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B&H Photography Podcast

Building and Curating a Photography Blog

B&H Photography Podcast

Jill Waterman

Arts, Visual Arts

4.8 • 2.1K Ratings

🗓️ 30 November 2018

⏱️ 65 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this week's episode of the B&H Photography Podcast, we welcome photographer Rick McGinnis and curator Julie Grahame, to discuss blogging and archiving. While this is certainly a broad subject, we will focus on the work of our two guests while considering how best to keep your collection of photos vibrant and valuable.

Rick McGinnis is a veteran portrait, editorial, and travel photographer based in Toronto. Most of his assignments and self-assignments had been for local newspapers and magazines and, when this professional landscape changed and motivation was lacking, he almost got out of the business entirely. With a little encouragement, he began to explore the many images he had shot over the previous twenty years—some he had never even viewed—despite being gorgeous portraits of well-known musicians, actors, and artists. The result of this deep dig was a blog he simply called someoldpicturesitook. The blog proved to be an avenue not only into his past, but to his future, because images never seen were now appreciated, discussed, shared, and ultimately, licensed. McGinnis is now on to a new travel blog and a new chapter in his career, and we will hear what he has learned along the way.

Curator, consultant and writer, Julie Grahame is the publisher of aCurator.com, a full-screen photography magazine, and the associated aCurator blog. She directed the Retna photo agency for 16 years and currently represents the estate of Yousuf Karsh for image licensing and maintains the extensive karsh.org website. We speak with Grahame about the benefits of a blog compared to a website, Instagram, or in her case, a webzine, and we discuss her relationship with the Karsh archive and insights she has drawn from licensing his iconic portraits.

Throughout the humorous conversation, we consider Google search tools, tagging, preferred blogging sites, and repurposing older work, but we also touch on the personal, professional, and historical importance of valuing and maintaining your photo collection.

Guests: Julie Grahame and Rick McGinnis

Photograph © Rick McGinnis

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:04.0

For over 40 years, B&H has been the professional source for photography, video, audio, and more.

0:09.6

For your favorite gear, news, and reviews, visit us at bnh.com or download the B&H app to

0:15.4

your iPhone or Android device.

0:17.6

Now here's your host, Alan White.

0:19.6

Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:23.1

Today we're going to be discussing the value of photosynthetic blogging and archiving

0:27.4

photographic collections.

0:29.1

Joining us in the studio today are Rick McGinnis and Julie Graham.

0:33.8

Rick McGinnis is the Toronto-based editorial and portrait photographer.

0:37.4

His photographs have appeared in the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the Village Voice,

0:42.1

the New York Times, Esquire, Spin and Fogue.

0:44.9

He's shot several album covers and a number of incredible portraits of musicians, actors,

0:49.4

and authors.

0:50.4

In 2014, Rick started the acclaimed blog Some Old Pictures I Took, which he recently

0:55.6

shuttered and produced three photo zines commemorating that particular body of work.

1:00.8

He's now working on a new blog, Rick McGinnis Photographs.

1:05.0

Julie Graham is a curator consultant and writer.

1:07.7

She's the publisher of Accurator.com, a full screen photography magazine, and the associated

1:13.6

Accurator blog, which is listed as one of life.com's top 20 photo sites.

1:19.8

Julie was the director of the Retina Photo Agency for 16 years and has represented the

1:24.2

state of UCF Carge for image licensing for the past 14 years.

...

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