Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/03/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The snapshot ethic is an interesting thing. To me it signifies a picture that looks casual, but when you look at it closely, it's a tight-woven mesh of relationships and balances, all perfectly arranged. It's only then that you start to appreciate that although it might look casual, the photograph is actually completely formally aware. It just doesn't show off about it. That is not the same as a snapshot. Winogrand's work, for example. Formally adroit, formally preoccupied you might almost say (the arrangement of the surfaces of things), but all done with an apparent flick of the wrist, almost infuriatingly casual. The pictures look throwaway, until you look at them hard. Maybe you don't buy this, so let me try to convince you with an analogy from literature, and another from documentary movie-making. First, lit. There is nothing, nothing so hard as writing casual, vernacular prose. Prose that sounds totally natural and unaffected, but that hits you in the guts with what it's saying. Writers (I'm one) slave and slave over every word to get something that just flows off the tongue, sounds effortless. Oftentimes readers make the mistake of thinking if it's easy to read it must have been easy to write. The opposite, usually. But prose like that aspires to look easy. As soon as it looks as thought it was tough to write, it sounds wrong. The most extreme example of this would be, for example, a sonnet that you could speak in conversation and it would sound like ordinary speech. Wordsworth aspired to this, and often fell flat. Second, documentaries. I have spent months in editing rooms editing the dialog of 'real' people until it sounds natural. The rhythms of ordinary speech, with all their ums and ahs and non-sequiturs and blind alleys and misprononciations and outright lies and all the rest, are stunningly dull to listen to at length. "Why can't that person talk properly and get to the point!!" the viewer thinks. So most doc dialog tracks are actually a frenzy of cuts as soon as the talking head disappears behind a cutaway. The greatest compliment is when the interviewee watches the film and *doesn't realise their dialog has been edited*. More than once I've had some poor inarticulate stumbler ring me up afterwards and say "I wasn't as bad as I thought. Actually I was quite good, wasn't I?" and you have to swallow the temptation to send them a transcript of what they actually said as opposed to how you edited it down. But again, as soon as it's obvious the dialog has been edited, you're lost. So in photography. The 'apparent' snapshot convinces us of something, a fact or an emotional truth, precisely because it *looks* like a snapshot. But that doesn't mean it isn't a riot of formal concerns, nor that massive efforts mental and physical didn't surround the taking of it. Just that it looks like a snapshot, and doesn't wear its effort on its sleeve. That doesn't make it a snapshot. (I think all of the above really demonstrates that rhetoric is not a dead dog). - -- Johnny Deadman http://www.pinkheadedbug.com