This is a preview of a paid post. To read it in full, consider upgrading. INTERLOPER is a reader-supported publication, and I’m so grateful for all paid subscriptions; they help me continue to work on this project. If you’d like a paid subscription but can’t afford it, reply to this email and I’ll comp you one, no questions asked. Anatomy of an assignmentBehind the scenes in Corfu: creative process, practicalities, & improvisationIn April I went to Corfu, Greece, on one of those commissions that comes around once in a blue moon: one where your own interests and the subject matter perfectly align, with just enough space and novelty to leave something still to be discovered. The assignment was part of The Atlantic’s ‘Literary Travels’ series, for which writers go to destinations that speak to the work of a favourite author or book. I’d be in Corfu with Honor Jones on the tail of John le Carré, who had his own history with the island, and who set a few key scenes in his 1986 novel A Perfect Spy there. The brief was both intriguing and satisfyingly open — and, as such, the assignment was as much a great invitation as it was a puzzle to solve. How to capture the spirit of espionage and alter egos, the stuck-in-the-past Britishisms of Corfu, and a feeling of le Carré’s post-Cold War unease, all in the perfect gorgeousness of spring on a Greek island? I planned to find out. Behind the scenes on assignment workInspired by queen Dina Litovsky’s impeccable assignment reporting (I especially loved her account of photographing one of her heroes, Ringo Starr) I’m going to share a diaristic account of the commission, from top to bottom — creative process, problem-solving, my go-to workflow — and the anecdotes behind it all, the background details that are often the subject I find most interesting as a photographer: the way that a picture shows just a fragment of what it took to make it, and often conceals that making entirely. I’ll get into the fine detail of what happened on this particular assignment in Corfu — practically, personally — and talk through how I built out the photo story, including:
And so, without further ado…... Subscribe to INTERLOPER to unlock the rest.Become a paying subscriber of INTERLOPER to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. A subscription gets you:
|
Anatomy of an assignment
04:03 |
Assinar:
Postar comentários (Atom)







0 comentários:
Postar um comentário