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September 3, 2016 by Kat

Q&A with Kat

I taught two classes in August on the Oregon Coast at the Sitka Center for Art & Ecology. It was a gorgeous location and I hope to teach there again in the future! My classes caught the attention of the local newspaper, the Lincoln City News Guard, and they interviewed me for an article. Unfortunately, the full article is available to subscribers only, so I’m posting the Q&A here for you all too.

What are the benefits of using an iPhone, iPad or iPod as one’s primary camera compared to classic photography?

The primary benefit is the accessibility and availability. You take your phone with you everywhere, and that means you have a camera everywhere too, which was not always the case in the past. Having a camera with you all of the time allows you to capture anything interesting you see throughout the day. This can lead to a deeper observation of the world around you, and a deeper experience of the moment you are in. It can change the way you perceive the world around you. For me, it changed the type of photographs I captured.

Another huge benefit is the processing power you have in the palm of your hand. Now you can not only capture the photograph, but process and share it with the world, all from the same device. The apps put the power of Photoshop into the hands of everyone in an inexpensive and user-friendly way. Capturing photographs is just the start of the process, and manipulating to create a new piece of art from it brings a whole range of new creative options.

What are some attributes that iproducts can’t beat when it comes to classical photography?

Mobile device cameras like the iPhone have a fixed, wide-angle lens, a smaller sensor, and no direct control of shutter speed and aperture. This means you don’t have the full range of functionality you would have with a dSLR – where you have interchangeable lenses and full control of the settings. For that reason, you can’t do all types of photography with an iPhone. For example, in wildlife photography, you need a long lens, in the range of 300-400mm, to capture the details from afar. You just can’t do that with an iPhone, even if you add aftermarket lenses.

While iPhone cameras certainly can’t do everything, they are incredibly capable devices which can do more than you might think. I don’t see the iPhone as replacing other types of cameras, more of adding to the range of what you can do with photography by making it so portable and available.

How long has the Sitka Center been offering workshops like this, which blend modern electronics with art?

This is my first year teaching at Sitka Center, so please check with them on the history.

I don’t think of it as “blending modern electronics with art” as much as using “modern technology tools to create art.” All art is created with tools, whether it’s a paintbrush on canvas or a digital tool. Modern technology adds a whole new range of tools into the mix, opening up more ways to create art. And that will only continue, as new technology is introduced and artists experiment with it. Isn’t that awesome?

As technology continues to improve in capturing visual art, will photographers begin to deviate from classical photography or will it remain a staple of art?

Photographers are already significantly deviating from classic photography using mobile devices. In addition to the portraits, still lifes and landscapes people might think of when they hear “photography,” there is a whole new range of photography-based art that is starting to reach the mainstream, including altered photography (what I call my work) and digital collage. I like to think of this as expanding the definition of photography rather than changing it. Classic photography will always have its place in art, and photographers who like to create that type of image will still be creating new work. The iPhone does not change that, only adds more photographic artists and different types of art into the mix.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: article, interview, newspaper

July 22, 2014 by Kat

My Brush with Fame

What a crazy week! I am slowly coming back down from the high of the art fair (more on that later this week) and the wave of publicity that came my way last week. I now have a tiny taste of what happens when something “goes viral.” It’s fun, exciting and more than a little disconcerting.

First, let’s tell the internet story…

The Salem Statesman-Journal article that ran a little over a week ago struck a chord with the media. The idea of a photographer choosing an iPhone over a dSLR seemed to pique their interest. The same day, it was picked up by a couple of other sites, most notably Business Insider. It seems they take the quotes and the gist of the story from the original article and publish as a new article, using photographs I’ve posted online. They never talked to me.

From Business Insider, the story proliferated, rewritten and repackaged on other sites all over the world. It was weird seeing my photographs accompanied by French, Russian and other languages. It was even posted on Yahoo News a couple of days later. My website has never seen so much traffic!

And then, there’s the radio story…

Stemming from the same Statesman-Journal article, a producer from Oregon Public Broadcasting’s Think Out Loud radio show contacted me. Think Out Loud is a lunch hour, Monday through Friday radio show on current events in the OPB listening area (all of Oregon and SW Washington). She was interested in my transition from the dSLR to iPhone as well. We talked a little bit on the phone on Wednesday, and she said it would be a Thursday segment if it was chosen. She’d know by the end of the day.

A couple of hours later she called and said they’d like to do the segment, and could I come up to the studio in Portland? This would be in the middle of setting up for the fair, but I was already halfway to Portland (45 miles), so I could drive up from Salem, do the interview, then drive back to finish my booth set up. It would make for a crazy day, but how do you say no to that? You don’t.

Photo Courtesy Aleida Fernandez

Photo Courtesy Aleida Fernandez

So, sweaty from setting up, I drove up to the OPB station, and sat in the green room waiting for my segment, trying very hard not to think about what I was about to do. Live radio. After thirty minutes or so, I was whisked into the booth, shook hands with host David Miller, put on my headset and the interview began. It was over before I knew it. A quick photograph in the booth, and I was back on the highway, heading to the fair to finish set up, souvenir Think Out Loud mug in hand.

2014-07-22 07.28.26-1

You can listen to the segment here. I haven’t listened to it yet, I just can’t. I keep thinking of better answers to the questions, things I wish I would have said. But I heard lots of nice things about it from other people, so I’m going to believe their compliments and leave it at that.

And the rest of the story…

Because of the internet articles, I was contacted by others who saw my work and had interest in connecting with me for future projects, so there could be some longer term ripples coming out of my little media storm.

And in the shorter term, all of the publicity certainly helped at the art fair. Many people came by my booth specifically because of the newspaper article or the OPB interview. I don’t really want to be gimmicky and have people interested in my work because of the device I use, but half the battle is just getting people to SEE my work and this helped. They will either resonate with it or they won’t, once it’s in front of them. Judging from the response, many people resonate with it.

My viral experience felt big to me, but it was really tiny in the grand scheme. It was a case of the sniffles, not a full-on flu. But it showed me how small things can snowball very quickly into bigger things on the internet, and you just hang on for the wild ride. The experience opened my eyes to a number of things…

I realized that no one needs to talk to you to post an article about you; you don’t really have any say.

I found out that your photographs can be pulled and posted anywhere, so make sure they are watermarked. When you put your work out on the internet, you are giving implicit permission.

I discovered that random people can be mean in their comments, or I take them too personally, so I stopped reading them. I don’t need more negative input, I generate enough of that in my head on my own, thank you very much.

I also discovered that many of the people who work in the media world are really cool. Tom Rastrelli of the Statesman-Journal and Aleida Fernandez from OPB were both awesome. It’s fun to talk to people who are interested in what you do and want to see you succeed. I can’t thank them enough for the opportunities they provided.

Finally, I learned that once in a while, if you are working hard and putting your art out there, it gets noticed. Be ready to take advantage of it.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: interview, newspaper, publicity, radio, viral

September 20, 2011 by Kat

A Postal Mystery

Here we have a row of one of my recent fascinations, newspaper boxes. Some empty and abandoned, others and in use. All in a neat row outside of our town’s post office. I loved the light coming along the wall, pointing to the row of these colorful boxes.

An appropriate photo to go along with the news of today’s postal mystery.  Let me set the stage…

The Liberate your Art postcard swap had just finished up, and I was contacted by my online friend Elizabeth, from Puerto Rico.

“Kat, I never received any postcards. Did you get mine?”

“I’ve sent out everything I received! I don’t remember if I got yours or not. If you didn’t get anything, I probably didn’t receive your cards. I’m so sorry!”

An unsatisfying ending. Until…

Yesterday. The postcards she sent to me in July for the swap arrived in the mail yesterday. Over two months after she had sent them.

So I have 5 cheerful postcards that Elizabeth liberated into the world two months ago, now looking for a home! I would like to get some postcards back to Elizabeth too, so if you would like to send Elizabeth one of your postcards, I will send you one of hers. You don’t have to have been a participant in the Liberate your Art postcard swap to do this. Email me kat [at] kateyestudio [dot] com with your interest and I will send you the details. The first five to respond are in!

One last participant. A postal mystery that will never be resolved. All I need is a few generous readers to help make Elizabeth’s swap happen! Can you help?

_________________________

What’s going on around The Kat Eye View of the World…

  • The current Exploring with a Camera theme is The Color Wheel: Part 1. Check out the post and join in the exploration.
  • Are you ready to find your own unique vision through photography? This is the last week to register for the fall series of the Find Your Eye e-course. Class starts Sunday, September 25! Visit here for more info.
  • You can subscribe to the Kat Eye News to stay up-to-date on all the happenings around here.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: brick, color, Corvallis, newspaper, Oregon, postcard, swap

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