Posts tagged InsaneLittleProjects
Why photographers should explore Machine Learning

I never thought I would write a blog post about machine learning, after all, I'm a professional photographer, with zero background in coding or computer science - I didn’t even go to college! However about two years ago, I decided to learn the basics of coding to build an app prototype. After all - how hard can it be? (Pretty hard it turns out)

After a couple of months of YouTube tutorials, I managed to build a scrappy camera app that could take photos (although I hadn’t figured out how to save them). One day I came across a tutorial on how to build the “not-hot dog” app, an app made famous in the TV show Silicon Valley. The basic idea is to create a dataset containing images of hot dogs, then use a machine learning model to “see” if what is captured is a hot dog or not. The usability of the app was of course pretty limited, but I realized the potential machine learning could have in creating more interactive photography projects, especially if hot-dogs were replaced with something else.

I realized the potential machine learning could have in creating more interactive photography projects, especially if hot-dogs were replaced with something else.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Picasso and George Braque revolutionized painting by introducing Cubism. Marcel Duchamp, also known as the father of conceptual art, believed that despite the sweeping revolution, painting was still a purely “retinal” affair - something whose appeal was directed solely to the eye. In other words, something that’s visually appealing but lacks deeper meaning. As a response to the “retinal” art, Duchamp went on to create readymades which shocked the world and expanded the notion of what art could be.

If there’s one platform that’s been the champion of the “retinal” in today’s world it would be Instagram. The platform was built around the idea that your iPhone photos could look professional by slapping filters on them (an idea much despised by professional photographers). On Instagram, photography is purely a shiny object (preferably in millennium pink) with very little room for connecting ideas and concepts to the photos. Sure you could add animations or write captions but why would anyone read those when there are a million photos just screaming for your attention a scroll away.

On Instagram, photography is purely a shiny object (preferably in millennium pink) with very little room for connecting ideas and concepts to the photos.

What really makes me excited about machine learning and more specifically computer vision is the capability to transform photography from a “retinal” artform into a truly interactive one. With the help of machine learning, photographers can communicate concepts and ideas that go beyond gimmicky filters and effects. Kind of like mixing photography, video, performance, installation, and conceptual art into a single medium. 

For me, this revelation started with the hot-dog app but quickly grew into something more ambitious as I switched the dataset from hot-dogs to my own images. I didn’t include my images to help me identify them or anything instead it the decision was based on years of growing frustration. As we gain more experience and knowledge, performing creative tasks becomes easier and easier. Once we reach a certain level, we tend to go into creative auto-pilot mode. I became curious about what my work would look like if I outsourced the creative decision-making process to a machine learning algorithm.

I became curious about what my work would look like if I outsourced the creative decision-making process to a machine learning algorithm

To accomplish this, I built a camera app that on the surface looks very similar to the iPhone’s native camera app. However, in the background is a machine learning model called “feature extraction”. The model analyzes the frames coming from the viewfinder and decides whether or not the photo about to be captured is too similar (unoriginal) to those already taken by the user. If the answer is yes - the app removes the capture button rendering it impossible to take the photo and displays a rather annoying message. The user is then forced to choose a different angle or approach in order to capture the image. The point is not to take “better” photos but to pause the creative auto-pilot and challenge the creative decision-making process.

Sort of like reversing the learning curve making it harder and harder to come up with original solutions to capture what’s around you. The result is a quite frustrating journey sprinkled with bits of occasional satisfaction. The experience can be described as “performance art meets photography”, where the user is prevented from relying on past experiences, creating a feeling of learning something for the first time. The camera app/bot project is called Svetlana in honor of my very stoic third-grade gymnastics teacher who believed that shortcuts are for lazy people. 

The camera app/bot project is called Svetlana in honor of my very stoic third-grade gymnastics teacher who believed that shortcuts are for lazy people. 

At this point you might ask yourself, what does this have to do with Duchamp and his crusade against “retinal art”? Well, until recently there haven’t been many tools available for photographers interested in creating work that primarily non-retinal or “to service the mind” as Mr. Duchamp would have put it. But with the capabilities of machine learning, it’s all of a sudden possible to create work that stretches beyond the limits of the medium while still retaining the accessibility and familiarity that photography offers. 

I will be the first to admit that learning code without any previous experience can at times be an uphill battle, especially if you had a C in math! However, the developer community can be very helpful as long as you show a genuine interest in learning the craft. Also, full disclosure I co-created the anti-social media app minutiae a few years ago, and even though the coding was done by professional developers, understanding the complexity of creating an app proved to be a very valuable experience. Even though the learning curve is still quite steep when it comes to code and Machine Learning for those who have patience (and time) the reward can be a newfound sense of creative freedom. 

Svetlana in action

So is there a label for photography projects that put ideas ahead of visual representation? “Non-Retinal”, “New Photography”, “Computational Photography”, “New New Photography” or “Photography 2.0” ?? I’m not sure but whatever label the future gives it, Machine Learning will be just as revolutionary to photography as readymades were to the art world a century ago.

Interested in testing the app?
Request a beta invite here.

John Francis Peters 2010/2020

What’s this? See the story behind the project here.

Year: Sept 2010
Location: Bushwick, Brooklyn, New York
Left: John Francis Peters photographed by Martin Adolfsson
Right: Martin Adolfsson photographed by John Francis Peters

Year: Aug 2020
Location: San Diego, California
Left: John Francis Peters photographed by Martin Adolfsson
Right: Martin Adolfsson photographed by John Francis Peters


Q&A with John Francis Peters

How would you describe your work?
My work is rooted in the documentary, art, and journalistic traditions but I tend to just call myself a photographer. I don't think I fully fall into any of the general photographic genres. At the core of my work process is an effort to make multi-dimensional photographs that may inform and while also embracing some mystery. It's a conscious effort to balance between these two dynamics.

Is there anything you want to shoot more of?
Right now I'm just looking forward to traveling again to make work. I'm an explorer at heart and normally travel consistently around the US and internationally. So now as I approach almost a year of not having traveled as usual, because of the pandemic, of course, I'm feeling anxious to get out. This time has definitely made me more aware of how important being out in the world is to me.

Looking back 10 years, what has changed and what hasn’t changed?
So much has changed in the past decade. The big thing is that I moved to Southern California and began working as a freelancer. That has totally shifted my life in so many ways and especially in the direction, my work has taken. I've been able to live in a dynamic part of the country and focus on building long-form bodies of work.

The move had also really inspired me to become a healthier person, both physically and creatively. It's a huge difference from where I was when I was living in New York. What has not changed at all is my passion for photography. My work process has evolved and I've learned more about what I'm best at but I'm still just a wanderer, embracing intuition as my guiding force.

What’s the one thing that has surprised you the most of the last decade?
Many things have been unexpected, to be honest. I've been able to work on incredible projects with so many talented editors and writers. That has been something I've worked towards but never fully expected. I've lost loved ones that I was very close to which was unthinkable even a year ago.

I've watched my country grow more extreme but also come together in ways I've dreamt of since I was young. As we say 'life is full of surprises' and sometimes those unexpected experiences may render incredible beauty and other times unthinkable darkness.

Going back to 2010, is there anything in terms of your career you’d have done differently?
Not really too much. I'd maybe have left the desk job I was at a bit earlier but I'm grateful to have had that opportunity too. It taught me a great deal about the editorial industry, its good and bad sides. I've had a very unconventional career path in general because I did not start off as a photographer in school. So my creative life has really been about taking chances to do what I care most about and love.

Has your approach to your work/profession changed - if yes, how?
Well at this point I'm shifting into a zone where I really want to hone in on my true interests and strengths. But, I will forever be a student of the medium and will always try to avoid drifting into conceptual or aesthetic stagnation.

So the journey as an artist will continue to evolve. I hope to make new discoveries as time goes on and continue to fully focus on producing long-form projects. Moving forward with photography, I just always want to stay true to myself and as long as I'm allowing my heart to guide the path ahead all will be ok.

Has your approach to your non-professional life changed - if yes, how?
I mean you hear it all the time, moving to California is for many about embracing a healthier lifestyle and I can definitely vouch for that now. I'm an outdoorsy type and into running, playing basketball, boogie boarding, hiking, and I can do those things here all year long while also engaging with a big city.

This as opposed to my past lifestyle which consisted of commuting on a bus 3-4 hours a day, 5 days a week, into a stressful environment, drinking alcohol, and often eating like shit. I made the decision to live that way for 5 years and it just really wore me down. I love New York, it's where I'm from and my heart will forever be there but I don't think I could ever live my life that way again.

What do you know now, that you didn’t at the time you took the last portrait?
I feel I now have much more control of and a better understanding about my photographic process. I've produced a lot of work since that time and of course, have refined the direction in how I make portraits. At the core of my process is the goal of finding unexpected moments and producing nuanced images and maybe I just have a better sense of how to hopefully achieve that outcome.

Has your relationship with photography changed since 2010, if yes, how?
The experiences I've had working as a freelance photographer for the past 10 years have taught me more than words can express. I've learned about my purpose using this medium to communicate and now know true art-making is completely intertwined with everything else in life from family, to my relationships with friends and communities.

I've grown more intimate with the medium and like any long relationship that works, your journey through life and make discoveries together over time. For me, photography is really that balance, the synergy between the inner and outer worlds. When it works it speaks to the greater unknown, that which is experienced in birth or death, but as artists, we are blessed with an ability to experience every day.

Bio
John Francis Peters is a photographer based in San Diego, California. His diverse body of work ranges from projects that explore emerging culture and environments in transition, to the portraiture of influential personalities. John’s work has been profiled by The New Yorker, The New York Times, Harvard University, and TIME magazine and he has been appointed to produce original works for public venues such as Grand Park in Los Angeles.

https://www.jfpetersphoto.com