Michael Foley, who runs a gallery in NYC and teaches at the School of Visual Arts, hosts these critique sessions of 4-6 photographers for three hours in an evening. I've been to a few and found the feedback helpful and I like being forced to think about and try to articulate why I like or dislike a given photo.
So I took my 11x14 prints of the Fuji pos-negs and little 5x7 prints of my Brooklyn at Night pics to the critique.
There's something to be said for looking at photos for more than the typical fraction of a second. This one guy's stuff, a mix of solitary contemplative figures in the city with abstract geometrics from the city, really grew on me from just looking at them for a long time (each person's stuff was up and discussed for about 45 minutes), with this one in particular that went from dismissed to my favorite.
Then the next guy had these crowd pleasers (lightning over Venice) and others that wouldn't get many social media likes but were much more interesting.
Then my pos-negs, which everyone really liked a lot (which was gratifying because I feared that being so dark they wouldn't print well). But then people commented a bit more and the first guy was pointing out the ones he liked (Keila, Yesenia nude figure, Sahomy sitting on bed portrait):
and the ones he didn't (the other two of Yesenia):
He said because the two he didn't like so much told him everything there was to know or feel at the first look, whereas the others engaged and drew him in. Like with the second guy's crowd pleasers vs his more interesting stuff.
This is what the edit looks like now (with borders trimmed -- another strong suggestion):
http://www.hookstrapped.com/photo-obscuraThis was my big take-away from the night. He had similar comments about the Brooklyn night pics. He really loved the last one, the woman walking alone in Bushwick which is also my favorite.
So, this has implications for my trip to Cuba in January ($240 round-trip, btw). I can't just do straight portraits. I'll do them because I want to give folks something they'd like, and I might get something good doing that, but I also need to think of other set-ups, full-body, shots that contain some ambiguity and mystery that can't be read in a second, interactions with their environment, abstract figures...
We talked about a series needing the easy to read pics to create breathing space, but yeah, that was important for me to hear.
The last person, a woman who does this collaborative stuff with women tapping into their inner goddess (many were cliché, some were quite good -- again, the same thing, what makes a cliché a cliché? partly the ability to read it, recognize it, and know it in a fraction of a second). She used this process of gluing the fiber paper to wood, then brushing melted beeswax over, called encaustic (apparently the place to learn how to do it is up the Hudson River Valley north of NYC). It worked.
Ever since I got my pos-neg prints, I was thinking about how I'd like them to physically have the texture and layering the chemical goop gives to the actual neg. I think I'm gonna play around with this technique.