2012-05-29

What Shoot Plan?!

One of the things we've learned is the importance of shoot-planning.  The ability to plan out all of the images you need and all of the images you want, and structuring them in a very specific way that makes sense and lets the shoot flow in an organized way from the first shot to the last. It's actually a great thing that seriously helps your time management on a shoot, especially when you have limited time with a model or at a location.

When shooting kids, however, it's a different story all together.  Last week, I shot four little boys, aged 3, 4, 5, and 6.  The brief was "Dirty Children" and I was supposed to aim for funny images, and ones that you might see on a laundry powder ad. Initially, I shot a little boy and a little girl, who must have been the cleanest children on the face of the planet.  They did NOT want to paint with their hands, did NOT want to get any mud on their clothes, and were only too happy to run to the sink to clean it off when they did. The four little boys, however, were only too pleased to jump right into it.
Under the advice of one of my fellow students, rather than following my shoot plan, I set up "stations". There was a painting station, a baking station, and an outdoor mud station. The very detailed three-paged shoot plan that I had prepared stayed in my bag for the entire shoot. There was no controlling these little monkeys. Whatever happened at each station was almost completely out of my control, and things escalated quickly. It got messy.

The boys had poured 6 bottles of multi-coloured paint all over the floor, and it went from finger painting, to having a full-on slip-and-slide on the living room floor, leaving blue, red, green, and yellow streaks spread out across every inch of the floor and all over the boys' clothing.

Bringing the boys outside was an even bigger challenge in model direction.  Mud and a soccer ball made it nearly impossible for me to give any kind of instruction. Luckily, with the very short moments of attention the boys gave me, and me shooting like mad the rest of the time, I did end up getting some very cute, laundry-detergent worthy shots.

I was told that the boys returned home to their parents with all kinds of mess-making stories, and that they slept incredibly well that night. A day of adults actually encouraging kids to get messy and play in the mud--isn't that every little boy's dream come true?







Images copyright Yuri Arcurs

Hi Again

To the many people who think I have dropped off the face of the planet, and to those who have considered my being eaten by a lion, I am pleased to announce that I am still alive and kicking. The plan to return home to Vancouver, Canada at the beginning of this year was rerouted when I was selected for a two-week photography competition in Cape Town. My best friend from Pretoria was also selected for the competition, so I figured a road trip and two weeks spent in Cape Town would be a perfect way to conclude my two years in South Africa. I wasn't expecting to have been chosen as one of the final 13 people and given the opportunity to spend the next 3-5 years learning and working, taking photos while traveling around the world. But alas, here I am, living in Cape Town--one of the most picturesque cities I have ever seen--and about to journey overseas to work in Aarhus, Denmark for the next three months.

Maybe this video of the two week photography "bootcamp" that I participated in earlier this year will give you a better idea of what I'm in for: 


I will be updating this site regularly, not only because it has been assigned to us at work, but also because I love going back and reading the other two blogs that I started (when I moved to France, and then to South Africa), and regret the fact that I didn't follow through on them. This site will keep you updated about my life, while I share anecdotes about my job, the places I visit, and the people I meet.