The Creative Camera
- Number of classes: 2
- Total Course Hours: 12
- Discipline: Photomedia
- Lecturer: Dr Ellen Dahl
- Age: 16 years and over
- Levels: Beginner, Intermediate
- Location: National Art School
The Creative Camera




Course Details
Day 1 – The Camera & Creative Control
The weekend begins with an introduction to your digital camera anatomy and how to switch from auto to manual control settings. Learn about the fundamentals of the exposure triangle—aperture, shutter speed, and ISO—then apply these concepts in a studio portrait session, experimenting with depth of field and focal length.
In the afternoon, Ellen Dahl introduces you to the creative potential in capturing motion. Through hands-on exercises, you’ll learn how to freeze or blur movement using different shutter speeds, followed by a group image review with discussion on results and techniques learned.
Day 2 – Developing a Creative Eye and Editing
The second day begins with key composition principles: rule of thirds, leading lines, framing, and negative space. A guided photo walk around campus allows students to apply these compositional ideas and refine their exposure and framing skills in real-world settings.
In the afternoon, Ellen introduces basic Adobe Photoshop: how to import, organize, and edit images—cropping, straightening, and adjusting exposure, contrast, and colour. Simple creative edits using layers and masks round out the session. The workshop ends with a group showcase, feedback, and Q&A.
Students will leave with confidence using their camera’s manual settings, an understanding of how exposure and focal length shape images, a strong grasp of composition, and a basic Photoshop editing workflow.
* NAS Short Courses are open to students of ages 16 years and over. The NAS Art Club is open to students between 15 - 17 years of age.
* Photography short courses may be held in upstairs studios. If access to stairs is not suitable, please contact us at short.courses@nas.edu.au
* What to bring? Please refer to the list of required materials in the Art Materials field below.
Art Materials
Students must supply their own art materials, please refer to the list below.
- Bring your choice of camera equipment, however it must be a Digital Single Lens Reflex (DSLR) or a Mirrorless digital camera body. The camera must have Shutter priority (Tv/S), Aperture priority (Av/A) and Manual (M) exposure control modes
- One or more camera lenses
- A cleared memory card and fully charged battery
- Notebook and pen
- Enclosed footwear is essential in all studios on campus.
Lecturer Profile
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Dr Ellen Dahl is a visual artist and educator. Originally from Arctic Norway, she moved to Australia as an adult and now lives and works on Gadigal Country in Sydney. Dahl’s lens-based art practice explores the expanded photographic field and its potential to engage new critical, poetic, and aesthetic ways of assembling ecological meaning and geological imagination. The concept of photography’s intrinsic involvement in how we see and feel about the world around us, underpins her projects. She is also interested in the medium’s relationship to time and often explore this working across photography, video and still-motion, sound, and installation. Dahl received an MFA (research) from Sydney College of the Arts, and a PhD from School of Creative Arts and Media, University of Tasmania. She works as a lecturer in Screen Arts at Sydney College of the Arts and in Photomedia at National Art School. In August 2019, Dahl co-coordinated/curated the Light Matter project — a symposium on the expanded field of photography held at University of Technology Sydney in conjunction with an exhibition at the Australian Centre for Photography in Sydney. Dahl’s exhibition history includes Unseen Amsterdam, This Is No Fantasy Gallery, Australian Centre for Photography, Dominik Merch Gallery, Centre for Contemporary Photography, National Portrait Gallery, Firstdraft and Verge Gallery, University of Sydney. Dahl has been a finalist in numerous art prizes, including The Fauvette Loureiro Memorial Scholarship, Hazlehurst Works on Paper and the Josephine Ulrick & Winn Schubert Photographic Award. She won the judges Commendation prize in the Contemporary Landscapes in Photography award (CLIP) in 2017 and is the winner of the biannual MAMA National Photography Prize 2024. Dahl is represented by This Is No Fantasy.
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