If you had to learn photography in the shortest amount of time, with intent of receiving the best experience and education, what would you do?
In the summer of 2008, I was working full-time as an engineer in Almaty, Kazakhstan. And for the previous three years in that region, I hadn’t made many photographs. Rumors eventually surfaced within my workplace that our contract might end, and I’d be heading back home to America. Suddenly, I felt an urgency to document my surroundings; I wanted to give my family and friends a front-row seat to what my life was like.
Since I had no photography contacts overseas, I consulted Google on how to develop photographic skills. One day at work, I entered “learn travel photography best” and reviewed the responses. The first result went something like this, “National Geographic Expeditions offers you an opportunity to learn travel photography from the best photographers in the world.” Within the next hour, I had booked an 18-day trip throughout India. My teachers and experts would be acclaimed photographers Steve Winter, Sharon Guynup and Nevada Wier.
On Day 1 of the journey, the terms ISO and aperture were as foreign to me as the Hindu language. But after my instructors spent countless hours detailing how to use the camera, work a scene, see the light and study a great image, intuition eventually took over, and the technical aspects fell into place.
Throughout the India Expedition, I was a sponge. Every waking moment, I photographed surroundings, asked questions or reviewed imagery.
On day 5 of the journey, I recall a lesson from Steve at breakfast, “If all people are looking at a scene in the same manner, then try to look at it from a different perspective.” A short time later, while approaching an early-morning street scene near Jaisalmer Fort, I saw about 50 people standing in a circle. Most equipped with cameras, those spectators were watching a young girl perform a balancing act. Steve’s teaching echoed in my ear. I crawled between people’s legs, pointed to the center of the circle, got approval from the tightrope walker and lay on ground. As the girl inched overhead, I made this image.