Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/09/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 9/1/03 12:09:21 PM, tim@KairosPhoto.com writes: << Even if we've done the improbable in the short time allotted and have covered it all, only a few shots get chosen of space necessity. The same choices are made all over again by the editor or director. What if they believe a different truth and choose only to show that?" >> The compositional editing doesn't bother me. What I hope nobody will excise are the two elements unique to photography [more big words]: the INADVERTENT and the CONTINGENT elements. Every proficient photographer and editor can recognize them almost immediately in a print. Everyone knows what inadvertent means: something that wasn't meant to be seen and the photographer didn't notice nor expect to be in the print. Example: the kid who makes a face while the mirror of your reflex banging around. You never saw it until it popped up in the print. Contingency is sometimes only half visible; it's the reason something is there. If you make a shot only of Bush's face, he could be anywhere and you'd need to write a caption to explain where and why. If you take a shot of Bush having dinner with Osoma bin Laden in a public restaurant, that shot is full of contingency. There is an interdependent relationship going on. The contingent element is bin Laden. This may be oversimplified an explanation but it's clear. If you print only Bush at the restaurant table, you're destroying the contingent in the photo. I assume a good PJ would make sure that the duo would appear in the shot, negative or digital file. If the shot was made on film, the poor editor couldn't cut bin Laden out without destroying the integrity of the negative. The digital file is easy to edit and legitimize. br - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html