Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/08/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A 21:52 09/08/98 -0700, vous avez =E9crit : >From: "GREG A ACHENBACH" <GACHENBA@prodigy.net> >Date: Sun, 9 Aug 1998 19:36:23 -0600 >Subject: Re: [Leica] On Photographic Seeing > >It happens with embarrassing frequency. I blow a shot and then think I'l= l >just go back and do it again. I return, place the tripod in exactly the = same >indentations in the dirt, look through the viewfinder, and the scene has >changed. The time of day is different, a cloud has cast a shadow, it's >foggy, there's a pigeon nesting on that road sign, the power company saw= ed a >limb off, or some kid has left skate board tracks down the cathedral ste= ps. >No scene is ever the same and the subtle differences over time may marke= dly >alter an image, often in pleasing ways. Andre Kertesz lived in an apartm= ent >overlooking a park for at least 20 years. Each picture of that park is >unique and stands apart even though all are from the same vantage point. > >Perhaps some of you saw an article recently (? Shutterbug) about a fello= w >who photographs one tree and has done so for years. Though you know it's= the >same tree, a series of photos of that tree show remarkable differences, = as >if there were layers of beauty each revealed by changing circumstances. = The >lesson for me in all of this is knowing that they are always there, I tr= y to >see the changes. > >Greg Achenbach > >- -----Original Message----- >From: Joseph Codispoti <joecodi@thegrid.net> >>...SNIP >>When I travel I find all I see to be exotic while in my home surroundin= gs I >>tend to became blase at seeing the same haunts day after day. COMMENT : Greg,=20 Joseph, Exotism may be a danger for the photographer. Try to shoot (photograph) t= he same haunts by including people.For instance, I live near a Renaissance castle with a Middle Age tower. I don't photograph it any longer. I am blase. But when the count, an old man, drives his mini-tractor in front = of his castle, the contrast is very funny in my opinion. If, at the same tim= e, a chicken seems to look at the scene, I have a good picture. Greg, you made the same comment ("i try to see the changes"). In other words, there is a static decoration and you, the photographer, try to record the epsilon event which causes a dynamic situation.In the VF of th= e Leica M and with a 35, you can prepare "l'instant decisif" (HCB) cutting off the 3D-space in successive planes : one for the chicken in the neares= t foreground, one for the mini-tractor with the count, and the last for the decoration (the castle). Why is exotism a danger ? Too easy and no dynamics. Take, for instance th= e picture on the backcover of the LHSA quaterly journal (VF n=B0 2/1998). T= he title is : Charleston sweetgrass basket ladies. The picture, made with a 24M, is excellent indeed ! We see on the background two afro-american ladies (am i correct ?) weaving sweetgrassbaskets. In the foreground we s= ee a parterre of baskets overwhelming the ladies .Exotic picture but there i= s no dynamics.In the text we are told that the women are camera hating.In m= y opinion, the next picture to take is when the ladies escape from the photographs with all their baskets or when someone (imagine, say, an afro-american boy)buys a basket. Easy to say, difficult to apply. Dominique