“I believe the camera is a powerful instrument, which simultaneously holds the humility of an anvil as well as the power of a striking hammer. The documentation of social humanistic issues have been the main drivers for my work, both in learning and in sharing, since 2006. In my opinion, education leads to empathy, which is the first step in any change for social good or justice,” says documentary photographer Richard Sharum.
This fall, Richard leads an online workshop focused on making a difference with your photography through developing and refining a personal documentary project. This is an entry-level workshop for photographers with no documentary background, as well as a workshop for those who have started a project and need a community for feedback, encouragement, and inspiration.
The aim of Richard’s workshop is to help participants develop their personal projects through lectures, discussions, one-on-one tutorials, and group image reviews. Richard presents several long-form projects developed over his 20-year career, reviewing the challenges and execution, as well as discussing editorial assignments or book publishing possibilities. Over the course of the month, Richard challenges, guides, and pushes participants to make new responses to their ideas and seek out visual stories that are not only important to them but also have a place in the larger context of social discourse. For their part, workshop participants strive to experiment with their personal style and consider new ways of approaching image making and storytelling. Personal growth is the key.
Here are the key questions and topics Richard and the participants cover during the workshop:
Why Documentary Work? Personal vs Social Responsibility
Morality and Ethics as a Photographer
Approaching People
Composition
Sequencing Images
Throughout the workshop, students learn to critique the work of others, and their own images—at both theoretical and practical levels. A goal is to identify each participant’s visual language and define their photographic approach. Richard encourages participants to realize the potential of both personal and assigned projects in the future. By workshop’s end, a final goal is to print or publish each participant’s documentary project.
Working knowledge of digital workflow and manual mode on your digital SLR or mirrorless camera. Participants must be able to download and select images using image editing software for class sessions.
Class will meet 12:30 – 2:30 pm (Mountain Time) on Thursdays starting September 25 and ending October 23 (five online group sessions). Enrollment is limited to 12 participants.
Zoom Video Conferencing software (available for no charge from Zoom.com) will be used to facilitate the class sessions. Further details will be emailed to registrants.
Santa Fe Workshops always aims to produce a high-quality experience for our online attendees. That said, variables including regional and local internet provider speeds, traffic on Zoom's servers, and your own computing hardware can contribute to a less than ideal streaming event. While we do our best to minimize the impact of these variables, they are outside the control of Santa Fe Workshops.
View Withdrawal and Transfer Policies for online programs.
For the convenience of participants, recordings of each class session are posted privately for one month after the end of each session. Santa Fe Workshops takes the recordings down after one month to protect the intellectual property of our instructors.
Richard Sharum is an editorial and documentary photographer based in the Finger Lakes area of Upstate New York. Mainly focusing on socio-economic or social justice dilemmas concerning the human condition, his work has been regarded as in-depth, up-close and personal.
Richard’s work has been added to the permanent collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, The Amon Carter Museum, the Hirsch Library, and the Witliff Center for Documentary Studies, as well as others. Selected exhibitions have occurred in Kyoto, Japan, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Reggio Emilia, Italy, New York, Boston, Chicago and Dallas. His commissions include those by The Meadows Foundation, Centers for Community Cooperation, Harvard Law School, Student Conservation Association, Children’s Medical Center (Oncology), Children’s Cancer Fund.
Richard’s publications include those by LFI (Leica International), British Journal of Photography, LensCulture, The Atlantic, Texas Monthly, Publico (Portugal), El Pais (Spain), Observer (UK), The New York Times Lens Blog, B+W Photo Magazine, Huck Magazine, Glasstire, PATRON, Creative Review, among others.
Recent Appearances include: A Photographic Life Podcast with Grant Scott, ATO/Bridging the Divide Podcast, and an essay on “Truth in Photography” for their Winter 2023 issue. Richard Sharum is represented by The Hulett Collection, Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Website: richardsharum.com
Instagram: @richard_sharum