Date: Fri 30-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 30-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A11
Quick Words:
Sheron-photographer-master's
Full Text:
(update/story on photographer Georgia Sheron/8/30/96)
Georgia Sheron: A Master of Her Craft
(with photos)
By Shannon Hicks
OAKVILLE - Photographer Georgia Sheron received her masters certificate from
the International Professional Photographers Association at its 105th annual
convention in Orlando in July. The association is for photographers who have
studios and work primarily with portrait photography or weddings. Georgia
Sheron specializes in children's portraiture, although there are a number of
weddings and executive portraits in her portfolio. She also dabbles with
infrared and Polaroid transfer pieces.
For the Oakville-based photographer, the certificate was not only a
recognition from her peers of accumulating merits through print competition on
an international basis and her hours put into taking classes and/or lecturing,
but also a personal accomplishment the 61-year old photographer wasn't sure
she would have a chance of receiving when she launched Georgia Sheron
Photography ten years ago. She has worked from her Main Street studio since in
Oakville since day one.
In the world of professional photographers who are members of the
International Professional Photographers Association (IPPA), the oldest
photographic organization in the world (founded in 1880), there is a series of
certificate-type degrees one can earn as a photographer improves his or her
craft.
Out of 250 IPPA members in Connecticut, only 22 currently hold masters
certificates. The association is headquartered in Atlanta, GA.
For the master's degree, photographers need 13 competition merits ("credits"),
which can be earned at the international competition level. Held once
annually, photographers can enter up to four prints at an international
competition. If a print scores eighty points or above, the print can be
included in the competition exhibition and the photographer earns one merit.
So a photographer can earn up to four credits in one year, which means at the
minimum it will take four years to earn the required merits.
Competition is not easy, of course. Of the 6,000 entries received, only fifty
percent - or 3,000 photos - will score eighty or above. From those accepted,
the 400 creme de la creme prints are selected for the Loan Collection, an
exhibit which travels around the world. A Loan Print selection gives a
photographer two merits instead of one.
In 1992 and 1994, Sheron had three of her competition prints selected for the
Loan Collection.
"That earned me six merits, so I got a jump on it," she said. "And that helped
me a lot to establish the required number of competition merits that I
needed."
Photographers need an additional 12 merits acquired through continuing
education (once a year, Sheron attends a week-long class sponsored by the New
England Institute of Professional Photographers, studying with a master
photographer) or through attending one- and two-day seminars.
"I go to those all the time," she commented.
The third way to get merits is when photographers begin to be invited to
lecture or judge at other state conventions. In the last two years, says
Sheron, she has started to do "a lot of that." She has been a judge in Maine
and Vermont twice, along with a visit to Rhode Island. Judging earns one merit
per event, regardless of an event's importance.
Presenting a program also earns a merit, and when photographers are asked to
judge a show, Sheron explained, the invitations are usually accompanied by a
request to present a program, which earns another merit.
Last year, Sheron was asked to be a speaker at the annual convention of the
Professional Photographers of New England. Attended by professional
photographers from six states, Sheron offered a program on the use of color
for photographers, "Color As A Compositional Tool."
Once a photographer is named a master, they receive a blue ribbon with a medal
on it they are required to wear to all future IPPA events. When a photographer
receives their masters medal, they need a sponsor to present them with their
medal at a formal induction ceremony. Sheron chose Jay Stock, a former teacher
of hers and a fellow of the British Society of Photographers and the American
Society of Photographers, for her sponsor. (Sheron was chosen to be a sponsor
for a friend of hers who received her craftsman medal this year.)
For the ceremony honoring all new medalists, Sheron's daughter arranged to
have Sheron, herself, Sheron's mother (who lives in Virginia) and her aunt
(who came in from California) all flown in for the black-tie affair. It was
all a surprise to Sheron.
"That was the most special thing in the world," the photographer said, looking
over photos from the big event. "It was great. It was very exciting."
Long before being named a master photographer, people were noticing Georgia
Sheron's work. By pushing her own parameters, she has discovered new ways to
present images on paper for viewers. Two or three times a year, she has shows
at Beaux Arts Gallery in Southbury, the gallery which represents her. Michael
Coleman is the gallery's curator.
"Her technique is probably no different than a lot of others' but what she
captures is great," said Coleman, who owns one of Sheron's Polaroid transfers
himself. "Her work is heads above other people."
"It's not just her technique, but also the personal expression she puts into
[every image]," he continued. "People stop, and they are intrigued by them.
They attract people who are looking to think when they look at art."
Having been recognized a master, Sheron now has to enter competition as a
master, a separate category where she will find herself competing only against
other masters.
"From that point on... it gets harder," she said. "It will be harder and
harder for me now to get competition points, or merits, and where I will need
those is when you go for the degree after craftsman."
Sheron needs seven more credits in order to become a recognized Craftsman, the
next certificate in the series. She figures it will take one to two years to
become a craftsman.
Once achieving the craftsman certificate, the next level is to become an
associate of the American Society of Photographers. A photographer needs 25
competition merits for that distinction.
The be-all, end-all is to become a fellow at the ASA. For this, a photographer
must write a thesis and be able to present a portfolio with 25 prints that
scored eighty or more in competition. This year there were ten applicants. One
was accepted.
"That's not even a consideration right now. I won't live that long," Sheron
laughed. "But that's what the schedule is, if you're serious about pursuing
it. But they keep making it harder every year to get to the next two levels.
They keep upping the ante. Bigger glass mountains.
"I'm just thrilled having a masters. If I were able to eventually get my
craftsman in a year or two, that would be great. Having my masters, it's an
accomplishment in my own mind."