Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/02/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> This week's shot and its alternate are from a small project I'm working on > for a local community service group that toils in one of the Western world's > most notorious neighborhoods, Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. It's a small > area with big problems: drug use that leads to more than 200 overdose deaths > a year, epidemic HIV infection and the ravages of poverty. For me, it > presented a difficult photographic problem ‹ and not just the danger from > the more paranoid crack addicts who like cameras about as much as they like > detox (I've been confronted three times, threatened twice but never > assaulted). For me the problem is in how to portray a neighborhood like this > without dredging up the standard tough-love, in-your-face imagery of needle > injections or the hard-core grotesques that play to middle-class fears but > little else ‹ or worse, dispensing candy-coated images with cornball > cliches. Most of what I've shot so far are simple and straight shots of > people on the street (whom I've asked) but a few are of the unavoidable > evidence of the place's hellish, sometimes hidden nightmare. I'm trying for > a quiet reminder here in these images, not a loud exclamation. But perhaps > they are too melodramatic even at that. I'd appreciate any responses. Scroll > to the bottom of > http://www.photo.net/photodb/presentation.tcl?presentation_id=52810 to view. > Thanks for any help, > Lee Bacchus > Vancouver > I saw some steps and what looks like a figure asleep and am wondering where the melodrama is? Or did I miss something? Steve Annapolis http://www.streetphoto.net