Episode 177: Ian Bates (Documentary Photography) Podcast Por  arte de portada

Episode 177: Ian Bates (Documentary Photography)

Episode 177: Ian Bates (Documentary Photography)

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo
🎞️ Inside the Wildfire Lens: Ian Bates on The Weight of Ash & The Meadowlark Project Published on 10 Frames Per Second Blog – Your go‑to source for photojournalism, storytelling, and incredible photography 📚 Quick Overview TopicKey TakeawaysWho is Ian Bates?Bay Area‑based photographer, author of The Weight of Ash (2025), former A&E, NYT Magazine, Bloomberg client.The Weight of AshBlack‑and‑white photo book documenting the eerie calm after western U.S. wildfires.Meadowlark ProjectA road‑trip series searching for the Western Meadowlark across six states, exploring habitat loss & climate change.Creative InfluencesPoetry (Jim Harrison), music (Adrian Lenker, Big Thief), and collaborative editing process with Clint Woodside & MattAdvice for Emerging PhotographersFollow curiosity, build community, and let books become the lasting platform for your work. 🎙️ About the Podcast Episode Show: 10 Frames Per Second – a photojournalism podcast hosted by Joe Giordano & Molly Roberts.Release: Tuesday, March 4 2026 (originally recorded at WLOY, Loyola Radio, Maryland).Guest: Ian Bates, photographer and author.Main Themes: Wildfire aftermath, the paradox of beauty & terror, the role of poetry & music in visual storytelling, and practical book‑making advice. 📸 Meet Ian Bates Background: Grew up in New Jersey; mentored by a high‑school photography teacher who introduced him to Matt Aitches.Education: Ohio University – photojournalism program, summer internships, and a shift toward personal projects during sophomore year.Career Highlights: Clients: A&E Networks, The New York Times Magazine, Bloomberg, Wired, Rolling Stone, Smithsonian, etc.Projects: 2014‑2020 West Coast wildfire documentation, The Weight of Ash (2025) published by the Dead Peak Club. Current Focus: Living in the Bay Area, photographing local landscapes, the Sacramento‑Joaquin River Delta, and exploring community‑based projects. 🌲 Ian Bates – The Weight of Ash – A Book Like No Other What the Book Captures Timeframe: The “in‑between” moment after a wildfire burns, before humans return.Visual Style: Black‑and‑white images that highlight quiet terror, ash‑covered landscapes, and the muted colors of post‑fire ecosystems.Narrative Tone: “Beauty and terror can exist in the same moment” – a recurring line Ian repeats when describing the book’s emotional core. Why Black & White? “Most fire pictures in the news are bright orange. I wanted to strip away that spectacle and let the viewer linger on the silence, the ash that muffles sound, and the subtle textures of charred land.” Editing Journey Wall‑to‑Print Process – Ian prints 4×5 in photos, stacks them, and iteratively sorts on a magnet‑covered wall.Collaboration: Clint Woodside (Deadbeat Club) – external editorial voice that forced tough cuts.Matt … – led 20‑30 edit rounds, helping shape sequencing for a page‑turning rhythm. Final Touch: QR codes linking to curated playlists (see “Music & Photography” section). 🐦 Ian Bates – The Meadowlark Project – Following a Ghost Concept: Travel across six states where the Western Meadowlark is the state bird (ND, WY, MT, OR, KS, NE).Goal: Use the elusive bird as a metaphorical guide to explore habitat loss, farming expansion, and climate change.Outcome: A series of images that convey a sense of “place without a name,” letting viewers feel the shared landscape of the American West. Key Insights from Ian The bird itself rarely appears; its presence fuels the narrative.The project became a vehicle for exploring borders, government policies, and the universal prairie environment. 📖 Poetry & Music – The Secret Sauce Poetry Influence Jim Harrison’s “I Believe.” – Opened the Meadowlark book.Ian likens his photographic practice to gathering beliefs “enough to press the shutter.”Poetry guides his “open‑ended” book structures, encouraging viewers to draw personal meaning. Music in the Studio Typical Soundtrack: Adrianne Lenker, Big Thief, atmospheric “sad and quiet” tunes.Music shapes mood while driving, shooting, and editing, turning the process into a multi-sensory experience. 🛠️ How Ian Bates Turns a Wall of Prints Into a Published Book Print & Pin: Small prints on a magnetic wall.Sort & Shuffle: Group by theme, remove “nagging” images (a technique inspired by photographer Ron Jude).Digital Drafts: Create PDFs during COVID, send to editors for feedback.Physical Review: Throw prints on a floor/table, spend days arranging sequences.Final Cut: Trust external editors for objective cuts; produce a limited‑edition book through Dead Peak Club. SEO tip: Use “photo book editing process” and “how to publish a photography book” as long‑tail keywords for blog traffic. 🎓 Advice for Emerging Photographers Follow Your Curiosity: Let unexpected projects (like the Meadowlark search) ...
Todavía no hay opiniones