Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Eric Welch writes: |No! Please, don't insult Ted's work!!! :-) Well, slap me silly. I did not mean to insult Ted's work. |Ted's work in his "This Is Our Work" is documentary photojournalism. |Environmental portraiture is where someone sits staring at the camera, or |dramatically off into the distance, and sits there while the photographer |takes their picture, even directing them where to look, where to sit, and |with no movement at all, most of the time. If you look at Ansel Adam's "Family at Melones, 1953", you will find a family portrait that appears to be composed. However, to me, it certainly captures a slice of life in a dynamic fashion. I keep waiting for someone to bring a pitcher of lemonade into the scene. I don't know who the folks in the picture are, but I know something about who they are and the way that they live (of course I really don't). |The word portrait implies the opposite of candid. Real documentary |photojournalism is unposed slices of life. And that kind of work is much |more difficult to do honestly and well. That's exactly what Ted did. Much |more important and impressive work than portraiture. The word portrait does not imply the opposite of candid. (As a matter of fact there is a term used called candid portraiture and I don't see the term as a contradiction). The word portrait implies capturing something of the essence of a person on film. It doesn't matter if the portrait is carefully and meticulously composed or a "candid" shot of a moment. |Don't get me wrong, great portraiture, al la Arnold Newman, etc., is |difficult to do well too. And very important to the history of the medium. |That's the best of the tradition. But it's the opposite of documentary work. Then how would you catagorize the work of Dorothea Lange? Her work is composed. But I have always thought of her as being one of the founding mothers of documentary photography. (Ooops, I don't think she ever used 35mm or Leicas so I shouldn't bring her name up). I think you need to think a little bit about what a portrait is. Perhaps you have picked up too many shiboleths at Missouri. Regards, Bill the misclassifier of photographic styles