Forsidebilde av showet The Eyeshot Podcast on Street & Documentary Photography

The Eyeshot Podcast on Street & Documentary Photography

Podkast av Eyeshot

engelsk

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Les mer The Eyeshot Podcast on Street & Documentary Photography

The Eyeshot Podcast on Street & Documentary Photography is a critical platform dedicated to contemporary street photography and documentary photography. Produced by Eyeshot — an independent publisher focused on publishing and visual culture — the podcast features in-depth conversations on photographic practice, authorship, editing, and publishing.Rather than promotional interviews, each episode examines how photographers construct meaning: how they approach the street, develop long-term documentary projects, edit bodies of work, and position themselves within social and cultural contexts.In a time shaped by speed and image saturation, the podcast creates space for reflection, responsibility, and visual literacy. It positions street and documentary photography not simply as genres, but as ways of engaging with reality.A growing archive for photographers, editors, and readers committed to thinking photography seriously.Website | Youtube | Instagram

Alle episoder

32 Episoder

episode Richard Sandler: What Street Photography Has Lost Today cover

Richard Sandler: What Street Photography Has Lost Today

Richard Sandler joins Eyeshot 50mm for a raw conversation on New York street photography, film, flash, eye contact, documentary filmmaking, and what it means to photograph the unrehearsed human face. One of the defining street photographers of late 20th-century New York, Sandler reflects on photographing the city in the 1980s, working with Leica cameras and flash, learning from Gary Winogrand, dealing with risk, rejection, the technique of two pictures in one frame, the same technique he once taught a young Bruce Gilden, and the presence of the photographer in the frame. He speaks about why he never wanted to be invisible, why eye contact can reveal something deeply human, and why the best photographs often ask more questions than they answer. Direct, funny and uncompromising, a portrait of a photographer who never stopped questioning what he was looking at.

I går - 58 min
episode Robin Schimko: Street Photography, YouTube & the Algorithm Problem cover

Robin Schimko: Street Photography, YouTube & the Algorithm Problem

Robin Schimko, also known as The Real Sir Robin, joins Eyeshot 50mm for a direct conversation on street photography, YouTube, algorithms, AI, flash, gear culture, and what happens when social media starts shaping the way photographers see. In this episode, Robin reflects on the difference between being a street photographer and playing the YouTube game, questioning how algorithms reward repetition, imitation, silhouettes, POV videos, gear obsession, and easily consumable images. He also discusses why good street photography is not about perfection, why AI may push photography toward a dangerous idea of the “perfect image,” and why the real value of the medium still lies in instinct, presence, failure, and visual identity. He talks about a decade with the same Leica Q and 28mm lens, gear as costume, photographing around the shock at Thailand's Vegetarian Festival, the biggest beginner mistake he sees in workshops, what it takes to make a living without diluting the work, and why in the age of AI a flawed real photograph matters more than a perfect generated one.

12. juni 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode Chuck Patch: Analogue Street Photography, Winogrand & the Decisive Moment cover

Chuck Patch: Analogue Street Photography, Winogrand & the Decisive Moment

In this episode, American street photographer Chuck Patch reflects on a lifetime of image-making, from his first camera and darkroom experiences to his years working with museums, archives, and photographic collections. The conversation moves through his influences, including Garry Winogrand, Walker Evans, Vivian Maier, Joel Meyerowitz, and Henri Cartier-Bresson, while opening a deeper discussion on what makes a street photograph last over time. Patch speaks about the beauty of mundane subjects, the limits of perfect composition, the shift from black and white to color photography, and why authenticity in photography has changed across generations. He also reflects on the role of Flickr and online photography communities, the fear of criticism, the value of amateur photography, and the difference between the traditional “decisive moment” and a more emotional, social, and narrative understanding of street photography. This is a conversation about street photography as attention, memory, community, intuition, and emotional connection.

9. juni 2026 - 59 min
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