Name: Mike Buckley
Location: Northern Virginia suburb of Washington, DC
CiC: Thank you for agreeing to take part in 'In conversation with ....' here on CiC.
My pleasure, Donald. Thank you for doing everything that you do here.
Please tell us something about your general back-ground. What about your work history? Where you grew up? Things you have done. Anything interesting
Considering that photography is a creative process, it might be interesting to know that I wrote musical arrangements for just about every type of wind instrument ensemble including symphonic band, marching band, jazz band, brass quintet and woodwind quintet with a few other ensembles including a chamber orchestra thrown in for good measure. (Unfortunately, that pun was intended.)
My music was publicly performed regularly beginning when I was 13. Though I stopped writing music long ago and never used music professionally, it's still a kick when every once in awhile people contact me from all over the U.S. about music that I wrote decades ago.
And what about your family life?
My wife of about 30 years and I have no children by design. All of the children that we didn't have thank us daily for not having them.
If you were staying in tonight, what would you choose as one of your favourite books and/or films to keep you entertained, and what you be having as a favourite meal?
One of my favorite luxuries is to cook a meal while I'm not on a schedule. Savoring the aromas that only a cook experiences while chatting with my wife as we enjoy a favorite red wine poured in decadently large glasses is beyond pleasurable.
OK, photography is a given, but what about other hobbies or personal interests?
Personal finance, cooking, wine, classical music, traditional jazz, volunteerism, and the Washington Nationals baseball team are at the top of a very long list of interests that make sleep highly overrated.
I'm also a huge fan of anything and everything having to do with Benjamin Franklin. My favorite quote of his, probably because it also applies to me, is about pride: "Even if I could conceive that I had completely overcome it, I would probably be proud of my humility."
EDITOR PICK #1
Let's get on to photography - how long have you been a photographer, and what got you interested in the first place?
In June 1983 about one week before my wife and I went on our honeymoon, we decided that we might want to have a few documentary photos of our vacation. Neither of us had ever owned a camera, so we bought a point-and-shoot 35mm camera and three rolls of color slide film that I expected to last the ten-day trip. I used all of them the first day or two and was hooked forever.
What type of photography are you interested in, and why?
I like to travel, so it's no surprise that I also like travel photography. I try to capture not just the obvious iconic subjects in traditional viewpoints that every traveler hopes to see, but also the details that reveal the character of the places and people that I visit. Sometimes that means capturing iconic subjects in unusual perspectives.
I recently set up a makeshift studio in a small storage room. I want to eventually learn how to successfully photograph everything having to do with wine (another hobby of mine mentioned above). That means also photographing glass, which is generally regarded as one of the most difficult subjects to master. With the constructive critique of my fellow CiC photographers, I hope to eventually prevail.
As for reviewing other people's photography, there is no style of photography that I don't enjoy at least in small doses.
Any particular photographic influences?
The entire range of photographic history is fascinating to me and inescapably influences me at least in subtle ways. One of the blatant influences is that I apply sepia toning to monochromatic images that aren't necessarily timeless. That's despite that timelessness is usually considered a requirement for that treatment. I also apply toning that is reminiscent of albumen prints made in the 19th century because I simply like the look.
Speaking of history, I created a 20-page document explaining the technologies used from the beginning of photography to about 1880. (Anyone can PM me for a free copy.) I did that because I have never seen the various capturing, developing and printing technologies explained in a way that makes it easy to understand them at a glance and why they came to be.
What do you hope to achieve through your photography - or what have you achieved already?
I want to make images that move me and hopefully others on any level. Whether an image makes us chuckle just a little bit or throws us into deep thought, either case and many others work for me.
What you think of CiC? Any way it could be improved? Where should it go from here, in your opinion?
There are so many things that I like about CiC that I'll mention just two -- that the discussions pertaining to photography equipment are brand-agnostic except for the occasional jokes and that every image that is posted is subject to helpful critique.
Getting more personal if you don't mind...what keeps you awake at night, apart from Photoshop?
If I could make only two things in life instantly disappear forever with a flick of my magic wand, they would be hunger and violence.
EDITOR PICK #2
I have to ask this…. What photographic gear do you own, and what software do you use for editing?
Actually, you didn't have to ask. I use a Nikon system but that's only because I have a good friend who also uses Nikon. When I changed from film to digital photography, I knew I could rely on him to get me out of trouble in a pinch. (That happened often in the beginning!) I thrive on using prime lenses mostly because it's almost a zen-like experience for me to find scenes that are a good fit with a particular focal length rather than the other way around. My primary post-processing software is Capture NX2, though not because it's a Nikon product. I find it so easy to use its control point masking technology and also like that there is no need to use layers.
It's difficult to be objective, but how would you rate your photographic skills and ability?
That's actually very easy for me. I hope it's reasonable to say that I'm getting better and better and I'm absolutely positive that that's not happening nearly fast enough.
Are you in a position to help or encourage others in their photography?
At the risk of getting a bit too heavy, everyone is in a position to encourage others in whatever they pursue. I hope I'm successful at that.
You often see debates on the subject … but do you consider photography to be art?
After years of thinking about art mostly in the context of music long before I ever held a camera, I finally came up with a definition that works for me: Anything created by mankind that moves me is art. That implies that each of us gets to decide for ourselves what is and isn't art. Great photography can move me, so it can be art. Having said that, labels are really unimportant to me, so I have no need to label anything as being art or not.
What single piece of advice do you think is most useful to someone starting out with photography?
For most people including myself when I first started, it would be to fill the frame with the subject.
Can we see two of your shots that mean something special to you, and could you explain why.
MIKE'S SELECTION #1:
Of all the images that I have made, this is the only one that I would ever consider to be truly important and that is because of the situation.
The child is my nephew Matthew and the adult is his mother Valerie. The image is the first one made of them together. There was no promise that Matthew would survive until the next day. I'm thrilled to report that he is about 4 1/2 years old as I write this and is thriving, though not in the usual sense due to prolonged medical issues. Notice the indication, "iron girl," on Valerie's tee shirt. My take on that is that no metal has ever been made that is as strong as Valerie; the challenges that she conquered at that time and every day since then proves that, indeed, she is an "iron girl."
Every time I make a picture of Matthew, I send it to to the head nurse who took care of him during those precarious months. I framed a print of this photo and gave it to her and the medical team as a "thank you" for saving Matthew's life. They hung it in the room where the doctors consult with the parents of their tiny patients who struggle to live just as Matthew did at the time.
MIKE's SELECTION #2:
I selected this image because, despite the typical constraints of limited time and conditions when traveling, everything came together to produce my idea of a creative presentation of an iconic subject.
Though millions of tourists have seen these bronze horses at the top of St. Matthew's Cathedral in Venice, relatively few of them have seen the sculptures or a photo of them from this angle.
Finally, can you give us one interesting/weird/silly thing about you that we probably don’t know?
When my older brother and I teamed up to play hide-and-seek with other small children, we always won. He would lift me into a safe that was the top part of a metal filing cabinet and he would lock the safe's combination lock. You probably guessed that we never told our parents about that until we became adults.
Thank you, again, for taking part in 'In conversation with .......'
Thanks also to you for helping to make it happen!
Read all the other interviews in the series by going to this link