Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 11:49 AM 11/28/1999 +0000, Mike Johnston wrote: >Artistically, the situation is a bit rockier. I would say that for me, >as a critic, the general problem has been that as color photography >gained hegemony, photographers almost immediately got distracted from >form and meaning and started simply portraying pretty colors. Mike, I often wonder if it's that - hey I love black and white too - or is it that most people are distracted by the color and don't see what the photographer is really doing in terms of form. The Pictures of the Year contest - which is judged by the best photo editors and photographers in the journalism world (and yes, there are Magnum photographers and European editors as judges) - gets distracted by color. One year all the portfolio entry winners were black and white. I was there, and I saw superior work that was color, but the judges seemed to be so intent on form that color was a bad thing to them. And so they missed the superior work for the very say reason you say people choose color. Ignoring the value of contests for a moment, is that not just another example of how people don't get it? It's not that color photography can't be done well, but that people get stuck in ruts and miss a lot because of a pre-determined bias. Or because they get distracted by the minor aspects of a photograph. In my mind, photojournalism, like nature photography, requires color to be complete. We are journalists telling it like it is - color is an inseparable part of life. Using it well is very difficult. Black and white is easier. But, that's not justification for denigrating color. That's sour grapes. It's not an either/or question. Leica lenses do a wonderful job with color, it would be a shame to live in a world devoid of color. Black and white is a greater departure from reality than color, therefore I think color is harder to use in a way that is artistic, thus artists would rather put it down than step up to the challenge. Eric Welch Carlsbad, CA http://www.neteze.com/ewelch You can find pictures anywhere. It's simply a matter of noticing things and organizing them. You just have to care about what's around you and have a concern with humanity and the human comedy. -Elliott Erwitt, "More Joy of Photography"