I recently got a flood of questions via Twitter asking about developing a personal photographic style, which made me think about a million conversations I’ve had with my photographer buddies over the years… And I was wishing I had recorded those. And then I remembered that I DID have one that I recorded from an old chasejarvis LIVE with my pal Zack Arias. He’s a fun guy, great shooter and very talented photography instructor. Here’s a few nuggets from our banter (plucked from the middle of the conversation and transcribed…) about developing personal photographic style…
CJ: Tell me the first time you realized that you actually had a style. Because for me, I can’t believe that you can take pictures for as long as it took me to take pictures before I actually could say that I have a style. Do you remember when that moment was for you?
ZA: I’d say it was probably just a couple of years ago. I’ve been pursuing this… If I count going to school and assisting and managing a studio, and trying to get my freelance career going, and then failing miserably, and then restarting it, that’s been about fifteen years. And I’d say…
CJ: Is that where the gray came from?
ZA: Yeah. That’s where the gray and all the kids, one of which you can hear in the background. Hawk is in the audience here. I guess in just the last couple of years I could finally sort of sit back and go, huh, this is what I do and this is how I do it and this is how I approach photography and this is kind of my style.
CJ: But it took a long time.
ZA: Yeah. Style is something that takes a long, long, long time and it takes; really, what it takes is shooting and just doing it over and over and over. It has to just develop and you can think you’re sort of on like when I started in photography, I thought I knew where I was going with my photography and how I would shoot. But that changed and I’d go down a different route and that would change and even just as last year, I was trying to break out of how I shoot things, do things differently and what I found that was most successful was just to go back to doing what I do and just kind of sticking with it. Every year, I seem to try to push my style and every year I fail pretty miserably doing that. And it’s just one of those I need to learn slowly and just slowly move forward.
CJ: If you try and develop a style from your living room, it’s unlikely that you’re going to and a lot of people, like, oh, when do you know when you got a style? You don’t know until you look back six months or a year or two years and say, oh, wow.
ZA: Or ten years or a decade. And at the beginning, you’re usually kind of replicating someone else’s style.
CJ: Right and imitation, that’s a great way of learning.
ZA: And that’s part of it. I replicated all the magazine photographers that I followed. I went out and shot just like them. I learned how they did it, but I had to get moving on from that….
If you want more, the entire video conversation is here.
Thanks – needed to hear that. I’ve seen so many things lately that say “figure out your style” and “develop your niche.” Well, I don’t know what those are right now! I appreciate hearing it’s not something that happens over night.
to paraphrase (bite!) Aesop Rock “Isnt it strange how its a fad to bite your idols when the reason you liked them’s coz their shit wasn’t recycled”
Sure, study and take inspiration from idols, just dont aspire to be the next . Stay true to yourself, your vision and be the best ‘you’ and your style will develop over time with you having to worry about it. Follow your work as you see (and change) what works and what doesn’t flow so well.
This can apply to pretty much anything – from creatives such as art, design, writing through to things like people management. Just dont be suprised if you find someone else doing something similar on the other side of the (getting smaller) globe.
Ash