Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> >What do they care about, and what will they care about? > >Go to a place where a house is burning down. Watch the woman of the family as >she hurridly shoves the kids out the door and then, in the last 5 seconds in >her flaming home, has one chance to grab something. What does she grab? -- >and as a news reporter I can tell you this is invariably the case? > >The family photo albums, that's what. Charlie is onto something here, I think. I have spent much of my career as a news-photographer and have in recent years realized that the photos people look back on to and hold in their memories are not those momentums images that are part of the "public" conscious such as the Eddie Adams photo or others. The photos people look at are the old shots of their cities, town and home area. The photos of their relatives as kids, the photos that show the common person in his/her element, after all we all consider ourselves common, normal, part of the status quo. Very few are part of international events and in the great scheme of living our daily lives those major events fade into white noise that, while important, pale in comparison to our child's first steps, words, the struggle of earning our daily bread, the simple process of living. I have photos of Presidents, winners of Supper Bowls, World Series's, Master's golf, a photo of the three pitchers who pitched the first ever combined no hitter in the National League baseball division, yet of far more import to me are the photos of my daughter I have made over the past few years. Photos such as Natchwey, Salgado, Chris Morris and others make are very important and need to be made to inform and appal, and remind us that such things do happen, but other kinds of photographs are equally important and should not be discounted for lack of news/social change value. To document life on has to go no further than what lies in front of him. The Leica M is probably the best tool for documentary photography made, use it and do not sweat the "import" of the photos you are making. File them, id them and your great great grand kids will enjoy looking at them. - -- Harrison McClary http://www.mcclary.net