website

Your website sucks... Comments from the "experts"

This Linkedin Post, Is everyone tired of Livebooks website format ? on the APA Group reminded me of a discussion a while back of photographers websites. After the dust has setteled from graduation, I have been thinking a lot lately about my website, my blog and how to promote myself as a photographer and artist in a sustainable way. Recently, I have began a newsletter (sign up here) and have updated the website more regularly.

I built this site myself, with a lot of help and advise from too many friends to list. Sometimes I think I should revamp the whole thing and begin from scratch again. I think building the SVA MFA Thesis site made me start reconsidering my own site but a major overhaul will have to wait for now.

If I were to hire it out I would surly not be with Livebooks. I think Livebooks is overpriced, not as functional as a website should be and the templates I have seen look cheesy. There are too many almost free ways to make a site better looking then Livebooks. I would recommend avoiding flash sites. Unless you know what you are dong, or you hair an expert. When I originally build my site I considered flash but since I wasn't that good at it I (thankfully) went for simple HTML. Many of the rules I followed came from the advise and philosophy of you Daniel Eatock and indexhibit. Some of the many rules I believe portfolio websites should follow are:

1. clean easy to navigate design.
2. Direct links to each area and image on the site.
3. clear contact information, artist's bio, and client, exhibition or CV.
4. large images without watermarks. and lastly, build a site you can view on a phone. I think phone portfolio viewing will become more and more normal as people move from their old phones to 3 and 4g smartphones like iPhones and Blackberrys.

Amazingly, Daniel Eatock and friends have turned indexhibit into a free platform for creating solid portfolio sites.

Another free option I have heard good things about is http://artlog.com/ anyone out there tried that one? Let me know if you like it. If you want to spent some money on a site I would recommend hiring a company like my friends over at Wegee Design who can custom make you a site that best fits your vision in a clean design that will likely still be cheeper then Livebooks.

I just wanted to add this old commentary on web design from the a visual society blog:

2. Livebooks. It seems to be popular. Popular to the extent that if I visit a website and see the familiar name scroll across the top and familiar double thumbnails start loading down the right hand side a feeling of dread comes over me... I don't know what Livebooks cost, from what I have heard it's not the cheapest. Give your web designer buddy the cash instead and have him design a real site for you.

from:
http://www.avisualsociety.com/2007/10/30/your-website-sucksfrom-a-photo-editor/
and
http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2007/10/29/your-website-sucks/

Will Steacy, staring down the...

This might be a little old but I just found these videos. Kinda fun and they remind me of school cititque to some degree.Will Steacy and hisStare Down vs. Sarah Small. I'm not sure if these videos ends up being good for the photographic dialogue or what but maybe they will get the swing of things. Seems like they should be longer? and less like a quick fire challenge.

Viewfinders | Zoom In

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Zoom In Online (ZIO) is an award winning online video network. ZIO covers the best in pop-culture, providing visitors with the latest happenings in arts, entertainment, culture and technology with four online communities: Film & TV, Music, Photography and Design. Each community is updated daily with professionally produced video shows, podcasts, news stories and blog posts.

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And it's over...


© 2008 Bert Rodriguez. The End-A project installed during the Whitney Biannual. As someone passes through the opening doors of the elevator a motion sensor triggers an endless looping soundtrack. The soundtrack was designed by the artist created from sections of end theme music from films. As the artist sees newer movies, more music is added until his death when the soundtrack will become completed.

Well, It's the end of many things now for me. School is finished. The Thesis Exhibition is down. And Summer access to the School's Computer Lab and printers is also over because they are renovating many parts of the school. So, we are now officially locked out from using the lab like we did last year to work on summer projects.

For now like so many photographers in New York I will be using Print Space when I need to make a work print or scan some film. While it is surreal that School is finished - with the end of school brings the excitement of the challenges ahead. It's terrifying graduating now but at least the economy appears to be getting better. If I had graduated last year we would have been flying into the job market as the economy entered the worst collapse since the great depression. Hopefully, that is behind us and jobs will be coming back to all the working photographers and artists. And collectors will begin to buy more of the art that they enjoy. Go stock market go!

I'm really happy with how our Thesis Exhibition turned out. It was sad to bring home the work but the end also means new beginnings for me and the development of the series. Check out all the great blog love we got below. Thanks to all the bloggers who posted the information for the show or posted links to their favorite artists.

Press from the SVA MFA 2009 Thesis Exhibition
whats the jackanory ? - sva mfa show
Two Days Left for SVA MFA '09 Show | Gallery Hopper
ArtCat - Chelsea - SVA (West 26th) - MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department presents Thesis Exhibition
Hey, Hot Shot! - SVA MFA 2009 Thesis Show
SVA (West 26th): MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department presents Thesis Exhibition | .FILAS, n{e}ws
Recent MFA Shows' Selections. | digressions: a blog
Zoe Strauss: SVA MFA Photo Thesis Exhibition
wan.der.lust.ag.ra.phy
Schauraum 3 – thesis show at the FH Dortmund « Daniel on photography
SVA.MFA. « Prison Photography
ARTmostfierce: SVA 2009 MFA Thesis Exhibition
The Exposure Project: Jessica Bruah's No Lake This Summer
Tina Schula - Conscientious
Maureen Drennan - Conscientious
Carlos Alvarez Montero - Conscientious
i heart photograph: yiftach belsky
School of Visual Arts MFA Photography and Related Media Thesis Exhibition | Artis

As for this blog I hope to keep it up. I have been thinking about what it should morph into now that school is out. I will be experimenting with taking some of the papers I have written in school and turning them into long blog posts. If they work I will continue to write longer articles on art in this blog in the future. So, to recap, an end is sad but the beginning is terrifyingly exciting. To quote my favorite wordsmith:

"What is that feeling when you're driving away from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing?--it's the too- huge world vaulting us, and it's good-by. But we lean forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies." -Jack Kerouac