A Focus on Change
If you’re picking up PhotoMedia for the first time, we hope this issue will strike you as visually powerful and editorially impressive. If you’re a longtime reader, on the other hand, you may be surprised by the dramatic evolution since our last issue (Fall 2007, on photojournalism).
Change is almost always a challenge and even a little scary, but in this case we think you’ll appreciate the results of our efforts. A sizeable rise in mailing costs and other expenses for the last issue prompted us to consider reinventing PhotoMedia with a new, slightly smaller and more convenient format — our first revision in more than 11 years — and a complete redesign, from front to back. This allowed us to incorporate many improvements that we had long contemplated. Every square inch of every page has been scrutinized...
20 Years…Bigger and Better than Ever!
In the world of publishing, surviving two years is an accomplishment – lasting 20 is something of a miracle!
To celebrate entering our 20th year, we wanted to make this a very special issue of PhotoMedia (PM). This is our most ambitious edition ever – a lot more pages (76), photos and in-depth features.
You’ll notice we have a new look, including a more contemporary PM logo and improved design throughout, thanks to our new creative director, Rich Huston.
It’s been a while since our last issue (Spring 2007). Skipping an issue (Summer) allowed us time to make some operational improvements and staff changes. Meanwhile, it’s been an incredible year so far...
Not as Simple as Pressing a Button
Recently I was invited to be a judge for the Costco International Photo Contest. The 24,000 entries received reminded me, once again, how so many people around the world love making pictures. Since the Kodak advances in the late 1800s, photography has been as simple as pressing a button, but only the truly talented can produce an original and inspiring photo.
Surprisingly, judging the qualifying 7,000 shots in the contest wasn’t nearly as time-consuming as one might expect, as the most impressive efforts were quickly recognized and ultimately honored.
Fortunately, we don’t have to look through quite that many photos to identify those we’ll present in each issue of PhotoMedia, since we cover some of the foremost photographers in the business, with archives full of great work.
In Praise of Women...and a Legend...
Certain events in one’s life can be pivotal to what lies ahead. In my case, it was the loss of my father in a heartbeat (or lack of one) when I was 16 years old that would prompt me to reevaluate my destiny. His passion for photography as a hobby would, along with other influences, inspire me to later make photography my career. After his passing, my mother and two older sisters provided their continued guidance to keep me on a positive track, while also instilling within me an appreciation for women’s issues and their struggle for gender equality in our society. I shall be forever grateful for their insight and wisdom.
With that in mind, it always gives me great pleasure to present the work of deserving women who have excelled in a heavily male-dominated industry. In this issue of PhotoMedia...
Persistence is a Virtue
This issue marks the start of our 19th year of publishing PhotoMedia. All things considered, it’s something of a miracle that we’ve managed to persevere all these years.
Throughout that time the photography industry has changed dramatically, with an almost complete transition from a traditional to a digital workflow. In the world at large, terrorism, wars, natural disasters and economic struggles – including, most recently, rapidly escalating gas prices — challenge the survival of all businesses.
Especially over the last five years or so, it seems that most people are busier and working harder than ever before just to maintain their lifestyles, while the cost of living spirals upward...
Lightning Speed
Everything is moving so fast. And the advent and evolution of digital technologies has made it all possible. Think back to a time without laptop computers, e-mail, the Internet, cell phones and digital cameras. It seems like lifetimes ago, but it is, amazingly, a mere 15 years past – less than a generation. Yet now digital technology seems so commonplace that we often take it for granted.
The lightning speed of today’s world has dramatically transformed the photography industry in every channel – manufacturing, retailing, photofinishing, education, creative workflow and distribution of images. The photo industry is rapidly merging into the electronics industry, as Sony’s recent takeover of Konica Minolta’s photo division illustrates. The crystal ball suggests that more mergers will occur soon, as companies position themselves to capitalize on the digital boom ahead...
Exposing Catastrophe
As we were preparing this issue’s biennial coverage on photojournalism, Hurricane Katrina was, unfortunately, right on cue, providing one of the biggest stories for photo coverage since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
One of our features already in progress was to profile three of the leading independent photo news agencies in the business — Polaris Images, World Picture News and ZUMA Press — and concentrate on the most notable news stories since our last photojournalism issue. Their cooperation was key to making this story possible.
When Katrina pounded the Gulf Coast and left New Orleans underwater, that cooperation extended to helping us present our four-page pictorial of the biggest natural disaster in American history...
Lifetimes Of Achievement
As we enter our 18th year of publishing PhotoMedia, it is awe-inspiring to consider the more than 160 years of collective experience of our four feature subjects in this issue. It certainly gives us a better appreciation for the meaning of stamina, dedication and commitment, with an eye on excellence.
Our cover story on David Muench is long overdue and about four years in the planning. I first became aware of David while I was just starting out as a photography student at the San Francisco Art Institute in 1972. He already had established himself as an icon in landscape photography and was well on his way to becoming perhaps the world’s foremost living landscape photographer. He has devoted more than 50 years in the field (literally and figuratively)...
Swept Away
As fate would have it, we were in production on this issue of PhotoMedia — the one time every two years that we focus on the subject of travel photography — when, on Dec. 26, 2004, a natural disaster of immense proportions occurred, which would dominate the news for weeks to come. The early reports of the South Asian tsunami could only give a hint of the magnitude of the resulting destruction, death and injuries.
At press time, the total deaths were approaching 300,000 and still counting. In my entire life, I can’t remember another naturally occurring event that even comes close to the scale of this catastrophe in terms of immediacy, devastation to life and infrastructure, and number of countries involved. The rapid response by world governments, businesses and individuals to provide aid has been truly encouraging...
The Power of Influence
With the recent passing of photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson at age 95, I had an interesting realization. It was the power of Cartier-Bresson’s work that almost single-handedly influenced me (as I’m sure it did many others) to examine the creative possibilities and opportunities of the medium. I first saw his book, The Decisive Moment, when starting college at age 17, and it changed the course of my life.
As the years passed, I became familiar with the works of many other celebrated shooters, but Cartier-Bresson was the one who remained my model for the kind of photography and photographer I wanted to emulate: a humble observer of humanity adventuring to some of the most interesting and exotic countries...