Reminder: last week to submit to JPG magazine issue 6: Oops!

Sometimes the best shots are accidents. They come from the moment your finger slips, your settings are wrong, you shoot into the sun, or your model sneezes. The results are more about serendipity than technique, and they can surprise even the most accomplished photographer.

The theme for Issue 6 is "Oops!" to celebrate these happy accidents. We’re seeking submissions of photos that say “Oops!” to you. Maybe it’s a photo you didn’t mean to take, or a moment you didn’t expect to capture. You’re encouraged to have fun with the theme. Surprise us!

Got the perfect "Oops!" photo? Submit it now! Submissions open until April 30, 2006.

Issue 28 of mooncruise* is up

Cover of mooncruise issue 28, April 2006

The April 2006 issue (28) of mooncruise*, an online magazine featuring photography and music by international artists, is now up and ready for viewing.

In this issue

PHOTOGRAPHY by: Cynthia Edorh, Adriene Hughes, Elena Getzieh, Emiliano Granado, Igor Ken, Ione Saizar, Jan Hoeft, Juao Coraçäo, Yu-fei Lin, Mark Peter Drolet, Matthew Holloway, Monica Menez, Satu Palander, Sonja Müller, Tread, Worapong Sunthornrohit

MUSIC by: Au4

mooncruise.com (requires Flash 6)

Submissions open for JPG Magazine issue #6 + thoughts on themes

JPG Magazine writes:

Sometimes the best shots are accidents. They come from the moment your finger slips, your settings are wrong, you shoot into the sun, or your model sneezes. The results are more about serendipity than technique, and they can surprise even the most accomplished photographer.

The theme for Issue 6 is ‘Oops!’ to celebrate these happy accidents. We’re seeking submissions of photos that say ‘Oops!’ to you. Maybe it’s a photo you didn’t mean to take, or a moment you didn’t expect to capture. You’re encouraged to have fun with the theme. Surprise us!

Got the perfect "Oops!" photo? Submit it now! Submissions open until April 30.

Go to submissions page at jpgmag.com

Thoughts on themes

I think magazines like JPG are a great idea, but the themes for many of them are getting a little strange. Most of them seem off the mark in many ways, both as a potential buyer and contributor.

JPG’s last theme, "Photography Is Not A Crime", was interesting and relevant, but it leaves me wondering what the point of JPG really is: is it a magazine of photography, as their previous issues have led me to believe, or is it a magazine about photography? The way I see it, the two have less in common than it initially seems. (As David Bayles and Ted Orland pointed out in their book Art & Fear, making and viewing art are completely separate activities.) As a customer, I’m confused as to what I’m actually buying; as a potential contributor, I’m at a loss as to what to submit. Reportage? Shots constructed to take a stand on the issue? Photos of places that other people have or are likely to be harassed for shooting even though it’s legal? Throw me a frickin’ bone here!

The "Oops!" theme leaves me similarly lost, not about what to submit, but what the point would be. I’m sure there will be some great work in that issue, but it won’t be because it was accidental. I see no connection whatsoever between something about a photo being accidental and it being a compelling image. It probably took me a few hundred rolls of film to learn the lesson, but a photo being of something you love or a nice color, fun or difficult to make, shot with a particular camera, or developed or printed with a particular process doesn’t magically make it good. A shitty photo is a shitty photo with or without that stuff. All that yields is a shitty photo that’s sentimental, colorful, or was a pain in the ass. A platinum print of a bad image won’t make it any better than having shot it with a Leica will; it can still suck mightily. None of this process stuff has anything to do with the experience of viewing the end result. So who cares if it was an accident or not? I don’t. I care that it’s engaging—that’s it.

What I think would be an interesting approach to this theme is for people to show an initial accident that started them down an artistic path that they’ve then deliberately developed: what they were going for, what they got instead, what about the accident made them see the potential for future work, how closely the initial idea of where they would take the idea matches where they’re at with it now, and what that development pictorially looks like. But then we’re back to the about or of photography magazine question, as this is more about process than result. Not that there’s anything wrong with convering both, but when you have a narrowly-defined theme, it creates expectations one way or the other.

While this is a matter of personal philosophy, I’m not sure why themes are necessary for this sort of thing at all. It’s certainly a common practice, and I’d hesitate to call it a bad one, but I think I’d prefer a broader sampling of whatever the editors think is good in general. (For a good example of this, check out File, an online photography magazine with no theme and no deadline, who simply publish whatever they find compelling.) It would probably offer more opportinuty for discovery, which is, I think, what I’m really after when buying this sort of thing. Of course there are many, many ways to interpret a theme, but I know that my editing can get a little narrow when I’m going after a theme vs. simply being open to anything that’s compelling. Perhaps most interesting is the opportinuty to find your own themes within a diverse body of work, as it’s not only more participatory, but can teach you something about yourself.

(I’m not a big fan of the one-way art experience where you’re shown a piece and told what it’s about, what it means, and how and what you’re supposed to feel and think about it. To me, that usually feels like a joke that has to be explained. I’d rather strap myself in, go for the ride, and see where it takes me. I’m not saying that this and themes are the same thing, but it feels to me like themes are a step up the one-way hill.)

My aim is not to slam JPG. There’s a lot of this happening with these sorts of publications, both electronic and print, and JPG just happened to be the example at hand.

JPG Magazine issue #5 now available

JPG writes:

"Issue 5 is now available! Our ‘Photography is Not a Crime’ issue is a celebration of the freedom to photograph.

"Inside you’ll find 31 photographer’s takes and stories on the theme, NYC subway photography by Edmund Leveckis, Shane Lavalette‘s Family Portrait Project, an interview with attorney Bert Krages about your rights when shooting, and a special clip-out Photographer’s Right Bust Card."

I follow Edmund Leveckis’ and Shane Lavalette’s work and they’re both insanely talented photographers. On the basis of that alone, this may be a don’t-miss issue.

More info and order from jpgmag.com

Submissions for the next issue open 1 April, 2006. The theme? "Oops!"

Issue 27 of mooncruise* is up

Cover of mooncruise issue 27, February 2006

The February 2006 issue (27) of mooncruise*, an online magazine featuring photography and music by international artists, is now up and ready for viewing.

In this issue

PHOTOGRAPHY by: Denis Zimmermann, Gustav Almestål, Ivo Gretener, Jill Coleman, Jóse Moreira, Peter Gorman, Andrew Burlone, Olivia Barr, Samuel E Scott, Stephen Mallon, Warren Harold, and Trevor Brady

MUSIC by: Return to Mono

mooncruise.com (requires Flash 6)

Lightleaks magazine issue #2 available for pre-order

Issue 2 of Lightleaks, a magazine for toy camera users published by toycamera.com, is available for pre-order for the reduced price of US $12.99. Shipping is US $2.50 to North America and US $5.00 to the rest of the world. If you want it—I do, issue 1 was a very promising start—order soon, as it will go up to the cover price of $14.99 shortly.

They’ve gone with a private printer rather than Lulu for this issue, so hopefully the print quality will go up and shipping times will go down over #1. The cover price has also been reduced from $16.99.

Overview of issue 2

  • Introduction by Steph Parke
  • Out of my imagination – An exclusive interview with the inventor of the Holga
  • World Toy Camera Day 2005 – Winning photos and a report on the event
  • Theme – Nobody: where has everyone gone?
  • Featured Artist – Leon Taylor
  • The Toy Box – The Pouva Start!
  • From The Archives
  • The Plastic Guide
  • Event Calendar

You can order issues 1 and 2 from this page on lightleaks.org.