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2002 WPJA Photographer of the
Year - David Beckstead
By
PEGGY BAIR - The Wedding Photojournalist Association
With
a career that seems to be moving at the speed of light, David
Beckstead earned the Wedding Photojournalist Associations
first Photographer of the Year Award in 2002. What makes Beckstead
unique are images that reflect an artistry that often requires
the artist to test the edges of former photographic limits.
But the artistic leading edge of wedding photography is exactly
where David Beckstead wants to be. As he recently explained to
a group of his peers, move while shooting and shooting while
you're moving. It's a statement that is quite fitting for
an artist who's style is hard to pin down.
Ask him what his exposure is and he'll tell you that he just spins
the dials -- he overexposes and underexposes and fiddles
with any dial the equipment has on it. He takes risks that purposely
fly in the face of rules of so-called technical correctness.
The results are that his stunning artistic images not only wow
his clients but have earned him the admiration of his colleagues.
Pushed further to explain his style, Beckstead wants badly to
explain it but, like most artists, his explanations are not about
technicalities.
I'm not a very technical person, said Beckstead. I
want [the bride] to see me as a creator rather than a technical
photographer.
Frustrating as this statement may be to colleagues looking to
study what he does and how he does it, it seems to matter little
to brides looking for something very artistically different. To
them, results are the only thing that matter.
Asked what brides tell him about his work, Beckstead said, Your
web site made me cry or It brought out some emotional
feelings in me and that is why I called. How can I get you to
shoot my wedding? How can we get this done? Somehow my web
site clicks with certain brides.
Beckstead talks in terms of making the wedding day fun and working
with couples that give him the freedom to explore their wedding
day story. But he knows he took a risk by marketing his own style
and vision rather than fitting himself into the expected.
If they prefer to make me do what they want then they probably
won't be my client, Beckstead said, then explained: It
used to be you asked the bride, what do you want and follow her
list. Instead I wanted to say, Yeah, I'll do some of the things
you want but let me show you how I can make your wedding stylistic
and fun and emotional, different than it has been done, different
from the norm.
A little background on David Beckstead is that he has only been
shooting weddings professionally since 2001, having just been
inspired by a seminar at the Summit headed by Gary Fong. He had
embarked in his professional photography career in 1996 when he
dabbled (his word) in other areas of photography,
aerial, hospital and legal work. Prior to 1996, Beckstead spent
12 summers in a row as a forest ranger fighting fires. In his
leisure time, Beckstead has and continues to travel. He has been
to 35 different countries, everywhere from Ireland to Nepal.
When professional photography beckoned to him as a new career
path, Beckstead embraced digital photography when he saw that
it was the medium that would allow him the freedom of artistic
expression he was seeking. With that artistic freedom, Beckstead
shared what he would like to convey to brides considering him
as her wedding photographer.
I'd like you to tell me what you see in my work that you
like. [The bride] should have a small list of things that are
extremely important to her to let me know. I want her to be patient
and not have a lot of pre-conceived ideas about time. I want her
to see me as a creator instead of a technical photographer.
Technology would further play a part as Beckstead sought to introduce
his unique style to a wide audience of discriminating clientele.
This would become possible with the reach of the internet. I
had to think outside the community and into state, national and
international. I have to find my brides by the internet,
said Beckstead. I want to live in Payson [AZ]. Without the
internet, I don't know how I could do it.
Therefore, as much creative effort and care went into the design
of the David Beckstead web site as goes into his photography.
I had set my entire web site up to funnel that artistic
approach so that brides will have a certain response that I am
an artist and that I should be left alone to create. Brides and
grooms hire me to unleash the potential.
What is wedding photojournalism according to David
Beckstead? [Photojournalism] does apply in my work but it's
not a label I want. If there is one label I want to put on my
work and for bride's to understand, I more want to be seen as
an artist. You have to have imagery and a great website to be
a higher end photographer. You have to sell yourself as a person.
Instead of selling a product, you have to sell yourself -- not
in boastful but in a unique way.
©
2003 The Wedding Photojournalist Association
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