I think Instagram is the worst thing to ever happen to photography

I think Instagram is the worst thing to ever happen to photography

I remember when Instagram was a mere curiosity – a place where photographers who had grown a little tired of its precursor, Flickr, could post their images in a less crowded environment. Flickr too was the place where once all the cool photographers went to get their daily dose of ego-boosting. If you were feeling a tad uninspired, it was Flickr you turned to for moral support. 

There was a special jolt of excitement when you saw the little bell icon light up, indicating that someone, somewhere around the globe, had found you worthy of engaging their finger muscle for half a second, to deliver you some creative reassurance that you weren’t just a nobody with a camera. Sound familiar?

The reason photographers tended to outgrow Flickr was that it had become an engine for mutual back-scratching, with little if any feedback that resembled constructive. The comments section was filled with statements like “Incredible!”,  “Unreal!”, “Best photo I’ve ever seen!!!” and other such pronouncements of unbridled adoration. This gets old quickly. And so, in what became a common story in the mid 2010s, I left my Flickr account to gather digital dust in the corner of my desktop. 

At no other time in the history of photography has any one format as aggressively forced uniformity and genericness as Instagram

Instagram, on the other hand, was fresh. It was like an empty Wetherspoons – still a bit tacky but with plenty of room to spread out and revel in the unusual quiet. You’d easily get your thirty likes, but people bothered to at least elaborate on what they loved about your images. It wasn’t a bad place to hang out. 500px was better, but if you wanted to use your phone, IG was easier. 

Naturally though, it didn’t last. Of course it didn’t. As soon as people realized money could be made by posting pictures of themselves, posed with little modesty on a beach somewhere warmer, it became more about marketing than making friends. As a side note, pictures of me of that ilk were never created, in fear of crashing the platform.

This brings us neatly to the present day. Instagram is a behemoth that rules the world of content creation. Platforms that aren’t Instagram try their best to be. It’s a fake world on there, everyone knows it and yet billions of people, photographers or not, flock to its gates every day.

Pexels

There’s nothing wrong with shooting for Instagram, but where else will those images find a home off-platform? (Image credit: Ron Lach)

Why is this such a destructive pattern, I hear you ask. If people want to spend their lives showing the world how they’d like viewers to think they spend their lives, without actually living, let them! Most aren’t content creators anyway, so why the negativity with regard to ‘true’ photographers? 

At one time social media was a means to an end. It was just another platform on which to display our images, albeit a particularly pervasive one. When people posted on Instagram, it was a means of gaining a little extra recognition, somewhere you knew someone had seen your work. 

Today, for many photographers it is THE reason to switch on their cameras. Everything they ever shoot is bound for ‘the gram’. Whole shoots are planned purely to capture images for the platform. At face value, this might not seem a big problem. If some photographers can successfully make a living out of it, then good on them. It’s another opportunity to break into a competitive industry. However, the real damage is done by the apparent promise of fame and fortune, pedaled by the elite brand of influencers at the very top of the algorithmic ladder. 

Shooting multiple image orientations and aspect ratios future-proofs your image database (Image credit: Future)

These people have a vested interest in buttering up Meta, Instagram’s current overlords. Their story is unlikely to be repeated for many new photographers, less so now than ever. IG is saturated, bursting at the seams with content. It’s neigh on impossible to rise to the top these days, so if you set up an account tomorrow, you’re pretty unlikely to be paying off your mortgage with IG-derived income by next year. 

Many young photographers won’t believe this though. Fresh-faced enthusiasts streaming out of universities, photography degrees in hand, are desperate to be Insta-famous. It’s their purpose in life. The worst part is, while the photo industry has always been competitive, the platform-specific requirements of Instagram mean files shot for social functions are largely useless off-platform. 

Everything is shot in portrait format, to maximize cropping possibilities on Insta. As a magazine editor, it’s all rather heartbreaking – you see a gorgeous thumbnail image packed with colour and drama, only to learn it’s a portrait format image with no alternative options. Photographers are creating entire portfolios of images which have only one function. On a magazine, we’re unlikely to print a portrait shot across a double page so, with this approach, you could very well be kissing off a sustainable income in future.

Instagram Reels and other functions should be used to promote your photography and projects, not become your reason for being a photographer (Image credit: Future)

When Instagram is closed – and it will be as soon as something more profitable for Meta comes along – we need to be prepared. Photographers with good sense shoot multiple compositions of each subject they approach, so there will always be an aspect ratio to fit, should a picture editor request one. Save all of your presets and back up your Lightroom Catalog, so alternative formats can be created with minimum fuss. And never, ever ‘Save for Web’. 

In my humble opinion, Instagram has its place but has forgotten what this actually is. If it acts as an encouragement to young photographers to get out with a camera and document what they see, then it earns its keep. But driving everyone who taps the icon on their home screen to shoot the exact same image as the hundreds or thousands before them, in a format that basically dooms their portfolio to editorial exile, will have a devastating effect on the photo industry over the coming years.

Stifling creativity can never be a good thing. 

Through Metaphorical Illustrations, Owen Gent Unveils Difficult Psychological Experiences

Through Metaphorical Illustrations, Owen Gent Unveils Difficult Psychological Experiences

All images © Owen Gent, shared with permission

For Owen Gent, texture and shadow are essential narrative tools. The Bristol-based artist fosters a robust personal practice and works with commercial clients, authors, and various publications to create moody illustrations rich with metaphor. In one work evoking the emotional toll of cancer, trauma, and depression, a figurative silhouette draws back a woman’s hair to survey the surroundings while still protected by the strands. An unsettling piece takes a similarly introspective and psychological approach as black crows circle a subject, one on fire and another grasping at the person’s eye.

Gent tells Colossal that his works begin with analog techniques like painting, and digital manipulation comes later. “It’s a constant push and pull between the two, and I try and be conscious of not losing too much of the original piece when editing,” he says.

Prints are available in Gent’s shop, and his illustrated children’s book That’s Nice, Love is out now. Find more of his work on Behance and Instagram.

 

two mask-like faces appear to float to the right of a figure with a shadowy face

Black crows, one one fire, surround a human form with one bird grasping at the human eye

A figure appears to float above water with a pink reflection in the body of water below

Two images, one of a hand holding a red beet, the other of a constellation of red spheres superimposed on a human figure

A girls legs stepping from darkness into flowers

A vibrant bird perched on a branch

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Through Metaphorical Illustrations, Owen Gent Unveils Difficult Psychological Experiences appeared first on Colossal.

DePaul Athletics Celebrates Student-Athlete Graduation

DePaul Athletics Celebrates Student-Athlete Graduation

CHICAGO – As DePaul University celebrates graduation weekend, June 10-12, DePaul Athletics congratulates its 42 student-athletes who have or will earn their degrees in 2023. Of DePaul’s 42 student-athletes graduating, 34 earned BIG EAST All-Academic Team accolades during their career. DePaul’s graduates span across six different colleges across the University and over 25 different degree programs.  

By Semester 

Fall 2022 – 2 

Winter 2023 – 4 

Spring 2023 – 32 

Fall 2023 (Expected) – 4 

By College 

College of Science and Health – 12  

Driehaus College of Business – 7 

Kellstadt Graduate School of Business – 7 

Jarvis College of Computing and Digital Media (CDM) – 7 

College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences – 6 

College of Communication – 3 

Men’s Basketball (3) 

Brendan Favre – B.S. Cybersecurity – Spring 2023 

Philmon Gebrewhit – B.A. Communication and Media – Winter 2023 

Tyon Grant-Foster – B.A. Communication and Media – Spring 2023 

Women’s Basketball (2) 

Jorie Allen – B.A. Political Science (Law and Theory) – Winter 2023 

Kiki Rimmer – B.A. Sociology (Health and Human Services) – Spring 2023 

Golf (2) 

Noah Kolar – BSC Economics – Spring 2023 

Artemiy Yalovenko – BSC Management Information Systems – Spring 2023 

Men’s Soccer (4) 

Michael Anderson – M.S. Cybersecruity (Networking and Infrastructure) – Fall 2023 

Grant Herbek – BFA Film and Television (Editing) – Fall 2023 

Jack Richards – B.S. Health Sciences – Fall 2022 

William Stroud – M.S. Management – Fall 2023 

Women’s Soccer (5) 

Kristin Boos – B.A. Art – Spring 2023 

Olivia Cooke – B.S. Health Sciences – Fall 2022 

Megan Malecha – B.A. Psychology (Human Development) – Spring 2023 

Maria Nordness – B.S. Health Sciences (Medical) – Spring 2023 

Brooke Weitzel – B.S. Biochemistry – Fall 2023 

Softball (2) 

Grace Frazier – B.S. Neuroscience (Behavioral/Cognitive Neuroscience) – Spring 2023 

Tori Meyer – B.A. Psychology (Human Development and Sociology) – Spring 2023 

Men’s Tennis (3) 

Leon Huck – BSC Business Administration – Spring 2023 

Lars Minsaas – BSC Business Administration – Spring 2023 

Luuk Wassenaar – M.S. Data Science (Computational Methods) – Spring 2023 

Women’s Tennis (4) 

Lenka Antonijevic – M.S. Business Analytics – Spring 2023 

Yuliya Kizelbasheva – B.S. Information Technology (Web Development) – Spring 2023 

Valentina Martin – M.S. Marketing – Spring 2023 

Madelyn Yergler – M.S. Finance (Online) – Spring 2023 

Men’s Track & Field (7) 

Dylan Armstrong – B.S. Health Sciences – Winter 2023 

Grant Fuller – MBA – Spring 2023 

Gavin Glaza – M.S. Audit and Advisory Services – Spring 2023 

Shane Knanishu – M.S. Applied Statistics (Data Science) – Spring 2023 

Myles Marshall – B.A. Political Science – Spring 2023 

Michael Stanley – MBA Finance – Spring 2023 

Jarel Terry – BSC Marketing (Sales Leadership) – Spring 2023 

Women’s Track & Field (10) 

Nina Amicon – B.A. Public Policy – Spring 2023 

Charlotte Anderson – BSB Finance with honors – Spring 2023 

Olivia Borowiak – B.A. Writing and Rhetoric – Winter 2023 

Erika Burgess – M.S. Applied Math (Mathematical Finance) – Spring 2023 

Tori Carroll – BFA. Film and Television (Screenwriting) – Spring 2023 

Alicia Jones – BSB Accountancy Honors – Spring 2023 

Kindle Miles – B.S. Cybersecurity – Spring 2023 

Kiara Pauli – B.S. Health Sciences (Nursing) – Spring 2023 

Jordyn Showers – B.A. Public Relations and Advertising – Spring 2023 

Valarie Whitted – B.S. Health Sciences – Spring 2023 

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Wilson joins Raise The Roof For The Arts

Wilson joins Raise The Roof For The Arts

SIDNEY — Raise The Roof For The Arts has announced the appointment of Delaney Wilson as its new event and advancement manager. Wilson, a recent college graduate, brings a fresh perspective and a strong passion for the arts, making her a valuable addition to the organization.

As a recent graduate of Miami University, Wilson has already demonstrated leadership skills and an understanding of event management and advancement strategies. Her academic achievements and dedication to the arts fits for her new role at Raise The Roof For The Arts.

“We are excited to welcome Delaney Wilson to our team,” said Ian Hinz, executive director of Raise The Roof For The Arts. “Delaney’s enthusiasm, creativity, and academic background in arts management will bring a fresh perspective to our organization. We believe she will play a crucial role in elevating our events and expanding our reach in the community.”

During her time at Miami University, Wilson was involved in various art initiatives and programs, where she gained hands-on experience in event planning, marketing, and management. Her dedication to the arts was evident in her involvement in managing successful arts events and theatrical productions.

“I am thrilled to join Raise The Roof For The Arts as the event and advancement manager,” said Wilson. “Having just graduated, I am eager to apply my knowledge and skills to make a positive impact on the arts community. I am committed to creating exceptional experiences and driving support for the arts, especially in underserved communities.”

In her role as event and advancement manager, Wilson will be responsible for overseeing the planning, execution, and evaluation of all events organized by Raise The Roof For The Arts. She will also focus on developing strategic partnerships, cultivating sponsorships and implementing fundraising initiatives to support the organization’s mission.

Raise The Roof For The Arts recognizes that Wilson’s fresh perspective, innovative thinking, and a strong commitment to the arts will contribute significantly to their growth and success. Wilson’s ability to connect with diverse audiences and her dedication to promoting inclusivity aligns perfectly with the organization’s values.