Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/03/31

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Subject: [Leica] They That Are Left
From: passaro.vince at gmail.com (Vince Passaro)
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2010 23:19:09 -0400
References: <mailman.1941.1270060959.1001.lug@leica-users.org> <981581.7971.qm@web86204.mail.ird.yahoo.com>

Well we really have cleared up this whole b&w versus color question anyway.
I'm glad.

The black and white are of course gorgeous and all you need but I STRONGLY
disagree that the comment that the color suggest death. I found just the
opposite. The color and light is 'lighter", less grave, less serious and
austere, more springlike, in the blog pics. Many of them have faces that
have seen a lot of laghter and it does not diminish the project to show
that.

The men -- I never knew any women who'd served -- the men of my father's
generation NEVER TALKED about it. Never, and not a one.  (This is not true
of Vietnam vets by the way, in my experience -- not so universally true in
any case).  As a kid I'd ask and they shut up like mollusks.

On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 3:03 PM, <briandavidstevens at talk21.com> wrote:

> Hi LUGers
>
> As some of you may remember for the past 7 years on remembrance day I have
> been shooting portraits of veterans, the portraits are all shot in the same
> style, crop etc, I am aiming to keep shooting it for at least another 3
> years. The project is based around the concept of The Unknown Soldier
>
>
> This is the intro from the book proposal
>
> "...They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old.
> Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
> At the going down of the sun and in the morning
> We will remember them..."
>
> from Laurence Binyon's 'The Fallen' (first published in The Times, 21st
> September 1914)
>
> "They that are left..." : 'Remembrance' portraits.
>
> Each year they are older, and as they do indeed grow old, as age does weary
> them and as the years do now condemn them more to what they still remember
> than to our truly remembering what they fought for (which is very simple :
> us),
> they thus become unknown.
> These faces then are as of unknown soldiers
> : no cap badges, no ribbons of spooling medals, no insignia for military
> rank. Faces, only. Each deep-etched with who they are and what they did,
> that we might look, and think -- and thank them.
> there's a sample of the work here
> http://www.lightstalkers.org/galleries/slideshow/9423
> in a slideshow format
>
> I've recently processed some of these in colour which may lead to an
> offshoot project
>
> http://driftingcamera.blogspot.com/2010/03/colour_31.html
>
> do they work as well as the black and whites?
>
> Comments and opinions welcomed!
> thanks for your time!
>
> Brian
>
>
> Brian David Stevens
>  http://driftingcamera.blogspot.com/
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Leica Users Group.
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>


Replies: Reply from sonc.hegr at gmail.com (Sonny Carter) ([Leica] They That Are Left)
In reply to: Message from briandavidstevens at talk21.com (briandavidstevens at talk21.com) ([Leica] They That Are Left)