Re: Thanks for all the great issues discussed over the past weeks!

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From: epona (acolyta@napc.com)
Date: 08/29/02-07:02:21 AM Z


Chris,

Just wanted to say this post rings true for me - I even graduated in 1997 as
well and have felt artististically stymied since then. Likewise the expertise
and thought provoking discussions on this list have helped me get back in the
groove again, enough to think about quitting *my* 8:30 to 6:00 computer job and
going back to school, since that seems to be the only place you can dedicate
your time 24/7 to making art. Oh, hoe I wish that was financially possible...

It is definitely a bad idea to mold your portfolio to fit the school you want.
When you're doing that, you're not really being who *you* are as a
photographer, rather someone's else's idea of who you should be. It may be the
interviewers saw that and that's why you haven't been accepted yet. If you did
get accepted, it may be a disservice to you in the long run because you would
be forcing yourself into a school that didn't really fit you, as opposed to
being yourself, finding a school that accepts you for who you are, and then
getting everything you can out of that MFA program. I hope I'm making sense
here....

Good Luck,
Christine

Christopher Lovenguth wrote:

> I just want to take a moment here and thank everyone who has contributed to
> these great discussions about art, postmodernism, feminism, nudes in
> photography, etc. They have been most inspiring! In fact, I have been in
> such a rut (since about 1997 I would guess), the conversations these past
> couple of weeks have inspired ideas for a new body of work. These types of
> discussions are one reason I really miss being in academia. I miss being
> around people whose job allows them to freely think (not that I'm saying
> people who are not in academia don't think...you know what I mean... I
> hope). I have such a hard time coming up with thoughts and ideas alone
> without discussion and debate. Especially when employed in what I would call
> an anti-art (working with computer hardware all day) totally demanding 9 to
> 6 (and then some) job that sucks the very soul out of me. It is almost like
> I feed off other people's energy and need it to stay motivated in thought,
> which then translates in to my imagery. This very reason also at the same
> makes me feel like a phony because it seems I can't come up with ideas on my
> own. But right now I'll take any sort of inspiration I can get, it's been
> years since I really made a body of work that I felt was mine. Instead I
> have been tinkering with processes, trying to fit ideas and work to my needs
> (getting in to a MFA program) and generally making up excuses as to why I
> haven't been successful. Hopefully I can get my act together and actually
> get in to a MFA program in the near future so that I can once again be in an
> environment that supports thought and not just that you show up to work on
> time and make your deadlines. I have been trying the last couple of years to
> get in to a school, but haven't really felt confident with my portfolio and
> I think it shows to the review committees. I keep hearing the same response
> over and over; I have the technique, history and thoughts, just not a
> cohesiveness with the imagery in my work. In fact at one of the schools
> (will not mention the name, but it's in the bay area and Janis Joplin used
> to work there), the academic advisor thought I'd have a better chance at
> getting in to the MFA program if I entered the school's BFA program, which
> the advisor said I would have no problem getting in to. Boy that made me
> feel better and not degraded! I told him I had a BFA from Ohio State and
> that I even received the Excellence in the Arts award for my graduating
> class and this advisor just shrugged his shoulders and told me it was an
> option I could consider. Hmmm let me think...re-enter a BFA program (can I
> bring Daguerreotypes and platinum prints in to Intro to Photography 101?)
> spend $20,000 a year for 2-3 years to turn around and apply to their MFA
> program and pay another $20,000 a year for another 2-3 years. Starts to
> sound like a telemarketing scam. Funny thing is I will probably reapply
> there again this year because I don't want to leave the bay area and really
> respect the reputation of this institution. Anyway, I guess it doesn't help
> that I only apply to the top schools and reinvent my portfolio every year to
> try to fit what I think "they" want. I'm starting to realize this approach
> is a tragic never-ending cycle of disappointment. Starts around this time
> every year, continues with me rushing to get those twenty images done before
> January 15th and ends with disappointment around May. Maybe it's time to do
> work for myself.
>
> Well enough self-pity, this was really just supposed to be a thank you note
> for all the great conversations, which have lead to inspiration. This is the
> last time I stay up late and post to this group, who knows what I might say
> next time. -Chris

--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious.
It is the source of all true art and science.  He to whom this
emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and
stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead; his eyes are closed."
-Albert Einstein

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