One of three construction workers repairing exterior of a house after a porch fire. Nikon D300, Nikkor 18-200mm, 18mm, f/7.1, 1/160sec, manual exposure, -0.3ev, ISO640, monopod, no strobe and no Photoshop. Converted from 14-bit RAW to jpeg using Capture NX2.1. Shot for an exercise at RedBubble.com.
Wikipedia.org has this to say about an environmental portrait:
“An environmental portrait is a portrait executed in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and typically illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings. The term is most frequently used of a genre of photography.
“By photographing a person in their natural surroundings, it is thought that you will be able to better illuminate their character, and therefore portray the essence of their personality, rather than merely a likeness of their physical features. It is also thought that by photographing a person in their natural surroundings, the subject will be more at ease, and so be more conducive to expressing themselves, as opposed to in a studio, which can be a rather intimidating and artificial experience.”
The Background in Environmental Portraits
“The surroundings or background is a key element in environmental portraiture, and is used to convey further information about the person being photographed.
“Where it is common, in studio portraiture and even in location candid photography, to shoot using a shallow depth of field, thereby throwing the background out of focus, in environmental portraiture the background is an integral part of the image. Indeed, smaller apertures and more depth of field is commonly used in this type of photography.”
Details in the surroundings
“While it is often true that the background may dominate the subject, this need not necessarily be so. In fact, the details that convey the message from the surroundings can often be quite small, and still be significant.The key seems to be in the symbolism expressed by various elements in the background, for instance, a baseball cap may not tell you much about your subject(unless he or she is a baseball player), but a chef’s hat gives you a lot more detail about who he is and what he does.”
Wow… now this is something to ponder. I never really thought of environmental portraiture before… but I love the concept. I recognize that when I look at photographs of people in whatever environment they’re in – I always find myself looking at everything else in the picture. It really does speak of who this person is (or may be). Even if I know the person and the environment they’re in – in the photo – I still often look at it as if I didn’t know them… just to try and get a picture of what a stranger my glean from it. Very interesting post, Jan. As always… I love reading your blog and learning from you. I’m searching for more time to do so. Maybe when I hunker down for the winter. Um.. I guess you’re already doing that.
BTW – I’ve commented two other times where after I wrote somewhat lengthy comments. I hit submit only to realize that there was a Captcha Code below the submit and lost my comment. The frustration made my mind unfit to rewrite my comments at that time… I do intend to go back and try again.
Thanks again – Roka
I’ll remove the ‘captcha’, Roka. Perhaps the spam bots won’t find this wee site.