Being
a fashion photographer
“The audience
may not remember the creator who molded the beauty but will always salivate for
the creation. Such is the power of visuals. What with the advent of Photoshop
and its benefit of transforming looks.
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
The glamour and glitz
that comes with fashion and modeling is something else. The photojournalists
who engage in this art know better. The shots are wild, the poses explicit.
Fashion and modeling
is slowly shaping up as a well paying venture for both the model and the
photographer. A local showbiz magazine, Pulse
wrote on February 14, 2014 p.19 that the art fetches between KSh. 500 and KSh
70,000 depending on the complexity of the photo.
Most of the clients
are models desiring to grace the cover pages of lifestyle magazines. This is
normally the entry point to a high stake stage of show business.
Once the models
appear on the front of magazine, they get noticed. This is a wish come true for
some who aspire to be socialites, models and attract men. They hog the
limelight like moths do a spotlight.
The next thing is
being called by advertising agencies to audition for their brands. That
explains the seminude billboards carrying these models. The business booms as
the buyers relate to the products courtesy of their favourite celebrity being associated
with them. The fashion photographer too gains status and money for creating
such an awesome photo.
The biggest winner of
course is the model. S/he is the most visible character in the whole chain. The
audience may not remember the creator who molded the beauty but will always
salivate for the creation. Such is the power of visuals. What with the advent
of photoshop and its benefit of transforming looks.
Be that as it may,
the Kenyan society is still conservative about nudity and the definition of
privacy is ambiguous. Models stand accused of being “immoral”. Some are labeled
sluts, lesbians, gays and social misfits. But do they care? As long as the
fashion photography is paying their bills, that is what matters. Kelele ya
chura haimzuii ng’ombe kunywa maji. (The noise of frogs does not prevent
the cow from drinking water).
The
writer is a student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at
Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email
your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com
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