Everyday Photography, Every Day Podcast Por M.H. Rubin and Suzanne Fritz-Hanson arte de portada

Everyday Photography, Every Day

Everyday Photography, Every Day

De: M.H. Rubin and Suzanne Fritz-Hanson
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Everyday Photography (Every Day)" is a weekly podcast where you get to listen in on a chat between a photographer (Rubin) and a regular human (Suzanne Fritz-Hanson) with an eye on making your pictures amazing and helping you enjoy your photography more. No technical stuff. No talk of gear or software. Just photography for the fun of it. Rubin brings a unique perspective to consumer media: a student of Jerry Uelsmann; an amateur photographer for 40 years; formerly of Lucasfilm, Netflix and Adobe; director of The Rubin Collection of Photography; and founder of Neomodern, he's long been passionate about advancing the language of photography. ** Enjoy show notes at www.neomodern.com/podcast© 2025 Neomodern, Inc. Arte
Episodios
  • 143: Jake and the Bridge
    Mar 31 2025
    Jake Ricker has been shooting the Golden Gate Bridge everyday, all day, for the past 6 years: an interior view of something we usually only experience in exterior.
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    55 m
  • 142: Arthur Drooker, Staying Curious
    Mar 23 2025
    Today we get to know Arthur Drooker, a creative photographer I first discovered with his brilliant "Conventional Wisdom" -- peering inside some niche gatherings. But today his book of 37 Views of the Golden Gate has sold out, and we look at his interesting career.
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    52 m
  • 141: Wallace Wilson and the Victims of Paradox
    Sep 5 2024
    I've long been fascinated by the photographs made by Wallace "Wally" Wilson in the 1970s-1980s; he was a professor of photography at the University of Florida when I was a kid, alongside other historic faculty like Jerry Uelsmann, Evon Streetman, Doug Prince, and Todd Walker. Wilson was part of an exciting time in the history of photography, as well as being a cool example of what I would describe as "haiku photography" -- although he would never have described his work that way.
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    55 m
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