Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/06/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]As a result of numerous messages for the past few days on here as well as on some photography lists I read, I set out this week to get a copy of last Sundayıs NY Times. The magazine section was devoted to 100 years of pictures (50+ pages). I have now looked through it all and read most of it. The text is by the Times picture editor. Since there has been so much on the NET this week about this magazine I thought it deserved some attention. About four comments come to mind: It is wonderful to have that much space devoted to a single topic and especially satisfying to those of us interested in photography to find our favorite area of interest covered. Such coverage focuses attention on photography as an historical record and as an art form, and such recognition is beneficial. I was brought up so short by an early comment from the author that it made me question the accuracy of her other statements and observations. In discussing the value and beauty of black and white compared to color photography she wrote that there were no high-quality color films available until the 1960s. This is completely absurd and brings to mind each generationıs dismay about younger generations and their belief that nothing of importance happened or was invented before they were born. The writer obviously either never saw or does not know about Kodachrome from the 1930s, the mainstay of long-lasting, high quality color film. Granted it was slow and a bit contrasty, but it made beautiful pictures that have not faded and are still in use today. The last comment refers to the many references on the NET this week about this NY Times document as if it contained the best photographs of the last 100 years or that it is a solid photographic documentary of the last 100 years through photography. Neither is the case. The Times magazine is, in my view, a collection of photographs that was easily available to the newspaper and which were made over the last century. (You may have already realized that the Times is celebrating its 100 birthday in present form.) There is a vast difference here. Many of the pictures are good. Very few are great I feel. Most are simply old. The George Tames (bless his soul) photograph of President Kennedy in the Oval Office is one of historyıs memorable documents of JFK or of any other president. It should be there and was, most likely because it is a wonderful image and also because George was a NY Times staffer and the picture could be used free. Sam Falk was a good but not great NY Times photographer. There are far too many of his pictures, not because they are important or memorable, but because they are in the files and free. I personally admire Salgado and consider him to be the best or among the best few working photographers today. His image on the magazineıs cover is nowhere near his best. It is most likely there, as are others from one article of his, because he did the pictures on assignment for the NY Times. I mention all this not to diminish any credit due the Times for putting together such a large work on photography but to point out the realities of the marketplace. These are not this centuryıs best photographs or even a good cross-section of important images. They are apparently are what were conveniently and inexpensively available to the Times. Donıt look for many of the great names of this centuryıs photographers or for some of the familar or preferably unfamiliar work they did. This coverage is more like an album than 100 years of good of great photography. Itıs nice to have, but it could have itself been a collectorıs item. Fred Ward