The Key to Personal Growth as a Photographer

The Key to Personal Growth as a Photographer

What is the key to growth as a photographer? Is it buying the best gear you can possibly afford? Nope. Or is it strategically curating your Instagram feed? Probably not. 

So, what is the path to progress as a photographer? In my opinion, the best thing we can do for our own development as creatives is to study the work of other photographers and artists. No matter what gear we have or how nice our social media looks to our viewers, we risk stagnation if we aren't learning from fellow photographers.

If you specialize in one genre of photography, I can't recommend enough studying the work of other photographers in other genres. I'm mainly a landscape photographer, but I find much inspiration in street and architecture photography. Viewing George Byrne's photographs, for example, has influenced the way I look at nature. Though his images mostly showcase concrete jungles, his simple, colorful compositions have helped me see trees, mountains, and rivers in a simpler light. 

Further, once I discovered famous paintings by Caravaggio, my style drastically changed. Caravaggio was an Italian painter during the Baroque period, and he often used a technique called chiaroscuro. This artistic approach manipulates extreme darkness and brightness to create emphasis and and dramatic contrast in an image. After discovering this artist's style, I quickly fell in love and began to apply it to my own photographs. 

What do you think is the key to personal growth as a photographer? Do you agree with this philosophy or do you have a different approach? If you agree, what photographers and artists influence your work and the way you see the world? 

Cover photo by Sushobhan Badhai on Unsplash.

Tim Behuniak's picture

Timothy Behuniak is a Salt Lake City-based landscape and outdoor adventure photographer who's passionate about getting lost in the woods with his camera. Tim's hope is that his viewers, like him, will one day love and fight to protect the beautiful locations he is fortunate to photograph.

Log in or register to post comments
11 Comments

I agree, those things are important, but think it's more important to develop and scrutinize my thoughts and feelings about my subjects and life as a whole. The former helps in discovering new ways to say what I want to say while the latter helps me discover what it is I want to say. Without the former, I may be able to communicate, albeit less eloquently. Without the latter, I'm babbling about nothing.

absolutely my background is painting and illustration I'm used to making my own colors, creating depth, shadows and highlights so for me I'm learning how to deal with whats given and working with it instead of making whats in my head.

Relentless practice and self-critique to improve.

Study to broaden.

Just take pictures.

I ve found out that the best I can do is to go and shoot and change/experiment with the scene setups (I mean holy trinity and distances with different lens I have) - what I mean is learning to control focus - as I found really hard to shoot 200 mm f2. 8 just 1 meter from my subject etc... In general knowing which parts of the photo are going to be in focus. Eg last lesson I learned was I can get much better pictures of my kids when using live view with face tracking (dual pixel though) then to try these always moving devils shoot trough viewfinder.... And so on....

The key for me to personal growth is to get out and take photos. Work hard at your compositions.Study the results and get honest independent crituiques of your work.

https://rickmcevoyphotography.com/

I enjoy your crisp, clean style. Perhaps studying the work of landscape photographers will help you further develop your portfolio!

It could be argued that the right market values a true artist, not just a cell phone shooter. Perhaps you're not in/catering to the right that will value your hard work, knowledge, and artistic ability. If photography as an art is pretty much dead, then photographers wouldn't put out photo books or host galleries. Yet, they still are. I beg to differ.

I've shot a few weddings at a fairly high price and always had success. Of course family and friends and the occasional aunt use their phones, tablets, or even entry-level DSLR, but as the photographer, I'm hired with the expectation that I have knowledge and skill to capture critical moments and deliver high-quality images to my clients that their family and friends cannot. The same can be said of concerts, public events, etc. Still not sure where you're hanging around, haha.