Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/12/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I had the opportunity to meet and speak with James Nachtwey for about 30 minutes a few years ago. My impression of him was very different than the impression Dante Stella got from the film. I haven't seen the film, so I can't compare my in-person reaction to what I would have from the film. Mr. Nachtwey impressed me as a very sincere and empathetic individual who works for an incredibly low day-rate (especially considering the conditions). He gave freely of his time to me. And as I observed him during the day, it appeared to me that he gave his time freely to anyone who approached him. Mr. Nachtwey was in town to give a lecture and slide show. After having seen that presentation, I must say that his book Inferno, as extensive as it is, merely skims the surface of what he has photographed. Original Message. >Date: Sun, 8 Dec 2002 09:26:12 -0500 >From: Dante Stella <dante@umich.edu> >Subject: [Leica] Nachtwey in war photographer >Message-ID: <0075F25D-0AB9-11D7-B1D1-003065D6E648@umich.edu> >References: > >He doesn't use a Leica, but he is the best living war photographer. > >If you can't get this movie in DVD, I can synopsize it in seven points, >having suffered through it the other night at the theater. Nachtwey is >my favorite contemporary photographer in print (Salgado pales by >comparison), but my short statement is that if this poorly-produced >film comes on TV, great, but I wouldn't go crazy trying to find it or >rent it. As for the details... > >1. The narrative is exactly the same as found in the new book on eight >war photographers ("Under Fire?"); in fact, most of the situations >pictured in that book correspond exactly to the scenes in the movie. > >2. Twenty minutes (cumulatively) of Nachtwey wandering around in >brightly-colored civilian clothes (a polartec pullover, jeans and >little backpack most of the time), oblivious to his own safety and >arguably oblivious to norms of politeness. > >3. One and a half hours of a microcamera shot over the right top plate >of Nachtwey's EOS (not Leica). Nachtwey's finger going up and down >and occasionally turns a thumbwheel. This would have been great for >five minutes, but it is b-o-r-i-n-g. > >4. Photo editor of Stern gushing over Nachtwey's emotionless pursuit >of photography. Nice interior shots of Stern's hellhole Hamburg >offices. > >5. Nachtwey's former German mistress gushing about how he excited such >passion in her. I would have to guess that Al Gore and Mr. Rogers >would also be on her top-10 list. She uses the word "library of >suffering" to describe his experiences. > >6. Christine Amanpour and some British journalist incoherently gushing >about Nachtwey. > >7. The making of Nachtwey's gallery show, in which the two main scenes >are (a) his browbeating his printer and (b) a vignette of his mutual >admiration society with his best friend. > >Despite this, I learned a couple of things. > >1. I now have no interest in meeting James Nachtwey. He is about as >unstimulating a conversationalist and unemotional person as I have >seen. In fact, he seems to be shell-shocked. > >2. Nachtwey describes his pictures as being possible because "people >trust me because I am giving them a voice." You can draw your own >conclusions, but after watching his techniques, I think his pictures >are possible because people are so distracted by what is going on that >they cannot react to him, not that they trust him or want a voice. >This suggests to me that half of war photography is getting over the >fear of being blown to bits; the subject matter is just being there. > >3. Some photographrs are better explored through their work and not >through their own exegesis. - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html