Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted Grant wrote: > > That's the realm of the commercial photographers, paid to set things in > place. Many wouldn't trade a photjournalist a moments time because we do > things in "real world time" and don't create the false front of a well > laid out studio. Many commercial guys wouldn't touch a photojournalists > assignment simply because they wouldn't have "any control nor could they > inject there personalities to the scene." > - -- Ted and Alan As someone who earns his living doing commercial photography the particular pleasure I enjoy when using my Leicas is that the subject matter is for me, not for clients. I get to relinquish all control over my subject matter and instead of directing it I become sensitive to and aligned with its rhythms. It's this loss of control that brings back my joy and love of photography instead of it just being a job. And that is why my Leicas are loaded with only my film instead of "job" film. As for injecting personality or style and being unobtrusive, the whole act of picking up a camera, drawing upon a life's worth of experiences, knowing when to release the shutter and all the other myriad technical and esthetic decisions that accompany that moment, that is when I inject personality or style. These qualities are the "helpful nudge" that I draw upon when I make a photograph. And additionally, these same judgements and decisions are also what I draw upon when I accept or reject that photograph in editing. Finally, for my commercial work, even when I do manifest some sort of control or influence my subjects and clients are unaware of it. That, too, is part of the psychology of this whole business. At the risk of offending some members of the LUG I find that people who are schooled in photography have great technical skills but often lack the people skills that help bring a good photograph to the level of a great photograph. The same goes for having a knowledge or sense of content that reaches the heart instead of knowing how to perfectly expose a negative. Selah! Carl Socolow Sometimes the wrong thing is exactly the thing you should do.