Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Most of the photography that I do is portaiture, either formal or informal. I've done a lot of weddings, though none in the last 20 years. Here is my perspective on the posed vs unposed issue. Weddings are complex symbolic events. If all you want to do is become married, you can do this in a courthouse with one witness. If you have a wedding ceremony and party, it has social and symbolic purposes as well as legal purposes. One of the symbolic purposes of weddings, especially church weddings, is that they are cultural links to the past and future. It's not just that someone is getting married, it's that they are getting married using an ancient ceremony that their ancestors used, and that their desendants will use. It's part of the link to their cultural identity. It ritually joins the couple not just to each other, in a vacuum, but to the larger context of the society in which they will be living. Posed wedding pictures are part of the tradition, no less so than the flowers, the clothing, the music, the spoken words, the rings, and the cake. It's not just that the pictures are posed; there are traditional poses. When I ask the bride and groom to pose with their mothers for Traditional Shot #5, "Bride and Groom and Their Mothers", I am not just asking them to pose. I am asking them to show the world, by their willingness to participate in this ritual, that they subscribe to the traditions of the culture in which they are getting married. There is a clear hierarchy of ten posed pictures for the wedding day itself: #1: The bride in her dress, without veil #2: The bride and groom in their formal clothing #3: The bride and groom and their witnesses #4: The bride and groom and their witnesses and attendants #5: The bride and groom and their mothers #6: The bride and groom and their fathers #7: The bride and groom and their parents #8: The bride and groom and the groom's entire family #9: The bride and groom and the bride's entire family #10: The entire collection of people in one big picture In some religious ceremonies we add #2a: The bride and groom and the religious leader who married them. Then after these 10 or 11 ritual pictures, which are as much a part of the tradition as the exchange of rings, various people and family members can take advantage of the photographer's being there by posing for other shots. Some people choose to get married without subscribing to the tradition. That's fine. It's not for me, but it's fine for them if that's what they want. The posed formal pictures are just part of that tradition. Brian Reid