Just recently, I had the opportunity to experience a 3-day intensive photo essay workshop organized by Leica, conducted by famed Magnum photographer, Abbas. I’ve learned about it on short notice, but I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to meet and learn from a master who’s been doing it for 45 years.
Abbas is an acclaimed photographer who roams around the world covering major political and social events. He has covered wars and revolutions in Biafra, Bangladesh, Northern Ireland, Vietnam, the Middle East, Chile, Cuba, and South Africa during the apartheid. He’s been a member of the elite photo agency Magnum since 1981.
The objective of the workshop was to push our creative boundaries as we create a series of photographs that tell a story. I’ve been shooting for 3 years now and my focus has mostly been on capturing interesting photos that stands on its own and may or may not tell a story. I haven’t really tried creating a photo essay – so I guess it’s high time.
Day 1 – Show & Tell
One by one, the participants lay down 10 to 15 prints of their work on a long table. Abbas would ask everyone to critique, edit, and then sequence each set until it told a story. He’d make the final edit giving us a good peek over his line of thinking. Seeing Abbas edit and sequence my Bad Weather shots was a pretty surreal experience.
After lunch, it was time to shoot. The plan was to capture different religion and culture in Singapore. Our first location was around the Sultan Mosque and Arab Street, focusing on Islam. I decided to shoot in black & white because I heeded Abbas when he said: “The world is in color, black & white is my way of showing my sense of reality. It helps me to focus and concentrate on what I want to show.”
So I put on my 20mm lens, set my camera to monochrome, and was all set. It’s been a while since I shot with a wide-angle lens.. it was pretty liberating as I wasn’t constrained by space. And shooting in b&w is a constant surprise since the photo will always turn out better or worse :)
Day 2 – Shoot
The shoot continues… we were taken to a Hindu temple in Little India. It was my first time to shoot in a place like this and got very excited with the barrage of imagery, textures, and ceremonies in the temple. It felt like there was one photographic opportunity after another and you had to keep your eyes peeled to not lose it.
After lunch, the next destination was a Buddhist temple in Toa Payoh. This place was the complete opposite of the Hindu temple, but equally beautiful. The place was spacious and peaceful. The ceremony was quite serene with all the chanting.
Again, it was pretty surreal shooting as Abbas looks on, constantly giving tips on how to see and what to shoot.
Day 3 – Edit
I was late for an hour because I joined the Safra Bay Half Marathon Run which started at 5:15am. But still, I couldn’t miss this last day… coz as Abbas said, this is the day we start the actual workshop.
We were asked to bring 120 photos from our day-and-a-half shoot. We were grouped in pairs where our partner helped us edit the photos down to 20. These were then projected on the wall where the whole group debated and narrowed it down further. Then all final photos of the participants were printed, laid down on a long table, edited, and sequenced until it gave a pretty good essay on religion / culture in Singapore.
After everything, Abbas gave each of us a signed print of his work and brought out a bottle of Chivas Regal.
Thoughts on the workshop:
Getting to converse with Abbas was a very humbling experience. He kept a low profile and was very fatherly in his approach, but the thoughts he shared in the workshop was absolutely inspiring for me.
Overall, the workshop reintroduced me to the profound side of photography. I’ve been so focused lately on capturing beauty with a long lens, I forgot to step back and look at the big picture of serious stories happening around. While I still want to pursue portraiture, I have a new-found respect and passion for documentary photography.
Update – 12th September 2011
Mr. Abbas has commented on this article, and has added insight to the peculiar group shot which he took of us (main photo above): “i believe a photographer’s place is behind a camera, never in front of it and this is why i asked all to playfully cover their face… since this is a group photo, i am present with my left hand – holding the camera with the other, using danny’s camera.”Thank you for dropping by, Mr. Abbas! :)
The group:
In addition to learning from the master himself, I got to meet a group of wonderfully different personalities all sharing the same passion for photography. Big thanks to Nathan, Khanh, Boon, Kim, Fun, Laxmi, and Deanna. I’m looking forward to more photo shoots with you guys!
Melisa – you’re awesome. Leonard – you rock, man.
Photo above taken by Fun
I remember when everyone first brought out their cameras – lo and behold, half of the group sported Leica M9‘s! Meanwhile, Abbas and Melisa had Leica M9-P‘s. I was starstruck. After briefly handling one (thanks, Nathan), I wanted one! But I know I can’t for obvious reasons. Maybe someday, who knows :)
The Photos:
The theme we covered during our 1½ day of shooting was 3 of the prevalent religions in Singapore: Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. Abbas has always considered religion as culture rather than faith. With this in mind, we focused not only on the temples and ceremonies, but also on the streets in its periphery – hopefully giving a peek of the people within and outside of their place of worship.
Below are the keepers I got. View these photos larger to see the details, please click here.
View these photos larger to see the details, please click here.
Nice read, Danny! It must have been a really great experience going through this workshop with Abbas! I particular enjoyed how u related ur perspective on experiencing documentary photography as opposed to your usual street portraits of strangers! Looking forward to your next series of photos!
It’s always a very interesting surprise to learn and discover other sides of photography.
Meanwhile, M9- rawrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr…
nice keepers, Danny!
good stuff!
Good sharing. I can feel the experience by reading to yoir article. Fantastic captures and seriously you really got hawk eyes :) i love the presentation of all your takes in black and white. Some sort of punch in all pictures. Amazing!!
Great post Danny..
It must have been a wonderful spending time and learning with someone who has spent majority of his lifetime behind the lens…
I have a few photo essays in my blog.. Could you please look through them and pass on some tips if you don’t mind?
Here are the links:
1. About children playing spintops in the back alley http://georgiemathew.wordpress.com/2011/09/04/spin-it-to-win-it/
2.About the Bengali community in Vellore. an outsiders’ view..
http://georgiemathew.wordpress.com/2011/04/04/the-foodie-bengalis-of-gandhi-road/
Thanks
Georgie
as always, you are inspiring. am a big fan.
Thanks for sharing this experience Danny. Your street portraits inspired me to focus on portraits for a while, I am thoroughly enjoying it, I believe I am learning as I go and I almost find it addictive to keep going with the portraits of 100 strangers project. This encourages me to look at the broader perspective.
Interesting post. It’s always good to go outside of our comfort zones. My favourite photo is number 4; it makes you do a double take :)
fatherly?… really?… danny i am glad you learned in the workshop
maybe you should have explained why the workshop participants have their faces covered : i believe a photographer’s place is behind a camera, never in front of it and this is why i asked all to playfully cover their face… since this is a group photo, i am present with my left hand – holding the camera with the other, using danny’s camera
a.
Mr. Abbas! Thank you for dropping by in my blog :) Yes, I thought you were ‘fatherly’, and yes, I’ve learned in the workshop… in fact, it opened my eyes to a broader aspect of photography.
And thank you for adding your insight to our peculiar group shot :) It’s definitely one of the more creative and curious group shots I’ve ever been part of. Thank you again! :D
How I envy you so much for attending this workshop! How terribly lucky you are, I would love to be in your shoes :-) I am sure a 70 minutes flight to Singapore is worth every penny if I had the chance. Great writing too. Thoroughly enjoy reading it. Love Abbas’ quote regarding shooting in B & W. That’e exactly what I feel too. Thank you for such sharing your experience with strangers!
3 Days with Abbas, I think You have lost your style :-) .. I love your “not Abbas” style
@tutun: It’s not about changing ‘styles’… in fact, I don’t think it’s about styles. For me, it’s being open and flexible for other ways of seeing and capturing things. I strongly believe that’s how we evolve and grow.
nice street photos pare! wish i can do that and learn from the masters. defenitely not your style but you’re right about trying something new and different.
Must have been a fascinating experience, specially to have someone like Abbas guiding and teaching you all the time. I am sure there are some great lessons learned.
Thanks for the photographs as well.
Thanks Danny for sharing this with us. Great read. Loved the group shot photo. Magnum did a similar shot for their annual meeting many years ago where they held their cameras up to their faces. I’ll be back again and again to your blog.
Regards,
Gary
@Gumanow: Thank you for dropping by my blog, Gary! :) I’m going to check out that Magnum group shot right now..
you do some amazing work man, no kidding. I’m a photography enthusiast myself, and do a tad bit of street photography.. seeing your work was a total treat. Please do keep up the gorgeous work :)
Thanks for sharing this. I recently attended a workshop with Alex Webb in Munich. We had an intense portfolio feedback session as well on the first day. Very helpful. For me it was a great honor to meet a Magnum photographer in person. So much experience, so much to learn.
I would really like to meet a great reportage photographer like Abbas. Hopefully some more workshops to come – maybe in Germany one day?
hey Danny,
great work man! people who talk about style are quite clueless and
I think you’ve shown another side to your thought process with this series.
strong reportage and will get better as your eye and experience matures.
editing:
I would have left out 5, 6 and 11 from above–
and it’s not to say they arent good in their own rights, I felt it didn’t
connect visually quite as easily as the others. still, it’s a fantastic departure
from your portraits.
greetings from Canada.
The term Hinduism also occurs sporadically in Sanskrit texts such as the later Rajataranginis of Kashmir (Hinduka, c. 1450), some 16th-18th century Bengali Gaudiya Vaishnava texts, including Chaitanya Charitamrita and Chaitanya Bhagavata, usually to contrast Hindus with Yavanas or Mlecchas.;;”-
http://healthfitnessbook.com
All the best
If you’re looking for an email list, head on to Emails 4 Less. Very cheap email packages and high delivery rate. http://bit.ly/emails4less
Do you mind if I quote a few of your posts as long as I provide credit and sources back to your website? My website is in the exact same niche as yours and my users would genuinely benefit from a lot of the information you provide here. Please let me know if this okay with you. Thank you!
I just want to tell you that I am new to blogging and site-building and certainly savored this blog. Very likely I’m likely to bookmark your blog post . You certainly have amazing stories. With thanks for sharing your blog site.
I’m just commenting to let you know of the impressive experience my friend’s girl gained browsing your blog. She noticed lots of things, most notably what it’s like to have a marvelous coaching character to let a number of people without hassle understand several tricky subject areas. You really exceeded our expected results. I appreciate you for coming up with such practical, dependable, educational and as well as fun guidance on your topic to Evelyn.
there are textured table linens which are much better than untextured table linena;;
I in addition to my friends came reading through the good ideas on your web blog and then quickly came up with a terrible feeling I never thanked the web site owner for those secrets. All the women came certainly joyful to learn all of them and now have unquestionably been taking pleasure in those things. I appreciate you for truly being simply kind and also for settling on this form of smart themes most people are really desperate to understand about. My personal honest regret for not expressing appreciation to you sooner.
I would like to show my appreciation for your kindness supporting folks that really want help with this one niche. Your special dedication to getting the message all through had become wonderfully functional and has truly made guys much like me to achieve their aims. Your amazing interesting tips and hints implies much to me and still more to my office colleagues. Many thanks; from each one of us.
I do accept as true with all of the ideas you’ve offered on your post. They’re very convincing and will certainly work. Still, the posts are very brief for beginners. May you please extend them a bit from subsequent time? Thank you for the post.
Well I truly enjoyed studying it. This information procured by you is very useful for accurate planning.
whoah this weblog is fantastic i really like reading your articles. Keep up the great paintings! You know, many people are searching round for this information, you can aid them greatly.
Very efficiently written post. It will be supportive to anyone who usess it, including myself. Keep up the good work – can’r wait to read more posts.
I do consider all the ideas you have offered in your post. They’re really convincing and can definitely work. Nonetheless, the posts are very short for newbies. Could you please prolong them a bit from subsequent time? Thanks for the post.
You are a very capable person!
It is in reality a great and useful piece of information. I¡¦m glad that you just shared this helpful information with us. Please keep us informed like this. Thanks for sharing.
I have been absent for some time, but now I remember why I used to love this web site. Thank you, I¡¦ll try and check back more frequently. How frequently you update your web site?
How do you protect your website’s content from copyright infringement?
You made some good points there. I looked on the internet for the subject and found most persons will consent with your blog.
I am now not positive the place you’re getting your information, however great topic. I needs to spend a while studying much more or figuring out more. Thanks for fantastic info I was in search of this information for my mission.
Wonderful beat ! I would like to apprentice while you amend your website, how can i subscribe for a blog web site? The account aided me a acceptable deal. I had been tiny bit acquainted of this your broadcast provided bright clear concept
I have been browsing online more than 3 hours these days, but I never found any attention-grabbing article like yours. It is beautiful worth enough for me. Personally, if all site owners and bloggers made good content material as you probably did, the internet shall be much more useful than ever before.
You made a few good points there. I did a search on the matter and found mainly people will consent with your blog.
We are a group of volunteers and starting a new scheme in our community. Your website provided us with valuable information to work on. You’ve done an impressive job and our entire community will be grateful to you.
I have not checked in here for some time because I thought it was getting boring, but the last several posts are good quality so I guess I¡¦ll add you back to my daily bloglist. You deserve it my friend :)
I’m just writing to let you be aware of of the really good discovery my princess obtained checking your web page. She mastered several things, including what it is like to have a marvelous helping mood to make many more completely know a number of multifaceted things. You undoubtedly surpassed readers’ desires. Many thanks for displaying such practical, safe, educational and unique thoughts on your topic to Kate.
I¡¦ve recently started a blog, the info you provide on this website has helped me greatly. Thank you for all of your time & work.
fantastic put up, very informative. I’m wondering why the other experts of this sector don’t realize this. You should proceed your writing. I am confident, you’ve a huge readers’ base already!
I intended to put you this tiny word in order to thank you so much the moment again for your marvelous thoughts you have discussed in this article. It was so pretty open-handed of people like you in giving extensively all most people could have sold as an electronic book to end up making some bucks on their own, particularly given that you could have tried it in the event you considered necessary. The inspiring ideas as well acted like the good way to be certain that other people have similar dreams the same as my personal own to grasp somewhat more in terms of this condition. I’m sure there are a lot more enjoyable instances up front for individuals who read carefully your blog.