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The Official Journal of Street and Documentary Photography
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Feb 24, 2023 • 1h 6min
Adventures of a Gallery Newbie – Lewis Sandler
Lewis Sandler originally trained as a lawyer, decided to move to China to explore a different world. There he spent nearly He spent nearly 30 years 30 years there working teaching English in high schools and later college. During his time in China, he photographed the world around him creating a huge body work.
When he returned to the US Lewis settled in Presque Isle, Maine. Newly retired, he decided to find a way to show his photographic work in a gallery. This is something many of us would like to do but most never take the first step. Lewis was not deterred.
Without any knowledge of how to find a gallery and create work for display he made a contact at the local library who agreed to give him space to show his work. He then set to work culling his photographs and contracted with a printer to print his selections on fine art paper. He then framed them (over 80 prints in all) and created supplemental material about life in China. It became a huge undertaking.
He made it happen by taking digital images that only existed on a hard drive and making them real. In the process he made many mistakes which he shared during our conversation. But rather than let them defeat him, instead he learned and adapted for the next time. He has another show scheduled for this spring in a nearby town.
Lewis shows us that no matter where you live, no matter what you photograph, opportunities exist to show your work to the public. You only have to look for them, ask and deliver. Which isn’t easy.
You don’t ask…you don‘t get.
A selection of Lewis’s China street photos
Lewis’s work on display in the library gallery space
Links from the show
Facebook
Pinterest

Feb 10, 2023 • 1h 6min
Nancy Kaye – It’s about the story
After I finish an interview I write down two or three things I learned from our guest. That’s why the title of this episode is “It’s about the story.” Nancy Kaye is a photojournalist and educator from Los Angeles. During her career she has been based in New York City and London, shooting for The Washington Post, The New York Times, and Associated Press.
During our conversation Nancy said something that really resonated with me. She said that a single image can be strong on its own, but when sequenced in a group with a common theme the synergy it creates is much more powerful. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Nancy’s photos have been widely exhibited in juried shows and included in numerous books and documentaries. Her portrait of author Ralph Ellison is in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.
In 1988 Nancy photographed a group of young girls in a rough Brooklyn neighborhood for The NY Times; a generation later she collaborated on a project, “Jump Rope Girls,” documenting the girls’ lives as adults with children of their own, and presented it at Duke University’s Documentary Study Center.
As an educator she’s taught at LA Valley College and Santa Monica College Continuing Education, and American Jewish University’s Whizin Center where she worked with Rotem Rosental. She has mentored youth at Venice Arts and developed an after school photo program for teens in Culver City. She leads independent street photo workshops, guiding photographers to define their personal projects.
Recently, she has served as a photo judge and curator for Photoville LA, ASMP-LA calls for entry, and the Orange County Fair. She’s currently President of the Los Angeles chapter of the American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP.)
Editor’s note: Nancy Kaye was the featured photographer of the month in the July 2023 issue of Street Photography Magazine. For an in-depth look at her work, read the article “Thinking in Stories.”
A selection of Nancy’s street photos
Links from the show
Nancy’s website
Book Recommendation: André Kerté
André Kertész On Reading
Mark Greenberg
J Ross Baughman
Maggie Steber

Jan 27, 2023 • 34min
Urban Exploring with Matt Nickles
Matt Nickles of Dayton Ohio is a new type of explorer. An Urban Explorer…Urbex for short. Rather than photograph people, he photographs the effects of people by documenting the things they leave behind by entering abandoned buildings, schools, churches and even subways. Basically Matt is an historian. These places can be dangerous, so it’s not for the foolhardy. Personally I find it fascinating.
Here’s an explanation from Matt, in his own words, about what he does and why he does it. Plus more than a few words of caution for those of us who want to try it ourselves.
“Take only photos, leave only footprints” a motto that would take a hold of my life! Hi there, my name is Matt Nickles(OhioRed). They say good things can come from bad situations and that is exactly what happened to me. Let me explain!
Prior to Covid I was an avid hiker and nature will always be my first love! Then Covid happened. I noticed the trails quickly became packed with other people looking to escape the confinement of home. To me, nature was my escape from people. Don’t get me wrong, I’m an extrovert to the bone. But, we all need a break from the world and society and nature was mine.
Now, I was stuck looking for a hobby without the cluster of people. I had always had this fascination with the Cincinnati Subway. So, to Google and Facebook I went. Took me just a couple days but I had set up a trip to get in and explore the remains of the forgotten subway. Before I go forward, I don’t condone any trespassing. I do this to capture the history before Mother Nature takes over. Next thing you know, I’m standing beneath the city of Cincinnati and can hear the foot traffic and cars on the street above me. Now, I find myself chasing light to capture that moment in time.
The greatest joy I get from this is the moment to stand at the center of some of these structures and just listen and smell and imagine what it was like in its prime with all the busy people and loud machines running. I make sure to respect all places I visit and to leave only footprints. I’ve found myself from coast to coast and from Michigan to Destin Florida in my travels. I’ve also found there isn’t a place that I’ve encountered that doesn’t have a story to tell.
I welcome you to take a look at my work and see if you may recognize any of these locations and may have a story of your own to tell? Safe explores!
A selection of Matt’s Urbex photos
Links from the show
Matt’s Urbex Facebook

Jan 13, 2023 • 50min
Carlos P Beltran – 12-year documentary project
Carlos P. Beltran is an award-winning documentary filmmaker, producer and photo journalist originally from Caracas, Venezuela.
Recently Carlos completed a 12-year documentary project, It Suddenly Occurred to Me, serves as an experimental biography that explores the life and work of Yarida Silva, a woman who found peace and redemption writing from within some of the worst prisons in Latin America.
The book, documentary and photography exhibit are a collaboration between writer Yadira Silva and Carlos that offers an intimate view of a troubled, yet hopeful life.
In today’s episode Beltran tells the story of how he and Yarida connected, how she wrote her story while imprisoned, how she hid her writing from the Venezuelan authorities and the dramatic rescue of her handwritten drafts from an abandoned apartment in Venezuela.
Carlos’ documentary work focuses on socio-political issues, civil rights, migration, LGTBQ+ and human-interest stories in Latin America and the U.S. His work has been featured in leading news outlets including, NBC News, ABC News, National Geographic, Discovery Networks, Univision, The New York Post, Telemundo, Fusion, The Atlantic and AJ+ among others.
A selection of Carlos’ Venezuela documentary photos
Links from the show
Carlos Beltran website
Suddenly it Occurred to Me book website

Dec 16, 2022 • 53min
Matt Brass – The line between street and documentary photography
Matt has worked as a creative nearly his entire professional career. He started as a visual designer but by the end of his 20-year tenure in that field his focus and expertise had shifted toward language and narrative. It’s no surprise that he ended up in the creative industry in that his parents were both artists and continue to create to this dav.
Though from a family of modest means Matt was always supplied with instruction and professional level art supplies. His father was both a painter and a writer, but Matt’s early interests were, like his mother, entirely visual. She is an accomplished artist to this day. Having studied under Xavier Ironsides in her youth and heavily influenced by the work of Andrew Wyeth throughout her life, she has a solid command of form and composition and is an absolute master of the use light, shadow and texture.
Matt’s formal training was initally in the area of theology. After a brief stint as a chaplain and teacher, however, he decided to pursue a degree in visual communications that evolved into a career in advertising. For multiple reasons does not consider his work in theology to have been a waste of time. In addition to applying the knowledge gained to his own spiritual journey it served to shape his creative vision as well. It’s his belief that the essence of true art is, fundamentally, the essence of humanity. and that human nature is most clearly revealed in its search for the divine.
Currently he owns a small company that creates destination art for retailers across the United States. And while he enjoys his work as a small business owner and illustrator he continues to pursue photography as a deeper from of creative expression. His photographic work has been featured on multiple occasions in Street Photographer Magazine and a piece he did for National Parks Magazine won awards from both the Society of American Travel Writers and the North American Travel Journalists Association.
A Selection of Matt’s Street Photos
Links from the show
Matt’s photography website
Smoky Outfitters – Matt’s business website
Instagram
Facebook
AbeBooks
Resurrection City, 1968 by Jill Freedman
The Unseen Saul Leiter
Gordon Parks: Segregation Story
The Candid Frame Interview with David Ulrich
The Mindful Photographer by David Ulrich

Dec 2, 2022 • 1h 2min
Matt Jerrams – Street Gear and Selling Prints on Etsy
Matt Jerrams is an executive producer who creates television commercials in London. He has a passion for street photography in one of the best cities in the world to shoot.
It seems like we have Matt on the show every year so it like this is his turn in 2022.
We had plenty to talk about including Matt’s post purchase dissonance after switching from Fuji to Sony and his successful experiment selling his own prints through Etsy. He even volunteered to help our listeners thinking about giving it a try themselves.
And of course he’s a Cleveland Browns fan…why is still a mystery to me. But we’re glad he’s a member of the fraternity. Don’t worry,we didn’t use the precious podcast time to talk football.
A selection of Matt’s recent street photos
Links from the show
Matt’s InstagramMatt’s Vero: @capitalfacesMatt’s EtsyRobert Blomfield: Edinburgh 1957 – 1966The Mindful Photographer by David UlrichShane Taylor InstagramJimmy Lee Instagram

Nov 18, 2022 • 1h 8min
Amy Touchette – Street Portraiture
Brooklyn based photographer, Amy Touchette, explores themes of social connectedness through street portraiture. Amy trained at the International Center of Photography and began her artistic career as a writer and painter, earning a BA in Literature and Studio Art and an MA in Literature. She is represented by ClampArt in New York City and Little Big Galerie in Paris, France.
Amy’s second monograph, Personal Ties: Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, was published in January 2022 by Schilt Publishing (Amsterdam) and garnered a Critical Mass 2021 Top 50. Her first monograph, Shoot the Arrow: A Portrait of The World Famous *BOB*, was published by Un-Gyve Press (Boston, 2013). Other publications include The New York Times, the New York Observer, and the books Women Street Photographers (Prestel, 2021) and Brooklyn Photographs Now (Rizzoli, 2018).
Her photographs have exhibited nationally and internationally, including at MoMA-Moscow, Leica Gallery-Warszawa, Hamburg Triennial of Photography, and in the U.S. Embassies in Vienna, Austria, and Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. Images from her latest series, Personal Ties: Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, debuted at the National Portrait Gallery in London, England, 2019-2020, as part of the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize exhibition and were included in an article on Artsy about Amy’s approach to street photography. An image from Personal Ties: Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn was made into a 8’ x 5’ flag and flown at the iconic Rockefeller Center rink in 2021 as part of Aperture’s “The Flag Project.”
Amy is currently at work on several medium-format street photography series, as well as Street Dailies, her ongoing series of impromptu portraits of strangers, which are released regularly on Instagram.
A selection of Amy’s street photos
Links from the show
Amy’s WebsiteInstagramFacebook

Nov 4, 2022 • 60min
Kieron Long – Borneo In Monochrome
Kieron Long is a documentary photographer and Leica Ambassador from Kuching, Malaysia located on the island of Borneo.
Born in Hong Kong, educated in the UK, Kieron has spent the past 4-years documenting the life and culture of the people of Borneo. He currently works with only a Leica Q2 Monochrom. By using only a single body and lens Kieron has mastered the capabilities of this specialized camera which drew the attention of Leica Malaysia to invite him to be and ambassador for the brand.
Long before Kieron became an ambassador Kieron was a regular contributor to the highly competitive LFI Gallery which has earned him countless LFI Master Shots and Picture of the Week awards. This is nothing to sneeze at.
Kieron pursues his project as a historian seeking to document the culture of his region before it disappears as young people leave their fishing villages to pursue modern lives in the city. He makes these photographs to honor the people he meets.
His primary influences are Sebastião Salgado and Aurelio Amendola.
A selection of Kieron’s photos
Kieron’s links
Kieron’s WebsiteInstagramFacebookKieron’s LFI Gallery

Oct 21, 2022 • 48min
Andy Hann – Hollywood Boulevard Up Close and Personal
Miami Street Photography Festival Submission Deadline Extended
Before we get to today’s show I wanted to let you know that the Miami Street Photography Festival (MSPF) will be live and in person this year at the History Miami Museum December 2 and 3. This is the premiere street photography event of the year, so we’re very happy that it’s back after the COVID interruption.Also, they have extended the deadline for contest submissions through Sunday, October 23 2022 (Midnight EDT). So there’s still time to submit your favorite single street photos or series. Use this link to visit their website. Use the links under Contest in the top menu to reach the submission forms. There’s one form for each contest, Single Photos, International Series and Miami Series.
Now on with the show
Editors’ Note: This show from our archives originally aired in October 2018. It’s one of our very favorite conversations that talks about the payoff of being persistent and passionate about a project over the long-haul. That’s why the subject is what I call the three P’s. Project, Passion, and Persistence.
It’s really The hero of our story is Andy Hann, a creative director with Sony Studios in the Los Angeles area.
Andy decided one day that he wanted to create a photo project about the people who frequent Hollywood Boulevard.
If you’ve never been there it’s probably one of the quirkiest places in America with people dressed as movie super heros, famous people like Marylin Monroe and Michael Jackson as a way to make money to feed drug habits or just survive.
This is a place that most of us would find as an interesting place to shoot for a few hours. But Andy saw it differently. He kept coming back…for over 3 years. And it’s not a pretty place because most of the regulars on the boulevard are homeless due to mental illness, drug addiction or both.
Over time he became passionate about the people themselves and began to use his own time and money to help the homeless. It wasn’t always easy because Andy had to deal with his own bouts of self doubt and the imposter syndrome.
Although he is a skilled designer, Andy wasn’t an experienced photographer. But he used the the project as a way to become familiar with the exposure and working in a variety of lighting conditions. At firstAt first and he wasn’t even an experience photographer
And he didn’t even have a fancy camera…just a basic Digital Rebel, with 3 prime lenses.
Despite bing a new photographer Andy persisted and finally after three years decided it was time to create a finished product which is his book Welcome to Hollywood. He tried to get it published and came close a couple times. But when that didn’t pan out he chose to publish it himself.
The result is is a collection of intimate up close and personal images that together tell his story of people most of us pass by…often in a hurry. He shows the human side of this weird and gritty uniquely American place.
Andy is one hell of a storyteller both visually and verbally. So I encourage you to hear the stories directly from the photographer himself by listening to my conversation with Andy Hann.
A selection of photos from Welcome to Hollywood
Andy’s Links
Andy’s InstagramAndy’s FacebookDoing the Most – Andy’s article in the June 22019 issue of Street Photography Magazine

Oct 7, 2022 • 52min
Karl Dedolph – street style at the US Open of Surfing
Karl Dedolph is a prolific street and documentary photographer from Minneapolis, Minnesota. He is a true student of the craft consuming about 2-hours of YouTube tutorials each day plus a regular workshop attendee. He’s trained with the likes of Bruce Gilden, Matt Stuart, Valerie Jardin and Brian Lloyd Duckett.
He’s also been a fan of surfing since hearing his first Beach Boys album as a child. Karl regularly attends the US Open of Surfing in Huntington Beach, California as a fan. But this year he decided to cover the even from behind the scenes, not as a sports photographer but from the perspective of an experienced street shooter.
So Karl asked us to help him option press credential for the event and offered to publish his article in Street Photography Magazine. That article in the October 2022 issue which you can find here beginning October 9.
Obtaining press credentials for a major sporting event like this was much harder than expected due to multiple entries involved. He was forced to jump through hoops by the event’s owner IMG, the World Surfing League and major sponsor Vans, Getty Images, and Make Waves Media.
After much wrangling and phone calls Karl did secure access to press area but he was restricted to a small area where the participants enter and leave the competition area. But he made it work by focusing his shooting on the participants and fans as they interacted outside the competition area. As Karl said he usually shoots on the street as a hunter, but this event forced him to fish for his shots.
And he did this in very difficult lighting conditions like Southern California sun at high noon. It seems that world-class surfing competitions don’t take place at the golden hour.
Anyway have a listen to Karl’s story about his street-style experience covering the US Open of Surfing.
A selection of Karl’s street photos shot during the US Open of Surfing event
When Karl wasn’t working the event he walked the streets of Huntington Beach in search of some compelling street photos. Here are a few from that week.
Links from the show
Karl’s website
Karl’s Facebook
Karl’s Salt Fever Article in Street Photography Magazine June 2019
Karl’s Street Photography Magazine podcast interview December 2019