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	<title>Mark Berndt Photography</title>
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	<description>Photography celebrating people and the circumstance of life.</description>
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		<title>WHY A PICTURE?</title>
		<link>http://markberndt.com/2011/11/welcome-to-mark-berndts-blog/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Nov 2011 21:50:59 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://markberndt.com/blog/?p=1033</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A glimpse, a moment, a memory, a sign, a problem, a solution, a wish, a love, familiar, unknown, remarkable, mundane, to report, to comment, to praise, to oppose, friend, foe, history, future … The reasons for making pictures are as varied as the photographers who make them. I started making pictures as a kid, using [...]]]></description>
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<p>A glimpse, a moment, a memory, a sign, a problem, a solution, a wish, a love, familiar, unknown, remarkable, mundane, to report, to comment, to praise, to oppose, friend, foe, history, future …</p>
<p>The reasons for making pictures are as varied as the photographers who make them.</p>
<p>I started making pictures as a kid, using my Dad&#8217;s Brownie Hawkeye. I liked the sound of the click, looking down into the fuzzy viewfinder. I couldn&#8217;t wait to see one of my pictures in the stack of deckle-edged prints that came back from the drugstore. My early photographs mimicked my parents&#8217;  &#8211; family scenes, friends and pets.  No thoughts of career or genre or copyright &#8211; just a confirmation of a moment past and the satisfaction of making something I could hold in my hands.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d have to say that I&#8217;ve evolved through the years &#8211; first learning photography, then photography-the-hobby, the early commercial work, then the well-funded hobby, then back to what I like to think of as more enlightened commercial work plus artful personal projects &#8211; and today I&#8217;ve come full circle. I knew it intuitively in the beginning and now it&#8217;s a relief to return to that clearly defined purpose &#8211; confirmation of a moment past, and the satisfaction of holding something in my hands that I made.</p>
<p>Today I try to approach my images with this intention: communicate clearly, compose precisely, finish professionally, but capture and keep the imperfections that give them a humanity.  I&#8217;m a perfectionist about the process, but I want to impose minimal impact on the content. I prefer to observe, not direct. I&#8217;m a digital zealot who hates digital-looking images.</p>
<p>And I print &#8211; because for me the print is the reason I photograph. The print keeps me honest. I create from an empty frame that thing that I hold in my hands.</p>
<p>Why do you make pictures?  </p>
<p>Have you thought about it lately?  Do you remember why you started and how making a picture <em>felt</em> in the early days?  Have you put that into words &#8211; written it down?  Make some time to sort this out, to remember and to reconnect. Write a short paragraph, a sort of mission statement to remind you why you make pictures. Then let it inspire you by reading it before your next shoot &#8211; or your next 10.  And see the difference it makes.</p>
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