Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/04/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Well ranted!! ric On Apr 22, 2009, at 7:44 PM, Greg Rubenstein wrote: > Maybe I've missed something in this thread, but even back when I was a > photojournalist weren't we marketing and publishing our vision/points > of view -- as well as that of our editors? Weren't we the > temperamental "artistes" and consciences of the hard-boiled newsroom. > (Remember the TV show, "Lou Grant," the photographer, "Animal"?) > > We shot and used leading lines; light, dramatic or flat; to show the > subject, story, event as we saw it or, perhaps, as our editor, art > director or publisher may have instructed us. Or, given the number of > shots we'd submit, they chose the one that best fit their points of > view. > > In the darkroom, we dodged, burned and balanced contrast and color as > best we could to further help viewers see what we saw, or what the > editors and art directors wanted us to show. Remember the heavy > burning at the edges so stylish back in the 70s? Again, the choice of > what to run was often someone else's -- and may not have quite > represented the event though it was "honest" in the sense that it was > something we saw. > > I even remember the days of photo illustrations, having used Exacto > knives, multiple exposures and such to created these images myself -- > and CLEARLY LABELING them as such at the start of a caption and in > credit lines. And, besides, even with Photoshop, who today can create > the magical photo images/illustrations people such as Jerry Uelsmann > and Michael Tcherevkov (check both spellings) turned out? > > While Photoshop as a tool has made it easier for people -- > photographers, editors, artists and such -- to mislead and cheat, I > find our caterwauling about purity a bit disturbing and hypocritical > in light of what we have done -- and do -- when shooting film, when > processing film and when printing negatives. > > I do not excuse adding missiles, intensifying smoke, changing the > color of swimming trunks or putting one person's head on another body, > but I must wonder if my take on an event by the angle from which I > shot, the light I preferred (or added with a flash), the editor's > instructions I followed, or burning I did is a heck of a lot more > honest and pure than what we see now. > > A case in point, though I cannot find the URL, was an article in Photo > District News a few years back that, essentially, asked whether > demonstrations caused photographers of if photographers caused > demonstrations. A photo of Palestinian demonstrators lobbing Molotov > Cocktails was shown from two angles. The widely published photo showed > members of an angry mob throwing homemade bombs seemingly at targets. > A shot from another angle showed a gaggle of photographers, and > smiling (maybe even amused) bystanders watching the photographers and > "the mob" throwing the cocktails into a rubble-strewn lot. Both photos > were accurate in what they showed, but how accurate was the message > sent in that example? > > The issue we've been discussing and will continue to discuss is a heck > of a lot bigger than Photoshop. Photoshop, more partisan people > (photographers included) and agenda-drive publications simply make it > easier to cheat now than before. And, as before, the cheaters are > generally outed -- maybe even more quickly today because of Photoshop > and a technically savvy viewing public -- but not before the > credibility of "honest" photographers and others is damaged. > > End of rant. > > Greg Rubenstein > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information