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
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
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