Module 1 2 Lecture Notes Intro To Photojournalism
Module 1 2 Lecture Notes Intro To Photojournalism
Module 1 2 Lecture Notes Intro To Photojournalism
Obe
Dr Joe
Email:
[email protected]
Twitter:@josephobe
Website:
www.josephobe.com
FB: Joseph Obe
Introduction to
Photojournalism
Course Overview
This course kick- starts the career of those who
want to venture into photojournalism. This course
is intended for potential editors, designers, and
other communicators who need to appreciate
photographs in order to use them intelligently in
their work. The class also should interest students
who want to improve their "visual literacy" while
learning some of the history and principles of
photojournalism.
It
will
not
include
the
comprehensive task of taking picture but it will
prepare you to start using camera as a
professional journalist. However, you will be
required to carry out simple photo shooting
exercise around the campus.
will learn
What you
Class Philosophy
1.I will take lots of pictures
2.I will always plan my pictures
3.I will get close to my pictures
4.I will shoot in the best light
possible
5.I will be creative.
will learn
What you
Module 1
Fundamentals of Photojournalism
The development of photography in the 1830s
was one of the most profound changes that has
affected the way we view the world. Photography
brings to life people, places, events and other
things that we would otherwise have trouble
understanding. It has given us a common set of
images
with
environment
experience.
which
that
we
to
do
understand
not
the
personally
Outstanding Photo
Journalists
One of the first great
photojournalists was Matthew
Brady, a New York portrait
photographer who traveled to
many of the battlefields of the
American Civil War in the 1860s
to record what had happened
there. Bradys images brought
home to people who had stayed
behind the starkness and
horrors of way and helped
change the way that people
thought about war itself.
Outstanding Photo
Journalists
Students to research
about local
Photojournalists like
Peter Obe of the Nigeria
Daily Times
Portfolio Assignment 1: PR
Find an object that projects the
image of the university. It could be
its logo, website, branding, gate
etc. Take a picture of the object
and find out everything you can
about the item. Why do you
consider it as a public relations
tool for the University?
Submission Deadline: 23rd April 2013
@11am. 5 marks
Difference between
photojournalism and
photography
1.Photography focuses on the
aesthetic beauty of an image while
photojournalism focuses on how the
news angle of an image.
2.Photojournalist is concerned about
the
compositional
focus,
or
emphasis
of a picture while
photography is concerned with
clarity, colour and quality of a
picture.
3. Photo journalists must integrate
photography into their thinking about
every story they cover. But that isn't
the business of a photographer.
What a photojournalists
must look out for in Pictures
1.Drama: Pix that will hold
viewers attention.
2.Action: Pix that depicts
movement, keeping viewers in
suspense of what happened
before and after the pix was
taken.
3. Expression: The photo that
captures expression tells a good
story.
4.
Unusualness: capture the
unique or bizarre moments of
peoples lives
The 3s of
Photojournalism
The 3s of photojournalism
distinguishes you from just
being a photographer and
being a professional
photojournalist. They are:
Close-up photography is
what proves the worth of
the photojournalist for the
viewer. Photojournalists
get near a subject when
viewers cannot or are
unwilling to go that close.
These shots give viewers
something
of
value,
something they would not
get otherwise. Getting
good
close-up
shots
requires both skill and
courage.
What a photojournalists
must look out for in Pictures
1.Drama: Pix that will hold
viewers attention.
2.Action: Pix that depicts
movement, keeping viewers in
suspense of what happened
before and after the pix was
taken.
3. Expression: The photo that
captures expression tells a good
story.
4.
Unusualness: capture the
unique or bizarre moments of
peoples lives
Assignment 3
Caption Writing
According to the American Press Institute, photo
captions should accomplish four things:
Explain the action: Tell where and when.
Name the principles: Dont leave out anyone whos in
the picture. If their not important, crop them out.
Tell why youre running the photo: Go beyond the
obvious. Try to pull the reader into the story.
Note important detail: Explain all mysterious objects
or circumstances. Allow for a longer photo caption if it
will help the reader understand the story.