What I like about French philosophers: They inspire you, they don't seem so much wanting to "prove their point" (as esp. American and German philosophers do). Similar with photographs. When they scream "Look, I made it to the mountain top!" or "Look, how great this holiday evening was!", we simply cannot share this emotion. Ironically a wedding photographer pictures not his own emotions but those of the people on the wedding. That is why they are a grateful audience.
There are some random photos that spark very intense feelings in me, while could be nothing to someone else. Sometimes it’s about to time in my life that I’ve been and it just reminds me of it. As photography saved me many times, mentally.
I feel like each video essay you put out surpasses the one before and that is ASTOUNDING, since they are all so good, consistently good and rich in substance! Everything is distilled to pure quality, visually and thematically too! 💯
After a wedding I leave it one week before even LOOKING at the images. I edit another month later. I try and tell the clients to be as patient as possible, it's about editing, leaving it, coming back, having a look again, retouch the edits, continue on, so on so forth. These images they will have forever, for me they leave the nest relatively quickly. The longer they leave it with me the more gold I find and I steer the images better. It's just hard to explain that. Maybe I bookmark this video and copy the url into every post wedding email, heh.
Such a great video as always. After watching your videos I set out with my camera for a day just to take pictures. I’d never done it before but it was great fun.
Similar parallels to rhetoric - studium being logos, and punctum being the blend of ethos and the all-important pathos triggered in the audience. Possibly, Logos = Studium; Ethos = Photographer's eye and timing of when they press the shutter; Punctum = What is triggered in the viewer/ audience. Thanks, Jamie, for a really thought-provoking 10-minutes.
This is not a RUclips video, this is a piece of art, a documentary. very impressive editing and pace, and all these little things like fonts reflecting the mood of the narrative. wow!
This is why I watch every video you upload Jamie! So interesting! I’m currently dealing with structuring my book from Mexico City and I actually though about splitting the photographs up based on where they were shot. But now, I’m certain that I’m going to structure the photographs based on what they show and what they convey. Thanks for this!
Thank you. Curating a pagination for a book can really change what story it tells. Juxtaposing 2 images on a spread can add a whole new meaning that isn't present in the photos individually. Best of luck with it!
A year is a long enough time to feel differently about your shots, but that process doesn't end there, it continues to change throughout ones life. I delete obvious failures and lesser alternate shots, but keep *everything* else. Thanks for such a thoughtful video.
Love this video. My grandfather (painter) always taught me true art must touch the viewer without an explanation, as soon as you add a explanation you are controlling the audience's thoughts and no longer touching it.
Your presets are the only ones I've ever bought. Very happy with them. I feel like they're the closest thing I can get to answering "what might Jamie try to do with this photo I've taken?" and I'll throw some of them on as a wild card curve ball new starting point which throws the edit out of the box whenever I'm stuck in a box or otherwise out of ideas. I used to see presets as "here, copy what I do" or "if you don't know how to edit, I'll do it for you" but now I appreciate them as being able to bring in a new perspective on how a photo might be able to feel and it's actually expanded my understanding of editing, not diminished it or made me lazy as I'd previously assumed presets were intended to do.
My master's is in poetry, so I first learned about Barthes through literary theory. (1) I think you did a great job summarizing his work here, Jamie, and as always, great video. :) (2) I find just about everything Barthes suggests to be full of air. Sometimes, I think his explanation fits my reaction to others' work. But, I can honestly find no punctum in several iconic photographs that resonate deeply with me and indeed, the context of their message was revealed to me by the image alone; I had no prior knowledge of the subject matter prior to viewing the photos. His theory can't be applied to all photos everywhere. (3) I'm an old-school structuralist so maybe I'm just biased too much against post-modern french philosophers. Because biased I most certainly am. :) For my money, Propp, Levi-Strauss and Joseph Campbell constructed much more compelling arguments than anything in Barthes' "Mythologies." If literature was his wheelhouse, just how on-the-mark could he be with photography? But yes, I'm a crank like that. (4) I fully agree with your conclusion that portfolio photos should stand on their own. I've no special or significant insight here, but I think one gets better at being self-objective over time, even though it never becomes easy. (That's at least been true with my own writing.)
Jamie, you have helped me a lot in my photography career, you and books like "Photographic Seeing" by Andreas Feininger and "Complete Photography" by National Geographic, with all this I have developed into an award winning photographer from the US gov and I just wanted to thank you. I took photography all four years of highschool and this was my last, my teacher told me before I left I'd be used as an example for the other students that are coming after me. Your work helped me start thinking less like a photographer and more like an artist. I need to be an artist to be a photographer, so thank you for helping me unlock that.
I’ve just discovered your channel and after having being living in sort of a languishing void of the past year it has really reignited me in a creative way. Thank you so much
Another great video from Jamie, Barthes can sometimes seem irrelevant in today's world of photography and daunting to newcomers. Breaking it down like this, with great context and narrative shows how relevant his work still is today.
This puts into words something I have always wondered when visiting galleries; there's the moment you see a work for the first time and start to wonder how it makes you feel, and then you read the artist's exhibit statement and find yourself wondering (often subconsciously), 'did I interpret that work correctly?'
What a video. Bravo. 👏 As a wedding photographer, this is something I’ve been suspicious of when editing, and when choosing images on my portfolio. I am very emotionally attached to a ‘day’ and find I have to almost leave the images after the shoot for a week, just to remove my emotional attachment and enable me to start the edit process. Thank you for this, and for having a channel that focusses on photography. It’s so needed and very welcome. If our paths cross one day, drinks are on me. 👍
As always, James, very thought provoking. I align with the concept that our photos need to have a "punctum" to create that emotional connection. But as soon as we place that as our objective we are shooting for the audience and not ourselves. After decades of client work it's been hard as hell to get those voices out of my head.
I don't know what's better. The presentation or the content. I revisited my work from the 80's a year ago. It made me regret not having every single image I ever made. I try to be honest and post only images I can stand by. Sometimes I remove images from Instagram because editing is equally important as creating. Learning about 'punctum' is like getting dealt a new set of cards. Let's see how I play my next hand. You've got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em ...
Detaching myself emotionally from my photos is so difficult. I guess I really have to let them sit and marinate for awhile before I look at them. What a brilliant video.
This was so profound! I've always wondered why certain photos evoke deep feelings within me, but have never been able to put a word for it. I've also wondered why some photos that are obviously composed to speak on a political or cultural level often make me feel nothing at all.
The way you make and edit your videos, not even one fraction of a second is being wasted. Also, great topics - you always provide us with new stuff and for that I am gratefull.
A couple of years ago I found myself looking at old photos on my computer and decided to make a book of the most interesting photos for each year. Some I consider the best of the year but most of then are ones that stood out for me when reviewing the photos from that year. I make a book of all of them and a calendar for friends and family of the last year of twelve of the images. I get my three children (23,18,12 yrs old) to help me narrow down the images for my calendar. I am always surprised and curious about the ones they choose because they are not only always my first choice. The books are not expensive but give me a chance to look at how my photography has changed over time and does not let them get shuttered away in the depths of my hard drive. Great video. I always find that they stretch and exercise my brain. Thanks
In my 4th (Honours) year of a photomedia degree and this is one of the most precise and useful summaries of Barthes concept that I have found. Thank you Jamie and I shall be recommending this (and your other videos) to my classmates.
This could have been about 20 minutes longer, this is the stuff of real photography! There is so much to discus down this rabbit hole. I personally have a process that has me revisiting shoots over years with regular revisions and reworking to arrive at the "final" image. I actively interrogate my idea of why the image is there at all, why it matters outside my own attachment until that attachment changes into something else. I actually try to think of it as breaking down my own ego abut the thing until it earns a new place for me. Obviously that in itself is a new presentation of my ego but I feel at least it's been more earned! Your videos are among the best on youtube!
RUclips is full of "best camera under 999 bros" and gear geeks - but only so few artists. We need to keep Jamie working for our education and improvement.
Another fascinating and thought-provoking vlog. Two inferences from Barthes that do not appear to follow: whilst understanding the meaning of an image does require being familiar with the topic, it does not require believing in the message (anymore than it does with text), and being familiar with the topic and believing in the message does not imply that it fails to trigger a deep emotional connection with us. That the photographer does not *fully* control how the images they make are received by an audience is fairly obvious, I think. And that an image's "punctum" depends on the subject is also fairly obvious, since we respond as individuals. Whilst some "punctum" will be idiosyncratic others will be approaching the universal. So the "punctum" being entirely subjective (i.e. dependent on the subject) does not imply that it will be entirely idiosyncratic or, hence, that the photographer lacks all control. Human subjectivity is rooted in aspects of our common humanity, and a photographer tuned into that common humanity can exert significant (if never complete) control over the emotional impact of the image. This is what makes anthropology and psychology possible - they seek to understand the culturally specific or idiosyncratic in terms of the more general or even universal aspects of the human condition.
Thank you for very clearly expressed thoughts about notions that have often been misconstrued. Probably the best presentation on the subject I have ever heard. To be remembered, Barthes's point of view was that of a "spectator", not "operator" (not a photographer), and he acknwoledged it. His musing on photography are definitely interesting from such a vantage point (spectator's). The concept of the "punctum" with its load of subjectivity can however be diverted in a useful way for an "operator" or a "critic" and added to their vocabulary to talk about photographs, just because of the fact that it refers to a "point" or something that attracts attention in a photograph and can be consciously or unconsciously included by the photographer in the same way as some idiosyncratic spices are added to a known recipe (the "studium"). Punctum taken as such can become a more interesting word/concept to talk about photographs (one could argue that in W. Klein's photograph, the hand without a body holding the gun and/or the look of the child toward the photographer are "puncta" that constitute the tension and ambiguity of the scene (studium). In any case "bravo!".
This makes me wonder what other books have I not yet read but probably should. Perhaps there could be a list of book recommendations in the future? This concept of a book summary was executed very well, and incredibly enjoyable.
Other classics are Susan Sontag's "On Photography" (makes most photogaphers gringe, but a good read, one often used as a reference), Vilém Flusser's "Toward a Philosophy of Photography", Lewis Baltz's "Texts", Robert Adams's "Beauty in Photography", John Berger's "About Looking"... for a start.
Bruno Chalifour I read Sontag's book and immediately gave it away. Her histories of famous photographers were interesting but I could not accept her conclusions about them; e.g., that Diane Arbus' suicide proved that her work was sincere.
you and Sean Tucker are the best (photography related) content creators on your RUclips right now! You keep me motivated and I learn so much in each video! thanks you!
And Dan Milnor! And some old Art of Photography with Ted Forbes.. yes! Edit: Oh wait and John Free .. check this guy out. He’s old and wise and loves life hard. He’s coming out with a book on rail yard tramps soon!! His first book, surprisingly!
check James Popsys, he is someone redefining the photography (to me at least) in the sense of follow the rules, learn the rules, and break the rules of composition. He takes photos about the objects instead of the objects.
What I did more last year than this year was that I waited more time to develop the film I used, but also I first take a look at my scans briefly when I get them, and wait some time before considering them fully
@@jamiewindsor This reminds me of something that the Gangnam Style guy said. He was being interviewed on some British entertainment show, and was asked about creating this phenomenon that is Gangnam style. He said I didn't create it. All I did was write a song. The public created the phenomenon. He was actually very humble about it. I wish American actors and musicians would be that way, but most of them have an arrogance beyond all bounds.
Thanks for another thought provoking video. I had this exact experience over the past few months going through old photos and finding photos jump out at me that I hadn’t thought much of before.
Jamie, your videos just.....hit and touch on things that are so simple yet i feel that i come out the other side fresh and new with info. I really appreciate the efforts and the amount of care thats put in.
Probably my most popular image I completely missed the first time around. A full 6 years later I re-visted the shoot and it completely hit me, I retouched it put it out there and then started selling it in galleries. Sometimes we are not the best at editing our own work and need to come back with fresh eyes (not just a day later, but a year or so).
Hi ))) Nice video! One thing that is really common these days, is for people to get on a sugar or caffeine high. And then they sit down to work. Being first a horse trainer and acupuncturist for horses - taught me that I have to be well grounded to get good results. And this does mean eating the right foods and keeping away from caffeine. It also often means taking off shoes to get the sole right on the earth. In my office, I have a copper wire coil that I can put one foot on and get grounded while editing. ))) Thank you for your video! I enjoyed watching it! ))) Gary
Excellent video. I actually agree with the premise. I started questioning and analyzing my work over the pandemic, and I came to the same conclusion. Why there is a representative meaning to the photograph that was intended either in the moment or well before clicking the shutter button, the part that hits the hardest is something that happens upon viewing the image not taking it. The striking power of something happens to me while taking the photo, but it really comes in its own when looking at the print or processing the photo. And that is something I cannot really plan as it is a response to the image. And, I imagine what stands out as striking to others is different than to me. And that is wonderful.
It is not really easy to read and understand Barthes, but he's so relevant to the subject when it comes to photography. Camera Lucida and The Rhetoric of the Image are of great value to any visual artist or to anyone who wants to grasp a bigger picture of Postmodernism and see how it reflects on today's society and culture :)
I read alot of photography theorists during my masters last year and I found his book to be one of the most interesting i read, although not necessarily the most mind boggling. I think his inexperience in photography at moments detracts from the book, but I also think anyone and everyone is a viewer, and as a general statement on art itself, it's a thought provoking piece. I also subscribe to the idea that his book was less a commentary on photography and more a mourning love letter to his deceased mother.
It was definitely a veiled tribute to his mother. I found that aspect of it verging almost into cliché. Ironically, I think this was the bit that confirmed for me that the punctum was completely created by the viewer and utterly irrelevant to anyone else.
Thanks so much for this succinct look at Camera Lucida and the clear defining of the term "Punctum." I'm new to studying Roland Barthes. Very interesting writer.
Thank you for shedding light on that topic. I recently read "How Emotions Are Made" by Lisa Feldman Barett. It's not about by photography. But what I took from that is that there are so many parameters in play for emotions to be evoked and understood by the person having them. I personally feel that it is not possible at all to determine how an image will be received. Even asking a friend will only gain you his subjective perspective ... which might even different depending on the time of day or if he is hungry or not.
Excellent explanation of Barthes' thesis. Really clear, thank you. I find Berger and Sontag more useful thinkers about the medium than Barthes, but there's no doubting his impact on our understanding of how we see.
This is the first video I see from this channel after becoming its patreon. It's an awesome feeling to know that I'm contributing a little to the creation of this content. Thank you much!
Such a gift for intentional teaching and vivid transitions or visual representations of a particular point. Real source of joy seeing beautiful and clever work. Thanks bro!
Jamie, your videos are so well made, so inspirational. Many of them made me question my approach of photography, and integrate so many interesting concepts and point of views in it. Thanks for that wonderful job you're doing.
I agree with Barthes. In fact, this idea of punctum already permeates my thinking and I think others as well in varying degrees. Thanks for introducing the term, maybe it is the very essence or root of subjectivity in all arts not just photography but also music, paintings, speech, etc. At times it could be subconscious but always an emotional connection that translates into overt appreciation of an artistic item. And yeah the artist couldn't have complete control but somehow proper composing, wise use of depth of field, leading lines, etc. could narrow down the options so that the artist has higher chance of aligning "his punctum" to that of his audience making the art more efficient(?) in its intentions.
Jamie, Excellent as usual. You didn't mention the use of third party picture editors when throughtout photo history they have played a crucial role in shaping how photography lives in our minds. You are so right about emotional attachment to the experience of making the photograph distorting the picture editing process. Time does help but not always. When we were working on Fashion Etcetera with my father Sam Haskins, he said old photographers should not be allowed to edit the images representing their careers, when he was at that very moment doing precisely that. It led to some tough family editing meetings. There's waiting a year and then there's death. Only when the artist has passed away for a decade or more does the deep filter of history set in. This very long view does provide deeper contextual understanding and widespread emotional resonance which, if the work is deserving, grows stronger over time. The only down side is that reflexive curators, publishers, editors and other industry gatekeepers keep selecting the same images when they should really take a considered look at the original books, articles or exhibition catalogues and make a fresh appraisal. Doing this is especially useful for understanding creative influence. Contemporary creative phtotographers tend to be very secretive about their sources. Time does indeed change how we look, what we see, feel and understand and allows art history to settle into place.
Fantastic, as always. Philosophical, engaging, beautifully shot, constructed and presented. Real food for thought. I will look at images in a slightly different way from now on. Well done.
Thanks for the clear explanation of what Barthes was getting at regarding the punctum. I thought maybe I was missing something, but I guess not. When I show my photos, people rarely like my favorites and I assume that it's due to me seeing my own punctums (or should that be puncta?) which are radically different than for others.
“How to make sure we don’t let emotional attachments cloud our judgements” so many things we do have metaphorical value. Especially when pulling up that camera 📸
Oh, this is so nourishing, I feel I've found a photographic brother. An accountant and a painter live next door yet have less connection than with artists and accountants who live on the other side of the world. Cheers ever so from Californ-eye-eh.
Ahhh as always Jamie, I love these videos in which you share your philosophical thoughts on a topic in photography! I relate to your thought process🤔 I also found it amazing that you were referring to this book. Do you happen to recommend anymore books of this sort?🤗
Hi First - thank you for the work that goes into your presets. I find them more true to the original intent than most: carefully crafted. Second A small thing, but your video editing is evolving very quickly from very good to notable. Every single element is perfect for the chosen purpose or message. Finally Thank you for the content in this video. You have precisely targeted key questions and your personal perspective is truly useful.
Covid made it so that I couldn't develop my rolls for 5 months as I was working on my book in Vancouver and it was an amazing experience sending a huge box to my lab and getting them months after taking them. I think it helped with the curation of the book actually!
Thanks!! Another excellent and engaging video by Jamie Windsor ... I learnt a lot. Its difficult, on your own, to judge what will be essential emotional hooks for others who are looking at the work from the perspective of a different stage of their own emotional journeys. I'll struggle with that as best I can and seek feedback to approach improvment if not perfection. But above all your video provides a language to address this with. If leaves are the fragments of our experience, your videos provide the structure (the trunk and boughs) which connects them and makes sense of a tree. Great stuff, mate! Nice one.
btw, the way you presented this video is so professional, cinematographic sublime experience. and your voice and the way is recorded keeps you watching until the end. Great work.
Your use of visuals to accompany the dialogue in place of B roll is so good.
it really is
What I like about French philosophers: They inspire you, they don't seem so much wanting to "prove their point" (as esp. American and German philosophers do). Similar with photographs. When they scream "Look, I made it to the mountain top!" or "Look, how great this holiday evening was!", we simply cannot share this emotion. Ironically a wedding photographer pictures not his own emotions but those of the people on the wedding. That is why they are a grateful audience.
There are some random photos that spark very intense feelings in me, while could be nothing to someone else. Sometimes it’s about to time in my life that I’ve been and it just reminds me of it. As photography saved me many times, mentally.
I feel like each video essay you put out surpasses the one before and that is ASTOUNDING, since they are all so good, consistently good and rich in substance! Everything is distilled to pure quality, visually and thematically too! 💯
Thank you.
Spot on praise. 100% agree.
distilled!
this word is jamie’s work here in a nutshell
yes
After a wedding I leave it one week before even LOOKING at the images. I edit another month later. I try and tell the clients to be as patient as possible, it's about editing, leaving it, coming back, having a look again, retouch the edits, continue on, so on so forth. These images they will have forever, for me they leave the nest relatively quickly. The longer they leave it with me the more gold I find and I steer the images better. It's just hard to explain that. Maybe I bookmark this video and copy the url into every post wedding email, heh.
Such a great video as always. After watching your videos I set out with my camera for a day just to take pictures. I’d never done it before but it was great fun.
whatever inspires people to take action is worth reflecting upon.
jamie’s offerings do the same for me. on a weekly basis at least
Similar parallels to rhetoric - studium being logos, and punctum being the blend of ethos and the all-important pathos triggered in the audience.
Possibly, Logos = Studium; Ethos = Photographer's eye and timing of when they press the shutter; Punctum = What is triggered in the viewer/ audience.
Thanks, Jamie, for a really thought-provoking 10-minutes.
This is not a RUclips video, this is a piece of art, a documentary. very impressive editing and pace, and all these little things like fonts reflecting the mood of the narrative. wow!
This is why I watch every video you upload Jamie! So interesting! I’m currently dealing with structuring my book from Mexico City and I actually though about splitting the photographs up based on where they were shot. But now, I’m certain that I’m going to structure the photographs based on what they show and what they convey. Thanks for this!
Thank you. Curating a pagination for a book can really change what story it tells. Juxtaposing 2 images on a spread can add a whole new meaning that isn't present in the photos individually. Best of luck with it!
wow! instant practicality
i feel the same way about his channel
A year is a long enough time to feel differently about your shots, but that process doesn't end there, it continues to change throughout ones life. I delete obvious failures and lesser alternate shots, but keep *everything* else.
Thanks for such a thoughtful video.
Jamie, your videos are so clever, so thought provoking and so beautifully produced. Thank you.
Notification Squad, UNITE!! I always get stoked for a new video from Jamie!!
Love this video. My grandfather (painter) always taught me true art must touch the viewer without an explanation, as soon as you add a explanation you are controlling the audience's thoughts and no longer touching it.
Your presets are the only ones I've ever bought. Very happy with them. I feel like they're the closest thing I can get to answering "what might Jamie try to do with this photo I've taken?" and I'll throw some of them on as a wild card curve ball new starting point which throws the edit out of the box whenever I'm stuck in a box or otherwise out of ideas. I used to see presets as "here, copy what I do" or "if you don't know how to edit, I'll do it for you" but now I appreciate them as being able to bring in a new perspective on how a photo might be able to feel and it's actually expanded my understanding of editing, not diminished it or made me lazy as I'd previously assumed presets were intended to do.
My master's is in poetry, so I first learned about Barthes through literary theory. (1) I think you did a great job summarizing his work here, Jamie, and as always, great video. :) (2) I find just about everything Barthes suggests to be full of air. Sometimes, I think his explanation fits my reaction to others' work. But, I can honestly find no punctum in several iconic photographs that resonate deeply with me and indeed, the context of their message was revealed to me by the image alone; I had no prior knowledge of the subject matter prior to viewing the photos. His theory can't be applied to all photos everywhere. (3) I'm an old-school structuralist so maybe I'm just biased too much against post-modern french philosophers. Because biased I most certainly am. :) For my money, Propp, Levi-Strauss and Joseph Campbell constructed much more compelling arguments than anything in Barthes' "Mythologies." If literature was his wheelhouse, just how on-the-mark could he be with photography? But yes, I'm a crank like that. (4) I fully agree with your conclusion that portfolio photos should stand on their own. I've no special or significant insight here, but I think one gets better at being self-objective over time, even though it never becomes easy. (That's at least been true with my own writing.)
Jamie, you have helped me a lot in my photography career, you and books like "Photographic Seeing" by Andreas Feininger and "Complete Photography" by National Geographic, with all this I have developed into an award winning photographer from the US gov and I just wanted to thank you. I took photography all four years of highschool and this was my last, my teacher told me before I left I'd be used as an example for the other students that are coming after me. Your work helped me start thinking less like a photographer and more like an artist. I need to be an artist to be a photographer, so thank you for helping me unlock that.
I’ve just discovered your channel and after having being living in sort of a languishing void of the past year it has really reignited me in a creative way. Thank you so much
Another great video from Jamie, Barthes can sometimes seem irrelevant in today's world of photography and daunting to newcomers. Breaking it down like this, with great context and narrative shows how relevant his work still is today.
These video essays make your channel the best photography channel on here. Thank you
This puts into words something I have always wondered when visiting galleries; there's the moment you see a work for the first time and start to wonder how it makes you feel, and then you read the artist's exhibit statement and find yourself wondering (often subconsciously), 'did I interpret that work correctly?'
What a video. Bravo. 👏
As a wedding photographer, this is something I’ve been suspicious of when editing, and when choosing images on my portfolio. I am very emotionally attached to a ‘day’ and find I have to almost leave the images after the shoot for a week, just to remove my emotional attachment and enable me to start the edit process.
Thank you for this, and for having a channel that focusses on photography. It’s so needed and very welcome.
If our paths cross one day, drinks are on me. 👍
It is always good to question yourself... Photography being just one aspect... A pleasure to hear your musings, always thought provoking. Thanks
As always, James, very thought provoking.
I align with the concept that our photos need to have a "punctum" to create that emotional connection. But as soon as we place that as our objective we are shooting for the audience and not ourselves. After decades of client work it's been hard as hell to get those voices out of my head.
I don't know what's better. The presentation or the content. I revisited my work from the 80's a year ago. It made me regret not having every single image I ever made. I try to be honest and post only images I can stand by. Sometimes I remove images from Instagram because editing is equally important as creating. Learning about 'punctum' is like getting dealt a new set of cards. Let's see how I play my next hand. You've got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em ...
Love from Iraq a big fan of your content bro ❤️🇮🇶
Detaching myself emotionally from my photos is so difficult. I guess I really have to let them sit and marinate for awhile before I look at them. What a brilliant video.
This was so profound! I've always wondered why certain photos evoke deep feelings within me, but have never been able to put a word for it. I've also wondered why some photos that are obviously composed to speak on a political or cultural level often make me feel nothing at all.
The way you make and edit your videos, not even one fraction of a second is being wasted.
Also, great topics - you always provide us with new stuff and for that I am gratefull.
A couple of years ago I found myself looking at old photos on my computer and decided to make a book of the most interesting photos for each year. Some I consider the best of the year but most of then are ones that stood out for me when reviewing the photos from that year. I make a book of all of them and a calendar for friends and family of the last year of twelve of the images. I get my three children (23,18,12 yrs old) to help me narrow down the images for my calendar. I am always surprised and curious about the ones they choose because they are not only always my first choice. The books are not expensive but give me a chance to look at how my photography has changed over time and does not let them get shuttered away in the depths of my hard drive. Great video. I always find that they stretch and exercise my brain. Thanks
In my 4th (Honours) year of a photomedia degree and this is one of the most precise and useful summaries of Barthes concept that I have found. Thank you Jamie and I shall be recommending this (and your other videos) to my classmates.
Outstanding visual effects, plus words sewed from a golden thread
This could have been about 20 minutes longer, this is the stuff of real photography! There is so much to discus down this rabbit hole.
I personally have a process that has me revisiting shoots over years with regular revisions and reworking to arrive at the "final" image. I actively interrogate my idea of why the image is there at all, why it matters outside my own attachment until that attachment changes into something else. I actually try to think of it as breaking down my own ego abut the thing until it earns a new place for me. Obviously that in itself is a new presentation of my ego but I feel at least it's been more earned!
Your videos are among the best on youtube!
RUclips is full of "best camera under 999 bros" and gear geeks - but only so few artists. We need to keep Jamie working for our education and improvement.
Another fascinating and thought-provoking vlog. Two inferences from Barthes that do not appear to follow: whilst understanding the meaning of an image does require being familiar with the topic, it does not require believing in the message (anymore than it does with text), and being familiar with the topic and believing in the message does not imply that it fails to trigger a deep emotional connection with us.
That the photographer does not *fully* control how the images they make are received by an audience is fairly obvious, I think. And that an image's "punctum" depends on the subject is also fairly obvious, since we respond as individuals. Whilst some "punctum" will be idiosyncratic others will be approaching the universal. So the "punctum" being entirely subjective (i.e. dependent on the subject) does not imply that it will be entirely idiosyncratic or, hence, that the photographer lacks all control. Human subjectivity is rooted in aspects of our common humanity, and a photographer tuned into that common humanity can exert significant (if never complete) control over the emotional impact of the image. This is what makes anthropology and psychology possible - they seek to understand the culturally specific or idiosyncratic in terms of the more general or even universal aspects of the human condition.
the amount of respect and admiration i hold for your content is immense, all love
Thank you for very clearly expressed thoughts about notions that have often been misconstrued. Probably the best presentation on the subject I have ever heard.
To be remembered, Barthes's point of view was that of a "spectator", not "operator" (not a photographer), and he acknwoledged it. His musing on photography are definitely interesting from such a vantage point (spectator's). The concept of the "punctum" with its load of subjectivity can however be diverted in a useful way for an "operator" or a "critic" and added to their vocabulary to talk about photographs, just because of the fact that it refers to a "point" or something that attracts attention in a photograph and can be consciously or unconsciously included by the photographer in the same way as some idiosyncratic spices are added to a known recipe (the "studium"). Punctum taken as such can become a more interesting word/concept to talk about photographs (one could argue that in W. Klein's photograph, the hand without a body holding the gun and/or the look of the child toward the photographer are "puncta" that constitute the tension and ambiguity of the scene (studium). In any case "bravo!".
This makes me wonder what other books have I not yet read but probably should. Perhaps there could be a list of book recommendations in the future? This concept of a book summary was executed very well, and incredibly enjoyable.
Other classics are Susan Sontag's "On Photography" (makes most photogaphers gringe, but a good read, one often used as a reference), Vilém Flusser's "Toward a Philosophy of Photography", Lewis Baltz's "Texts", Robert Adams's "Beauty in Photography", John Berger's "About Looking"... for a start.
Yes! Good idea 👍
@@BrunoChalifour Many thanks! I'll certainly be saving these for later.
a list. yes!
i feel the same way
Bruno Chalifour I read Sontag's book and immediately gave it away. Her histories of famous photographers were interesting but I could not accept her conclusions about them; e.g., that Diane Arbus' suicide proved that her work was sincere.
I come again and again to review your videos. Such a fan. I can not get enough of them!
Thank you. Glad you like them. I have a new one coming out early next week.
you and Sean Tucker are the best (photography related) content creators on your RUclips right now! You keep me motivated and I learn so much in each video! thanks you!
And Dan Milnor! And some old Art of Photography with Ted Forbes.. yes! Edit: Oh wait and John Free .. check this guy out. He’s old and wise and loves life hard. He’s coming out with a book on rail yard tramps soon!! His first book, surprisingly!
check James Popsys, he is someone redefining the photography (to me at least) in the sense of follow the rules, learn the rules, and break the rules of composition. He takes photos about the objects instead of the objects.
Lord above, the faff you must go through pulling these together. Chapeau, sir
Unfortunately most people wouldn't recognize the art potential of that and your other videos.
You've got an excellent feeling for aesthetics 👌
What I did more last year than this year was that I waited more time to develop the film I used, but also I first take a look at my scans briefly when I get them, and wait some time before considering them fully
Garry Winogrand would take a whole year to develop his pictures. He said that he needed to be emotionally detached from the pictures.
And also because he shot a lot of rolls, he didn't have enough time to develop them, not to mention seeing.
I can completely relate to that.
Not forgetting the 2,500 rolls that he never developed..! 😁
Same, yep, that’s exactly why I take so long to develop/process/edit my photos, that’s all it is 👀
@@jamiewindsor This reminds me of something that the Gangnam Style guy said. He was being interviewed on some British entertainment show, and was asked about creating this phenomenon that is Gangnam style. He said I didn't create it. All I did was write a song. The public created the phenomenon. He was actually very humble about it. I wish American actors and musicians would be that way, but most of them have an arrogance beyond all bounds.
You are an amazing Story Teller… thank you so much
Thanks for another thought provoking video. I had this exact experience over the past few months going through old photos and finding photos jump out at me that I hadn’t thought much of before.
Jamie, your videos just.....hit and touch on things that are so simple yet i feel that i come out the other side fresh and new with info. I really appreciate the efforts and the amount of care thats put in.
Probably my most popular image I completely missed the first time around. A full 6 years later I re-visted the shoot and it completely hit me, I retouched it put it out there and then started selling it in galleries. Sometimes we are not the best at editing our own work and need to come back with fresh eyes (not just a day later, but a year or so).
Yep. You’re still my favourite content maker. Thanks for continuing to reassure me!
Simply the best channel actually about photography
Your videos are so pleasing to watch.
They are little art pieces🙏🏻
The punctum to a photo changes with time and subject. Thanks for your videos X
Hi ))) Nice video! One thing that is really common these days, is for people to get on a sugar or caffeine high. And then they sit down to work. Being first a horse trainer and acupuncturist for horses - taught me that I have to be well grounded to get good results. And this does mean eating the right foods and keeping away from caffeine. It also often means taking off shoes to get the sole right on the earth. In my office, I have a copper wire coil that I can put one foot on and get grounded while editing. ))) Thank you for your video! I enjoyed watching it! ))) Gary
Excellent video. I actually agree with the premise. I started questioning and analyzing my work over the pandemic, and I came to the same conclusion. Why there is a representative meaning to the photograph that was intended either in the moment or well before clicking the shutter button, the part that hits the hardest is something that happens upon viewing the image not taking it. The striking power of something happens to me while taking the photo, but it really comes in its own when looking at the print or processing the photo. And that is something I cannot really plan as it is a response to the image. And, I imagine what stands out as striking to others is different than to me. And that is wonderful.
It is not really easy to read and understand Barthes, but he's so relevant to the subject when it comes to photography. Camera Lucida and The Rhetoric of the Image are of great value to any visual artist or to anyone who wants to grasp a bigger picture of Postmodernism and see how it reflects on today's society and culture :)
I read alot of photography theorists during my masters last year and I found his book to be one of the most interesting i read, although not necessarily the most mind boggling. I think his inexperience in photography at moments detracts from the book, but I also think anyone and everyone is a viewer, and as a general statement on art itself, it's a thought provoking piece. I also subscribe to the idea that his book was less a commentary on photography and more a mourning love letter to his deceased mother.
It was definitely a veiled tribute to his mother. I found that aspect of it verging almost into cliché. Ironically, I think this was the bit that confirmed for me that the punctum was completely created by the viewer and utterly irrelevant to anyone else.
Thanks so much for this succinct look at Camera Lucida and the clear defining of the term "Punctum." I'm new to studying Roland Barthes. Very interesting writer.
Thank you for shedding light on that topic. I recently read "How Emotions Are Made" by Lisa Feldman Barett. It's not about by photography. But what I took from that is that there are so many parameters in play for emotions to be evoked and understood by the person having them. I personally feel that it is not possible at all to determine how an image will be received. Even asking a friend will only gain you his subjective perspective ... which might even different depending on the time of day or if he is hungry or not.
My photography cerebral resource did it once again...another book on order. Graphics so on point. Thank you...
Jamie Windsor's RUclips channel. A.K.A. The free university course 🙌.
Extraordinary helpful, inspiring and beautiful presented 🙏👏
Excellent explanation of Barthes' thesis. Really clear, thank you. I find Berger and Sontag more useful thinkers about the medium than Barthes, but there's no doubting his impact on our understanding of how we see.
I am impressed with the visual and audio quality and the precise pacing of your videos. They are both interesting and a joy to watch.
This is the first video I see from this channel after becoming its patreon. It's an awesome feeling to know that I'm contributing a little to the creation of this content. Thank you much!
Such a gift for intentional teaching and vivid transitions or visual representations of a particular point. Real source of joy seeing beautiful and clever work. Thanks bro!
My favorite photo youtuber. I like your scientific and intelligent approach, not to mention killer editing! Keep 'em coming Jamie!
Jamie, your videos are so well made, so inspirational. Many of them made me question my approach of photography, and integrate so many interesting concepts and point of views in it. Thanks for that wonderful job you're doing.
Thanks for showing me where my punctum is.
I agree with Barthes. In fact, this idea of punctum already permeates my thinking and I think others as well in varying degrees. Thanks for introducing the term, maybe it is the very essence or root of subjectivity in all arts not just photography but also music, paintings, speech, etc. At times it could be subconscious but always an emotional connection that translates into overt appreciation of an artistic item. And yeah the artist couldn't have complete control but somehow proper composing, wise use of depth of field, leading lines, etc. could narrow down the options so that the artist has higher chance of aligning "his punctum" to that of his audience making the art more efficient(?) in its intentions.
Jamie, Excellent as usual. You didn't mention the use of third party picture editors when throughtout photo history they have played a crucial role in shaping how photography lives in our minds. You are so right about emotional attachment to the experience of making the photograph distorting the picture editing process. Time does help but not always. When we were working on Fashion Etcetera with my father Sam Haskins, he said old photographers should not be allowed to edit the images representing their careers, when he was at that very moment doing precisely that. It led to some tough family editing meetings. There's waiting a year and then there's death. Only when the artist has passed away for a decade or more does the deep filter of history set in. This very long view does provide deeper contextual understanding and widespread emotional resonance which, if the work is deserving, grows stronger over time. The only down side is that reflexive curators, publishers, editors and other industry gatekeepers keep selecting the same images when they should really take a considered look at the original books, articles or exhibition catalogues and make a fresh appraisal. Doing this is especially useful for understanding creative influence. Contemporary creative phtotographers tend to be very secretive about their sources. Time does indeed change how we look, what we see, feel and understand and allows art history to settle into place.
Fantastic, as always. Philosophical, engaging, beautifully shot, constructed and presented. Real food for thought. I will look at images in a slightly different way from now on. Well done.
Thanks for the clear explanation of what Barthes was getting at regarding the punctum. I thought maybe I was missing something, but I guess not. When I show my photos, people rarely like my favorites and I assume that it's due to me seeing my own punctums (or should that be puncta?) which are radically different than for others.
Once again, an amazingly insightful post! Thank you Jamie!
Thought provoking and visually appealing as always. Many thanks.
“How to make sure we don’t let emotional attachments cloud our judgements” so many things we do have metaphorical value. Especially when pulling up that camera 📸
Incredible video. So thoughtful and stimulating. Excellent work, Jamie!
Great video! The best explanation I have ever heard regarding Punctum.
This is the level and style of 'content' that this world should have and consume! My tremendous regards to you as an artist
Only time tells. Awesome video, as always. Thank you, Jamie!
Oh, this is so nourishing, I feel I've found a photographic brother. An accountant and a painter live next door yet have less connection than with artists and accountants who live on the other side of the world. Cheers ever so from Californ-eye-eh.
I really appreciate the level of effort you put into your videos. It must be a staggering amount of work.
What an amazingly crafted video. Thank you for your dedication to details and overall great storytelling. Thank you
our
Thank you for this excellent content, I'm an English teacher and sharing your videos in my class, very authentic.🤗
Ahhh as always Jamie, I love these videos in which you share your philosophical thoughts on a topic in photography! I relate to your thought process🤔
I also found it amazing that you were referring to this book. Do you happen to recommend anymore books of this sort?🤗
The graphic and font animations are so awesome! just watched 1,5 minutes and im very
impressed!
Always a joy to watch your content...
Thank you for the fruit for thought🙏
INCREDIBLE video dissertation as always, Jamie.
Jamie! No words needed!
Glad to see you back, it's been a long time, and I really missed to learn more from your videos, homework to do and a new book to find and read! 🙏
Hi
First - thank you for the work that goes into your presets. I find them more true to the original intent than most: carefully crafted.
Second
A small thing, but your video editing is evolving very quickly from very good to notable. Every single element is perfect for the chosen purpose or message.
Finally
Thank you for the content in this video. You have precisely targeted key questions and your personal perspective is truly useful.
wow!! 8 minutes of super interesting info. best photography content on youtube. thanks!
Love your graphics and the way you illustrate your thesis.
Covid made it so that I couldn't develop my rolls for 5 months as I was working on my book in Vancouver and it was an amazing experience sending a huge box to my lab and getting them months after taking them. I think it helped with the curation of the book actually!
These videos are getting better and better, hat down
Elegant and informative video as always.
another masterpiece.. loving the special fx and montage as well as the message. thank you
Beautifully put together and thought provoking video.
So glad to see a fellow photographer talking about Roland Barthes! Phenomenal video! Would love to watch one on Jean Baudrillard or even Umberto Eco!
I'm really impressed with your after effects skills. Can you please do a video on your video production process?
Thanks!! Another excellent and engaging video by Jamie Windsor ... I learnt a lot. Its difficult, on your own, to judge what will be essential emotional hooks for others who are looking at the work from the perspective of a different stage of their own emotional journeys. I'll struggle with that as best I can and seek feedback to approach improvment if not perfection. But above all your video provides a language to address this with. If leaves are the fragments of our experience, your videos provide the structure (the trunk and boughs) which connects them and makes sense of a tree. Great stuff, mate! Nice one.
btw, the way you presented this video is so professional, cinematographic sublime experience. and your voice and the way is recorded keeps you watching until the end. Great work.