4.6 • 2K Ratings
🗓️ 26 April 2018
⏱️ 68 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The simple theme for today’s episode of the B&H Photography Podcast was to be “how to speak to people in the street when you’d like to take their photo.” For this conversation, we invited two of the best street portraitists in New York—Amy Touchette and FUJIFILM X-Photographer Ruddy Roye, both incredibly talented photographers (and writers!) whose work has appeared in the New York Times, New Yorker, Time, Esquire, and many other publications. They are both also very active on Instagram, with work that seems ideally suited for the best that medium has to offer.
However, as good conversations often do, ours takes a winding road. We discuss personal and family histories, gentrification, race, and a range of subjects, all along tying these ideas to the fundamental aspects of engaging with people, often strangers, to produce passionate and compassionate street photography.
We ask our guests how they approach people, how they describe their work when asking for a photograph, and about the importance of body language and eye contact to convey your intention and develop trust. We also examine the differences in approach when photographing people from cultural and economic backgrounds different than your own, when shooting groups of people and, finally, we discuss how to handle pushback, requests for money, outright rejections, and even upsetting encounters. For the gearheads, we touch on working with formats from medium format to cellphone, and how that effects your approach and the interaction with your subjects. Join us for this inspiring conversation.
Guests: Amy Touchette and Ruddy Roye
Photograph © Amy Touchette
Host: Allan Weitz
Senior Creative Producer: John Harris
Producer: Jason Tables
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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. |
0:19.9 | Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast. |
0:23.6 | For some people, yours truly included photography is a solitary endeavor. |
0:28.4 | They prefer to photograph quiet landscapes or perhaps work in a studio. |
0:32.3 | For others, the interaction with people is the heart and soul of the photographic process. |
0:36.9 | Approaching people in the street on the spur of instinct, often strangers sharing greetings |
0:41.2 | with them and hopefully capturing a small glimpse of their world at that moment in time |
0:46.1 | as the goal. |
0:47.4 | But getting folks to agree to be photographed would be photographed in the manner that the |
0:50.9 | photography envisions often takes a bit of convincing at the very least a bit of trust. |
0:56.9 | How we get to that moment of trust is the topic of today's conversation. |
1:00.8 | Amy Tushet is a Brooklyn-based photographer who explores themes of social interconnectedness |
1:06.4 | through street portraiture. |
1:08.2 | Her work has appeared in New York Times, the New York Observer and Escore and has been |
1:12.4 | exhibited throughout the world. |
1:14.4 | She is represented by Clamp Art in New York and has had incredible series Street Dailies, |
1:19.4 | which in our humble opinions is the type of series Instagram was designed for. |
1:24.4 | She's also a past guest on our show. |
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