Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/11/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Decisive moment gone indeed on another perspective I was ready a review of the Minolta Dimage XT or whatever the latest model is in the magazine E Gear it was considered very speedy as it only took 3 seconds to take a picture (NOT WRITE TO THE CARD we are talking focus and fire here) after you press the release Yee gads (my D1 has .58ms delay which seems almost M fast and WOWO 1 1/16000th is cool) >> Two points: the first is that the observer's bias will transfer into >> what is recorded. Ted has always pointed out that you need to look >> behind you, and most documentaries don't show the whole picture. In >> many journalistic settings that I have observed the coverage has not >> portrayed what was really going on. These would include race riots in >> KC in the 60's to street protests about vender locations at the 96 >> Olympics. > > As I have said before we mustn't confuse the photograph itself with the > thing photographed - they are two different things. The photograph will > always be our opinion about what we photographed - our statement, our point > of view. When we depict something in a photograph we aren't re-creating that > thing or that scene, we are giving our personal account of what we saw, our > perception of what happened in front of our camera. As photographers, we are > often very concerned about copyright and ownership - that we have unique > vision which shows itself in our work. If this were not so, then why not > just send a robot into photograph the family in the barrio, the woman in the > shelter, the refugees in the camp - and let it take random pictures. No, the > photographer makes many subtle (and sometimes not so subtle) choices in > making each picture, that makes it uniquely theirs - their view, their > opinion of what they saw. Which isn't to say that it is not an honest view - > far from it. But it is not an unbiased, neutral one. > >> The second point is that you can immerse yourself into a situation and >> not have an observable impact on the world passing by. > > Or the "fly on the wall" documantary or reportage photographer, who perhaps > spends an extended period of time with someone so they "blend in" and they > can then go about there work. I wonder how many times such a photographer, > getting to know a family, or a group of people at work somewhere, or a group > of kids in the inner city, says in the course of getting to know them; "Just > pretend I'm not here. Just act normally. Act as if I am not here". It's an > interesting approach. Pretend this situation isn't what it actually is - > i.e. there is a photographer taking pictures of you in your small peasant > home, or in your work place. "Act" normally? And how many of these kind of > documentary/reportage stories have people looking at the camera at some > point? That's the reality of the situation on that day/week/month in that > story - there was a family + a photographer, a workplace + a photographer. > And it wasn't normal. It wasn't the same as most other days. > > Or perhaps like Salgado, the reality is, these working kids in the slums see > you taking their picture and like kids everywhere - even in some of the > worst situations - they smile when someone - a photographer - takes interest > in them. But that doesn't suit his vision, or how you see this situation. So > he shakes his fist or scowls or shake his head so they stop smiling. The > reality was that kids smile when you point a camera at them. The truth the > photographer wanted to show was that these kids led desperate oppressed > lives. So which is more important - the reality or the truth? > > > tim > > > BTW - isn't there now a strong belief that the "man jumping over the puddle" > was a collaborator of HCB's? > > -- > To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html