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The Portrait: Understanding Portrait Photography
The Portrait: Understanding Portrait Photography
The Portrait: Understanding Portrait Photography
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The Portrait: Understanding Portrait Photography

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Glenn Rand, longtime photographic educator, and Tim Meyer, Lead Portrait Instructor at Brooks Institute, have collaborated to create a thorough and balanced textbook on the modern techniques and practice of portrait photography. They have crafted a definitive resource for professionals, students, and avid amateurs wishing to advance their skills in this discipline.

Glenn and Tim begin by discussing lessons from the masters and the history of photographic portraiture. They build on this foundation and cover all of the technical and aesthetic components of understanding and producing outstanding portraits. Extensive illustrations illuminate the concepts discussed, and the works of outstanding photographers serve as examples of how to apply the lessons in this book. This second edition offers even more illustrations and photographic examples and an expanded discussion about posing.

Topics include:

  • Quality of light and the portrait
  • Ambient, continuous, and strobe light sources
  • Understanding light modifiers and enhancers
  • Mastering lighting ratios
  • Importance and selection of backgrounds
  • Extensive coverage of lighting setups
  • Understanding light meters and metering in portraiture
  • Lighting patterns on the human face
  • Facial analysis
  • Composition in portraiture
  • Posing for various types of portraits
  • Eliciting appropriate expression
  • The fine art portrait
  • Portraiture for the masses
LanguageEnglish
PublisherRocky Nook
Release dateNov 17, 2014
ISBN9781492016168
The Portrait: Understanding Portrait Photography
Author

Glenn Rand

Glenn Rand is an artist with international acceptance. His photographs are in more than two dozen museums and public collections in the United States, Europe, and Japan, including the Center for Creative Photography, the Crocker Art Museum, and the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum. He has also exhibited widely throughout the United States. Glenn has published and lectured extensively about photography and digital imaging on topics ranging from commercial aesthetics to the technical fine points of black-and-white photography. He has written more than ten books, including Capture: Digital Photography Essentials, Teaching Photography, and Shaping Light.

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    Book preview

    The Portrait - Glenn Rand

    Introduction

    The most difficult thing for me is a portrait. You have to try and put your camera between the skin of a person and his shirt.

    HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON

    © Tim Meyer

    As we start this second edition, it is clear that some things in photographic technology have changed, but the core components of good portrait photography remain the same. Portrait photography is not about you, your cameras, or your lenses; it is about the subject. The most appealing aspect of portrait photography is its ability to convey to others the person captured by the portrait. The portrait’s great gift has always been presenting likenesses for others to recognize and remember.

    Most dictionaries define a portrait as a personal likeness, particularly a painting, drawing, or photograph of the face. Using this definition as a basis to make portraits, we need to focus our abilities on creating an image that is recognizable. This simple statement summarizes the driving force behind this book and our approach to making portrait photographs as likenesses of subjects. It does not mean that we reject or will not address other concepts, but that we see portraiture as a conscious act. This differs from documentary and event photography, which try to show the situation, including the people, as they exist without being influenced by the photographer. Portraiture involves controlling setting, pose, and lighting effects.

    The language of portraiture involves more than technique. The meaning of a portrait is derived from what the image communicates about the subject. The difference between a good portrait and a driver’s license photo lies in what is communicated about the person in the picture. Technique provides the tools that make the communication possible. But, as with any other language, portraiture does not communicate unless the speaker (the portraitist) has something to say.

    In this second edition, we once again present a complete system of portraiture and lighting, and how these ideas are used both in the studio and on location. Further, we describe how a careful analysis of the subject and their pose forms the basis of good portraiture. Our intention is not to eliminate personal style, but rather to demonstrate that style alone does not make good portraiture—just as the latest camera does not guarantee a good photograph.

    For our approach to portrait photography, two areas of consideration override all others: lighting and posing. These two areas of content have been expanded in this edition. We firmly believe that the keys to successful portrait photography are how photographers control the lighting and how they work with the sitter. We will address some of the technological improvements in photography, but only to support the other portions of book.

    As educators, we believe that there is more to making great images than the technical portions of the process. First, we will go into light and lighting as tools to make the images. Next, we demonstrate how the combination of the setting, the pose, and the photographer’s skill in relating to the sitter can lead to success as a portraitist. While we show specific examples of lighting setups, these are not unbreakable rules, but rather applications of tools that indicate potential solutions.

    D. O. Hill and R. Adamson

    (From the collection of David Ruderman)

    We approach the technical side of portraiture with a concept called LD, or Light Dynamics. We define LD as those aspects and attributes of light that make it a useable tool to create portraits. It is the dynamics of light that give us the control to solve potential problems, whether by employing specular or diffuse light, changing the direction of light, controlling light ratios, and much more.

    Further, we believe that there is much to learn from the development of portraiture through the centuries. The history of portraits includes not only the way photographers have taken portraits, but also how painters and sculptors have represented people through their media. We will briefly address the history of portrait photography to show how different approaches to portraiture recycle through time.

    This will lead us to the second part of the book: working with the sitter to make the best portrait. We describe how to analyze each portrait situation in terms of the particularities of the sitter, the setting, and the potential lighting options. Topics include composition, facial analysis, relating to the subject, and finally, personal style. In both the technical and aesthetic sections of the book, we provide you—the professional, serious amateur, or student—with the ability to make your statements through portraiture.

    Often, very successful portrait photographers have developed a style or a working method that they use consistently. However, just because one photographer does great portraits with a particular approach does not necessarily mean that your needs will be met by that approach. Our intent is not to say what the style or approach to your portraiture should be, but rather to offer options and encourage you to make good portraits based on your creativity and vision. That brings us back to the central idea mentioned above: portraiture is about the interaction between people: the subject and the photographer. A successful portrait is proof that the skills of the photographer met the needs of the subject.

    You will notice as you read this book that we do not concentrate on cameras. Whether the camera is film-based or digital does not affect the portrait as much as lighting, understanding the face, and how the portraitist relates to the subject. While exposure, image structure, the number of pixels, and the size of the grain affect the look of the print, the essence of a portrait is the subject, not the capture technology.

    In our discussion of lighting the portrait, we use two interrelated but different approaches. Glenn comes at lighting from a more technical side, while Tim discusses how light affects and helps you understand the subject. Together, we merge LD, the Light Dynamic, with the subject to create the portrait. This presents both the input and output of lighting in the portrait setting.

    The look of the book would be less interesting were it not for the many fine photographers who graciously contributed their inspiring images. We also wish to thank the manufactures and distributors who provided equipment for illustrations and demonstrations. Many of our colleagues, students, and professional associates generously contributed their insights and experiences. Finally, we wish to thank our families who have supported us throughout this project.

    1 A Very Brief History of Photographic Portraiture

    In this portrait from Behind Photographs, Tim Mantaoni made portraits of famous photographers with one of their best-known images. Steve McCurry made the portrait of The Afghan Girl in 1984; Mantaoni shot his portrait in 2002. Both of these portraits were used on the cover of National Geographic magazine. As part of the project, Mantaoni asked the photographers to write their comments about the photograph on the border of the image. © Tim Mantaoni (Courtesy of the artist)

    Peshawar, Pakistan, 1984.

    I looked for this girl for 17 years and finally found her in 2002. Her name is Sharbat Gula. —Steve McCurry

    When we enter a discussion of the history of portraiture, we need to understand that we are looking not only at what has come before, but also at trends that will be used again. An examination of portraiture over the past 2,000 years shows many ideas that are still used in photographic portraiture. We are not saying that the portraiture of the past is what we should do, but rather that the ideas and approaches important throughout history are still finding currency today.

    It must also be noted that our approach to portraiture is through Western eyes. The approaches of other societies are certainly valid, but our historic trail winds its way from Egypt through Europe to the Americas.

    From prehistoric times, humankind has used pictures to describe, communicate, remember, and celebrate. The portrait was a natural extension of these uses. As societies developed, important individuals soon became the subjects of pictures. Historical portraiture is replete with changes in style and technique as societal conventions dictated how people would be portrayed. During many periods, portraits were idealized to convey the importance rather than the reality of the person.

    Our only knowledge of portraiture in antiquity comes from the archaeological record. Sculpture and bronze statues are among the best records of Western portraiture in the pre-Roman era. This record indicates that only the elite upper or ruling class had portraits commissioned. Some of the earliest known portraits date from the first century BC. They were funerary portraits, created by the Egyptians of the Fayum district. Known as mummy portraits, they were used to remember the deceased and thus were painted with care to create the best possible likeness. The artists used light to create dimension in these portraits, displaying an advanced understanding of shadowing as well as specular and diffuse highlights.

    Many portraits were produced in Europe during the medieval period, but their relevance to photographic portraiture is more ideological than practical. For much of this period, the church dominated portraiture, and likenesses associated the portrayed individuals with God or the church rather than conveying their personas. Since the church served as the preeminent supporter of the arts, its dictums determined a great deal of the content and thus medieval portraiture tended toward ecclesiastic subjects.

    Dr. Munro by D. O. Hill and R. Adamson (From the collection of David Ruderman)

    Rembrandt’s studio had a row of windows on the north side of the room that provided consistent diffuse light. With the subject situated near the east wall, the light would come down at a steep angle from the subject’s right side. A white cloth hanging above the easternmost window created overhead soft light. He likely closed the lower shutters on many of the windows to control the direction and overall intensity of the light. After controlling the light on the subject, Rembrandt placed his easel in the center of the studio to choose the point of view. The darkness or tone of the paintings was a choice of the rendering of the scene. (Illustration by Glenn Rand)

    We often consider the Renaissance as the height of photorealistic portrait painting. This period brought the use of perspective, light, and shadow to create a dramatic sense of depth and form. Most important from our point of view, the use of light effects in painting was pronounced and continues on today. In addition, the Renaissance painters brought great craft to portraiture, making the quality of the skin important.

    Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) and other Renaissance painters used a concept called sfumato that created softness in their portraits. Sfumato comes from the overlay of varnishes and transparent oil paints used to soften the color transitions in facial tones.

    Anonymous daguerreotype in case (From the collection of Glenn Rand)

    While highlights and shadows produced a feeling of volume in the paintings, sfumato softened the skin tones to make them appear more natural and pleasant. Today we can see these effects in photography, as some portrait studios have north light windows and often use softboxes to create soft lighting.

    There are four major factors in Rembrandt van Rijn’s (1606–1669) paintings that are important in contemporary photographic portraiture. First and most obvious is the lighting, known as Rembrandt lighting, which produces a small triangular highlight on the shadow side of the face. The position of the lighting allows for more texture in the image because the light strikes the subject at a shallow angle. Next, Rembrandt often chose a body position that turned the face slightly away from the light source. This is called broad lighting in portraiture. Third, while not directly using a backlight, he employed selective background lighting effects to give his portraits both depth and contour. He also vignetted his images to provide more visual centering on the subjects.

    Last, in his studio Rembrandt draped a large white cloth across the ceiling and attached it to the top of the prime window used for lighting the subject. This, along with a series of small windows, directed fill light to his subjects, ensuring that the details on the shadow side of the subject were clearly visible.

    Another technique from the Renaissance masters is chiaroscuro, which refers to a light-dark contrast that produces volume in the subject. Often confused with Rembrandt lighting, chiaroscuro is an angular light that creates the sense of volume through shadows.

    While most people think of portraits as two-dimensional representations, sculptures were often used to represent the likenesses of people. Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680) utilized marble to create portraits. The three-dimensional nature of sculpture brings life to these stable pieces of polished stone.

    Technology also became part of painting during the late Renaissance. While optic projections were common knowledge, at this time there is evidence that the camera obscura and mirrors were used to produce the paintings. The use of optical tools for painting can be regarded as a precursor to photography.

    In 1839, portraiture changed from the portrayal of reality to the actual capture of reality. In that year, both Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre (1787–1851) and William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–1877) introduced their processes for photography: the daguerreotype, a mercury/silver amalgam on a polished metal plate; and the calotype (Talbotype), a salt silver paper negative process. After seeing the daguerreotype process, the painter Paul de la Roche (1797–1856) said, From today, painting is dead. While he was wrong, parts of the world of painting did change—and none more than portraiture. Portraits that took many hours of sitting and many more hours of painting became much

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