Street Photography in the 21s Century: New Voices, New Strategies with Thomas Alleman (Hybrid Learning – Six Sessions)
- Thursday
February 6, 2025
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm - Saturday
February 8, 2025
11:00 am - 2:00 pm - Thursday
February 13, 2025
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm - Thursday
February 20, 2025
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm - Saturday
February 22, 2025
11:00 am - 2:00 pm - Thursday
February 27, 2025
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
This workshop explores the evolution of street photography post-1980s, examining how digital technology and diverse contemporary voices are reshaping the genre. Participants will investigate new ideas about content, power, and representation while learning from photographers who challenge traditional notions of street photography.
Six Sessions
Tuition: $645 (Become a Member today and received up to 20% off!)
This course is strictly limited to 10 participants.
About
Hybrid Learning (In-Person and Online)
The great heyday of “social documentary” street photography, which blossomed after the Second World War and lasted into the 1980’s, gave us many of the century’s greatest pictures, produced by several of our greatest photographers: Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, Lee Friedlander, William Klein. Their prodigious work has provided lessons for two or three generations of students, in courses and workshops like this one. But they may have overstayed their welcome at this party; the conversation has grown a little stale. In the 21st century, we need to invite other voices and ideas into the discussion…
Unlike those celebrated forbears, most of us use digital cameras now, which mostly capture color images in high definition; we can crank the ISO to shoot in the near dark, where our lenses will focus automatically. Those cameras can be gotten for a bargain, and many of us already have laptops we can process our files on. People who could never have participated in the photo culture, for want of lenses or film or a darkroom, can now make and share their work with relative ease. New ideas are oozing in from the edges, and attitudes about content, design and presentation are emerging; we’re reevaluating “the author” and their prerogatives.
In this workshop we’ll look at the work of photographers who’ve come of age in the aftermath of street photography’s golden age––after we thought the genre had exhausted itself. What do those photographers have to teach us about what’s possible now? How does digital capture create possibilities that Robert Frank could never have dreamt of? How do current ideas about power, gender, and privilege affect the way we make and read street photography? Does street photography even require streets, or people?
Thomas Alleman is a commercial, editorial and fine art photographer living and working in Los Angeles. During a 15 year newspaper career, Tom was a frequent winner of distinctions from the National Press Photographer’s Association, as well as being named California Newspaper Photographer of the Year in 1995 and Los Angeles Newspaper Photographer of the Year in 1996. As a magazine freelancer, his pictures have been published regularly in Time, People, Business Week, Barrons, Smithsonian National Geographic Traveler, and US News & World Report, and have also appeared in Brandweek, Sunset, Harper’s and Travel Holiday.
Details
- Six Sessions
- Dates: Thursdays, February 6; February 13; February 20; February 27, 6 pm – 9 pm PST (Online) + Saturdays, February 8; February 22, 11 am – 2 pm PST (In-person field trips TBD)
- Enrollment Limit: 10 students
- Skill/Experience Level: Open to all levels
- Tuition: $645 (Become a Member today and received up to 20% off!)
- Location: Hybrid. Online sessions will take place via the Zoom application/software. In-person shoots will take place in the Los Angeles area.
A details email complete with the Zoom link will be sent to the attendees prior to the start date. If you have additional questions please email info@lacphoto.org.