The Perceptive Photographer

The Danger of Consistency


Listen Later

In Episode 564 of the podcast, I’m thinking through an idea that comes up often in photography but is rarely examined closely: consistency. We tend to treat a recognizable style as a sign of maturity or a settled voice, a clear direction. And for a while, that recognition feels like progress. But consistency can quietly become a constraint.

The problem is that consistency is often mistaken for coherence. Consistency lives on the surface of photographs. It shows up as repeated visual solutions: similar compositions, familiar subjects, reliable color and tone. Coherence operates underneath the work it is similar ot our voice or vision. It’s the continuity of attention or the way a we look, what we care about, and the questions we continue to ask, even as the work itself changes.

So this week we talk about how consistency is reinforced by external pressures: audience expectation, institutional validation, and the quiet rewards of being easily recognizable, and how over time, this can lead photographers to protect a look rather than respond honestly to what’s in front of them. We also look at how to think about coherence as a resource forus to use in our work and processing.

Steven Shore offers a powerful counterexample. American Surfaces and Uncommon Places look radically different, yet they belong to the same mind. Remember coherence isn’t stylistic. it’s conceptual. In this case of Steven and others, the work remains grounded in observation, description, and the ordinary, even as the visual language shifts.

Lots of other photographers like Wolfgang Tillmans, Adams, Minor, and Sophie Calle operate similarly. Their practices change form, scale, and medium, but their attention to what matters remains the same.

The danger of consistency isn’t repetition itself. It’s the narrowing of perception. Coherence asks something harder: allowing the work to evolve without abandoning what truly matters.

Voice isn’t a look you defend. It’s comes paying attention to yourself, what you seee, and why it matters. And at that core, the work you create can can survive any consistency change.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Perceptive PhotographerBy Daniel j Gregory

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

55 ratings


More shows like The Perceptive Photographer

View all
Freakonomics Radio by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

Freakonomics Radio

32,175 Listeners

Hidden Brain by Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam

Hidden Brain

43,710 Listeners

LensWork - Photography and the Creative Process by Brooks Jensen

LensWork - Photography and the Creative Process

426 Listeners

The Digital Story Photography Podcast by Derrick Story

The Digital Story Photography Podcast

264 Listeners

B&H Photography Podcast by B&H Photo & Video

B&H Photography Podcast

2,020 Listeners

Pivot by New York Magazine

Pivot

9,545 Listeners

Moose Podcasts by Moose Peterson's Website

Moose Podcasts

55 Listeners

F-Stop Collaborate and Listen by Matt Payne

F-Stop Collaborate and Listen

290 Listeners

FRAMES Photography Podcast by FRAMES Magazine

FRAMES Photography Podcast

104 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

16,096 Listeners

The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart by Comedy Central

The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart

10,309 Listeners

Plain English with Derek Thompson by The Ringer

Plain English with Derek Thompson

2,181 Listeners

Beyond The Lens with Richard Bernabe by Richard Bernabe

Beyond The Lens with Richard Bernabe

141 Listeners

Wiser Than Me with Julia Louis-Dreyfus by Lemonada Media

Wiser Than Me with Julia Louis-Dreyfus

11,439 Listeners

The PetaPixel Photography Podcast by PetaPixel

The PetaPixel Photography Podcast

96 Listeners