level when consumed in an intentional manner, where the context (neighboring photos & content) matters and enhances the overall experience.