Instructor: Rick Wright
Saturday, May 18
10am - 5pm (one-hour lunch break)
This introductory class will open up an entirely new frontier for the film photographer. Everyone will get hands-on time and instruction with a 4” x 5” bellows camera. The session will begin with inspirational imagery from the pantheon of large format photographers. We’ll move into explaining and exploring the mechanics of these wonderful cameras. Then, we’ll have an opportunity to shoot some photographs in the streets nearby (weather permitting). By the end of the session, everyone will have a solid understanding of camera movements, film back loading, ground glass focusing, and exposure.
What you’ll learn and do:
Compose on an upside-down and flipped ground glass
What the various movements of the camera can achieve
Tilts, Swings, Rises, Falls, Shifts
How to take a manual exposure reading, and set proper aperture and shutter speeds using leaf shutter lenses
Proper tripod use and cable release methods
Loading a 2-sided film back with film
This is a workshop geared toward students who are already very familiar with 35mm and medium format cameras and are ready to explore larger formats.
The Halide Project will supply 4x5 positive paper (for in-class development). Halide will also provide 4x5 cameras for the session. If students have access to their own 4x5 camera, they are welcome to bring them in.
Workshop Withdrawal Policy
We recommend choosing workshops with care after reading our withdrawal policy. If you have questions about any of our workshops, please contact dale@thehalideproject.org
Rick Wright Bio
Rick Wright initially trained as an oil painter at Princeton (BA) and Columbia University (MFA), before embracing photography with studies at The ICP in New York. While there, he studied with: Nan Goldin, Susan Meiselas, Danny Lyon, and John Loengard. He currently practices architectural photography, shoots 4x5 film landscapes, and hosts photography seminars and critiques at The Halide Project, Fleisher Art Memorial, and Peters Valley School of Craft.
Rick says, “Photography is 93% of my life. The other 7% is occupied by film camera repair, short story writing, and motorcycle photo trips. I chose photography over painting for its speed, unpredictability, and ready bends of reality.”
Rick’s work resides in several permanent collections including the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Johnson & Johnson Collection, and University of Pennsylvania, and is exhibited internationally. In addition to a 2020 museum solo show at The Griffin Museum in MA, he was published in Lenswork Magazine, and appeared in the First Zagreb Photo Biennial.
Rick lives in the Center City District of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Website: www.rickwrightstudio.com
This workshop has been generously sponsored The Phillip and Edith Leonian Foundation.
Register for workshop