blog Cartier-Bresson’s advice on young Sam Tata I recently came across the work and story of Sam Tata, a Chinese-born Indian photographer and photojournalist. He is not a name that appears often in today’s photography world, yet his life quietly intersects with someone who shaped the way many of us understand photography. Sam Tata was born
blog Photography as a profession In the age of social media and constant distraction, Ansel Adams’s 1950s article makes me think what I am pursuing in photography today and whether I am following my own creative spirit.
blog I have a problem with this advice - “keep shooting” “Keep shooting” sounded inspiring, but should we follow that tip?
book Marc Riboud’s Eye Marc Riboud’s introduction—and Cartier-Bresson quoting Max Jacob—reminded me that a photograph is not a confession but a crafted piece of work.
blog Photograbber vs Photographer a reminder to walk slower, see deeper, and make photographs instead of collecting them.
project On Reading, Again Inspired by André Kertész’s On Reading, in the digital age, I look for the few who is reading on paper not phones.
people If I give you Shakespeare’s pen I was in Niagara-on-the-lake this weekend for a two-day trip. I met a photographer photographing a spider flower on the crowded street. His name is Tom King, a photographer from Niagara Falls. I started the conversation and introduced myself as a a beginner into photography and what camera he was
blog I am no photographer Weeks ago I met a college classmate who is also into photography. He introduced me to his coworkers that I went to college with him eight years ago and emphasized that Zuo is also a photographer. I feel ashamed. Not the way he introduced me, but the way I regard