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43+ Obras 926 Miembros 11 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Dave Ulrich is Professor of Business at the University of Michigan and a cofounder of The RBL Group.

Incluye los nombres: Dave Ulrich, David Ulrich

Obras de Dave Ulrich

The HR Value Proposition (2005) 94 copias
Liderlik Markasi (2009) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Sunstone - Vol. 19:2, Issue 102, June 1996 (1996) — Contribuidor — 1 copia

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Conocimiento común

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Reseñas

Great book and inspirational
 
Denunciada
dinoroy.aritonang | 3 reseñas más. | May 19, 2020 |
“The Widening Stream” is an excellent book. It is not just a book about the creative life, but it is also a book that can help you live a more meaningful and mindful life.

There is a lot of inspiration that David Ulrich seems to take from Zen philosophy, as well as from the writings of Carlos Castaneda, amongst others.

Minor White is an inspiration.

I like the questions and exercises that he appends at the end of each chapter. It is worthwhile doing the exercises, as they will allow the reader to extract the maximum benefit from the book.

Towards the end, I did think that David Ulrich sounded a bit repetitive. If he was, then I would only consider this to be a minor blemish in an excellent book.
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RajivC | Apr 27, 2020 |
This is a very deep book. David Ulrich does not speak about the techniques of photography. He talks about the six stages to mastery.

David borrows heavily from Zen philosophy while writing these lessons, and emphasizes depth over a shallow approach to the use of technique to shock.

The lessons can be read through, even though I read only one chapter a day. However, to make the best of the book, it is advisable to go back to the book from the beginning, and to practice the exercises he outlines.

Mastery takes years, and it is futile to expect to become a master in a short period of time. It takes years and over the years, “Zen Camera” can be a faithful companion and mentor, if you allow it to be so.
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RajivC | 3 reseñas más. | Apr 5, 2020 |
Zen Camera: Creative Awakening with a Daily Practice in Photography by David Ulrich is an instructional guide to photography based on simple zen practices. Ulrich is currently co-director of Pacific New Media Foundation in Honolulu, Hawaii. He has taught for Pacific New Media, University of Hawaii Mānoa and was a Professor and Chair of the Art Department at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle. For fifteen years, he served as Associate Professor and Chair of the Photography Department of The Art Institute of Boston.

Early on Ulrich tells the reader that we have lost sight of the resonant language of metaphor and symbol. We are no longer creative. Poetry is dead. I review quite a bit of poetry so I will disagree with the last statement. But I do see the point. I live in the suburbs and people think it is a nice well maintained place to live. What do they base this on? Usually, it is driving through a neighborhood or looking on from a highway. I ride a bicycle and I see the cracks in walls and peeling paint on a suburb that is decomposing. Moving slower and observing things closer I see more. For a while I walked to work, cutting through a small park in the process. I became aware of the trees, the light, and the colors. It was something I didn't notice before because even at bicycle speeds, I was still moving to fast. Slow down, relax, observe, become aware of your surroundings.

Ulrich says many of the things I recognized myself and adds to it. There is waiting for the right light, right day, and the right subject to appear. There is also a discovery of the photographer's own eye. Ulrich suggests keeping a journal and taking one to two hundred pictures a day. The volume will help you discover your eye. Many of the basics of photography are covered in light detail as well as zen topics. There is more of a sharing of information rather than conforming to a dogma in his teaching. He also offers photography exercises and practices at the end of each chapter.

There were a few surprises for me in this book. First, use any camera. Even your cellphone camera is allowed. Ulrich is not a purist and pixels are just as good as silver nitrate and paper. Second digital photography allows the photographer to adjust the picture through editing. How often have we taken a picture that that looked so good to our eye but the camera recorded something much blander? Editing software allows the user to fix this without changing the nature of the photographed subject.

Zen Camera is a well written and informative guide to taking better pictures. Ulrich's own photographs and others are used as supporting material throughout the text. Recommended for those wanting to improve their photographic eye.

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Denunciada
evil_cyclist | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 16, 2020 |

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Obras
43
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2
Miembros
926
Popularidad
#27,712
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
11
ISBNs
81
Idiomas
7

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