David Price: Illustrated Proverbs
David Price: “This project grew out of some recent discussions about drawing inspiration from anyone, anything, and everything around you. I admit, I drew a lot of inspiration for this idea from Irene Liebler’s series she did across last year of Common and...Learning from the work of Ritts, Lindbergh and Moon; Hiram Chee
Hiram Chee, one of the longest running members of Project 52, shares a post of portraits he did during the 8 Week Portrait Class. Learning from the work of Herb Ritts, Peter Lindbergh and Sarah Moon Check it out for some wonderful portrait work.From the Early Days of Color Photography
The year was 1913. I absolutely love these images. From composition through framing and of course the patina, they are simply lovely. “Mervyn O’Gorman was 42 when he took these pictures of his daughter, Christina O’Gorman at Lulworth Cove, in the...Read more“I have always been more interested in the power of what a good photograph or film can do – not who created it and what box that creator fits into. I’m interested in the story one has to tell. We are visual communicators and we are all unique but only if we listen to our own voice and create from that voice. Whenever I have trusted and listened to my internal voice and created from my own unique perspective and my life’s experiences, I have been “on purpose” and my work has resonated across genders, race and age. I suppose I could copy or mimic the “style du jour” whether it is HDR or photographing hipsters with tattoos and attempt to be someone I’m not. I don’t have the desire to do that because that is not why I became a photographer or filmmaker. That’s not to say that I don’t like and appreciate photographers who are following these styles but it’s not me and creativity doesn’t come from mimicking others. I’ve seen a lot of styles and techniques over the decades I’ve been in the photo business. They come and they go – just like the photographers who chase after the latest trend.”

