Better ways than 365 days?

Guest-written by Daniela Bowker

If you’re serious about improving as a photographer, there are better ways of accomplishing it than taking a photo of yourself e

If you can keep your self portraits interesting, it's worth continuing to experiement.

I think that the statement I’m about to make could unleash something of a furore. (Give me a moment: I’m going to batten down the hatches and take a deep breath.)

I have a loathing for 365 self-portrait projects.

I can’t bear them. They irritate me. Sometimes they even bore me. They don’t quite make me want to scratch out my eyeballs, although occasionally some of the pictures might. There, I’ve said it. Admission made. Given that the 365 Days group on Flickr has 19,175 members, I suppose I ought to qualify this statement, because there are a whole host of people prepared to disagree with me.

There are two predominant reasons that 365 self-portrait projects give me a shudder of discomfort. First, I don’t think that they necessarily encourage good photography; second, I think that they do encourage some sort of egotism and narcissism. Want me to unpick this a bit more? I thought that you might. Here goes.

Yes, it does seem counter-intuitive to say that a project that demands you take a photo every day doesn’t encourage good photography. If you’re shooting every day, surely it can only help you to improve. (This does seem to be one of the major driving factors in embarking on a 365 Days project.) But I’m not convinced that deliberately setting out to take a photograph of yourself every single day of the week for an entire year does that. Instead, I think that the combination of obligation to take a photo and limited subject matter stifles creativity. Having to take a photo of myself, a photo that I’m willing to present to the world, a photo that conveys my story, every day for a year sounds more like an exercise in endurance. And that does not good photography make.

So not only am I concerned by the potential for uninspiring, leaden self-portraits, but I can just see how the necessity to take said daily self-portrait becomes all-consuming and and obliterates the opportunity or the desire to take other photos. Don’t forget about landscape and macro and street and architectural photography.

What’s more, there are some days when you really don’t want to be photographed. Or is that just me? How on earth is that sense of being camera-shy, of feeling miserable and unphotogenic, of being tired or drunk or ill, ever going to make for a well-composed, intriguing photo? I’m not sure how many images of my feet, or any other sufficiently abstract body-part, people would be able to take, even if I did succeed in posing them creatively, using a thought-provoking depth-of-field, and arranging moody lighting.

Looking beyond portraiture

If you can keep your self portraits interesting, it's worth continuing to experiement.

Becoming a better photographer isn’t just about portraiture. Or self-portraiture. Or going off and getting yourself a Photography Masters Degree.

And this leads me into my second point of pique. If it is all about documenting my life (another key reason for starting the project), who the bloody hell is really that interested to know the minutiae of my day-to-day existence? I’m not that thrilling. Yes, there are things that I do from time-to-time that might ignite a frisson of excitement, but they’re relatively limited in the grand scheme of things. Keeping a pictorial diary could well be an unusual take on a journal, but my desire to lay myself that bare in public is supremely limited. You can tell me that we live in the age of social media and that I just need to get on and accept it all that you want, but the concept makes me itchy. My entire life isn’t for public consumption and I doubt that every Tom, Dick, and Harry, and Emma, Jo, and Kate need, or even want, to know what I ate for breakfast (Homemade spelt bread toast with blackcurrant jam, seeing as you asked. It was tasty).

If you know me well enough and you know that I’ve written about how photos are an incredibly valuable historical resource, especially those that tell the narrative of the mundane, you might find that statement a little perverse. But I’m talking about making sure that people in the future know about our unextraordinary lives so that they will enjoy a better understanding of how our society functioned. (And indeed the social media phenomenon will be something that future historians will pick apart and examine and debate and turn into theses.) Someone living in 3010 who uses my writings and my photographs in an attempt to build a picture of life in 2010 is a bit different to me contriving a shot for uploading to Flickr.

Widening the horizons

Documenting your life is about a great deal more than just taking self-portraits.

I’m not saying that there are no good 365 self-portrait photographers out there, I’m not saying that people won’t learn from the experience, and I’m not saying that they aren’t valuable in some sense. I’d have to be blindingly ignorant to think anything of the sort. And if you want to commit to taking a picture of yourself every day for a year, go ahead. But let me give you something to think about first.

If you’re serious about improving as a photographer, there are better ways of accomplishing it than taking a photo of yourself every day. In fact, I most definitely endorse taking a photo every day. But just make sure that you expand your subject matter and your technical repertoire beyond pictures of yourself. Borrow your friend’s macro lens and have a go at photographing teeny-tiny things. Drag your tripod out from beneath your bed (what’s it doing there, anyway?) and try your hand at some long exposures. Pick up some filters and mess around with their different effects on your images. Play around with reflectors and diffusers, artificial and natural light. Hell, try shooting on film or build yourself a pinhole camera.

These seem like real challenges to me, challenges that will help you to develop your craft as a photographer.

Now, if you want to document your life in pictures, remember that the picture doesn’t have to be about you. The things that you see, the places that you go, the people whom you meet; all of these contribute to your life and would be worthy of photographing. I bet that you’ve a camera-phone that would do that job pretty well, although I’d recommend shopping around for a compact camera to keep in a sock in your bag. This will tell a much richer story of your life, for you and for anyone else who stumbles on some cache of a fragment of this weird photo-sharing website that seemed be called Flickr in 1,000 years’ time.

For sure you’re going to end up with very different types of photographs if you adopt either of these two approaches, but the results – whether you’re aiming to improve your photography skills or record your life – will be something altogether better than 365 days of self-portraits.

This post was written by Daniela Bowker, who usually is the boss over at Small Aperture.


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Comments

Anonymous
Anonymous

I’m part way through a 365, (day 126 actually) but I haven’t restricted myself to self portraits, in fact they’re usually the go to for when I have no other ideas.

I think saying they stifle creativity is going a bit too far, If you can “train” yourself to get in a creative mood (and it does seem possible) then it’s a great way of doing it. Sure some people may benefit more than others, but I think in general it’s a great project.

Once I finish mine, I’m going to do something different, a project 520. Where hopefully I’ll produce a SET of 10 images every week. it might just be a trip to a museum for the week, or maybe a set I’ve been working on for months… not too many restrictions. So I can have days off without stressing, but in the end produce more photos. I already have a list of potential sets.

Anonymous
Anonymous

yeah totally agree.. tell it how it is.

fwiw i have always thought 365 day photo portrait projects to be narcissistic, creatively dull and beyond uninspiring.

i do however, have some deep respect for creative projects based on long time lines… and for this reason i have just signed up to http://steply.com/eventful … steply (via iphone or web) … a new social networking photo type sharing thingy (based on geo tagging etc)… and snapping with my iPhone4… i fully intend to upload a nano second of suburban life every day.

thing is, as this service is launched in hong kong… and i am a very rare uk user of it thus far… i am currently learning far more about other peoples interesting lives (ie: those people who are posting from hong kong etc) … than i am teaching others about my own.

one of the joys of contemporary (digital) life… is that.. it often pulls me into places i would never normally wander.

i also take photos with a canon camera and some appear on flickr:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/eventful/

good article nice and contriversial .. keep ‘em coming daniela :) x

Anonymous
Anonymous

today… Halloween weekend i will be inundated with alerts of friends and people i barely know telling me about their new album posts on face book and flicker accounts from their costumed escapades of the weekend. The age of posting, blogging, and sharing everything about you is here… like it or not.

Anonymous
Anonymous

I couldn’t agree more with you about the self portrait 365 projects. To be perfectly honest, I’m not a massive fan of the shoot-any-photo-a-day type of 365 projects either (unless the photographer is particularly skilled). I find that most of those that I’ve seen tend to start off well but rapidly become an afterthought.

I much prefer project which have a non-narcissistic theme that runs throughout the duration. I’ve seen some excellent projects revolving around landscapes/graffiti/food/etc..

As for me, I’m now most of the way through a 365 project of my own in which I am shooting a street portrait a day and documenting the people of my city – http://www.sheffield365project.co.uk. It’s been a challenge to work within the tight constraints that I’ve set myself, but one that is definitely rewarding and hopefully has produced an interesting set of photos.

Anonymous
Anonymous

I couldn’t agree with you more. Unfortunatly, I have dropped many Flickr contacts and or ignored the ones that have taken the self-portrait project on. I am glad they wanted to to do it but I can’t look at them everyday and their narcissistic behavior really gets to my nerves as from what I have seen they begin to comment less and less as they want all the comments and I’ll go back a few months later, and no one comments on them anymore. Very interesting! Great read!

Anonymous
Anonymous

Wow! Narcissistic? [shrugs]

I actually got into the 365 project because of this site; a call out for Haj. I happily joined as I had assumed it would help me grow as a photographer.

It’s very difficult to do a quality self portrait… let alone every day. I shoot tons of portraits, love it! Would prefer to do nothing more, but this, a 365. A self portrait every day.

That was tough. I was ready to give up many many times, but I had friends and family who kept me going. It’s a challenge and I have the guts to keep up with something I committed to.

Yup. I made a commitment to myself to do it and darn it, I’m doing it. Narcissist? No way.

I am proud to have survived the project this long, and pending some insane accident that renders me unable to shoot, I will be finishing the year out.

It’s a challenge. A serious challenge. As a photographer, I’m up to the challenge.

Daniela, great write-up! Controversial indeed! Way to go and I look forward to future entries :)

CARL!

Anonymous
Anonymous

i get to comment after carl which is good because i think he said it best – as to why this is right for him. and so we see it is indeed “subjective” no pun.

i am not involved nor really care either way – but his point being: it’s a discipline. thus it carries over to any task we might at first enjoy then deal with tedium once novelty is gone.

i appreciate everyone’s p.o.v. anything that inspires you and makes you happy is worth doing cheers! – pia

Hi,

I am not fond of self-portrait 365, because I would not be interested in watching photos of the same person every single day.

That said, I do not agree with everything you say here. First, as others pointed in the comments, 365 projects are not always about self-portrait photography. Whether 365 are or aren't a good way of improving, I'll let everyone decide for themselves.
I like 365 projects because when you find a good one, you are very happy to discover a new shot every day. This is why on my blog I am running a thread in which I introduce a new 365 each week (http://photographiclizard.blogspot.com/search/label/365).
I know good 365 are not easy to find, but good photos aren't easy to find either!

I would not usually bother my ass to sign up and comment on an article like this were it not for one thing you said.

I do a lot of self-portraits and the reason I started them was because I have extremely low self-esteem. When I joined flickr I saw a great deal of talented photographers churn out a stream of fantastic and pretty self-portraits and I decided perhaps if I could create what I thought was a pretty photo then I might start seeing the model in it as pretty too. I have been doing this for a year now and I assure you it has helped my confidence greatly. I have far to go but I believe self-portraiture has helped me along. For this reason I have started a 365 (mainly self-portraiture but I haven't limited myself to it since I'd like to try out other things) in the hopes that it will build my skills as well as my confidence.

So I would like you to know that the reason for self-portraits is not always narcissism and in my case it was the opposite.

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