Should you always remain true to your style? MEG member Eric Johnson shares some thoughts on the topic.
Several times during a recent group show at Multiple Exposures Gallery, I received a particular comment on one of my images, a desert landscape that I shot in Joshua Tree
Valley
Sunrise, Joshua Tree National Park
©Eric Johnson
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Every photographer should have a style – it is what makes our work distinctive, and it comes from our individual outlook on the world. It reflects how we see, and it comes from within.
Bob and
Edith’s Diner, Arlington, VA ©Eric Johnson
However, there is some benefit to breaking out of your usual style once in a while and trying some new things. I recently took classes in portrait photography and studio lighting. These two areas may not have much direct relevance to the type of photography that I typically do, and I don’t really intend to make a major change in the direction of my photographic career, but I took the classes more as a means of expanding my awareness of other photographic methods and techniques, and to experiment with a different way of using light and seeing its impact on a subject. I’m sure that these new techniques and approaches will find their way into my photographic style, even though I probably won’t change the subject matter that appeals to me. But that’s my goal – to keep growing as a photographer while remaining true to my style, but to not get so stuck in one style that I can’t break out of it from time to time.
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