Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/06/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Robert Meier wrote: > > I see a profound difference between the photographer who watches and > observes > life and takes pictures of the world around him as it unfolds, and the > photographer who directs people and events, turning them into models who > are > following his script. The results might look superficially the same, but > they aren't the same. The artificial creation might sometimes be superior > in > many ways -- lighting, design, composition, gesture and expression -- and > at > other times it might not come up to the level of the genuinely captured > moment. But it is not the same and is not, in my opinion, to be judged by > the same criteria. Well, that eliminates our admiration for many of the great photos in National Geographic magazine, for example. Many many are "orchestrated" to some degree (the word "staged" is to be avoided), despite the appearances of spontaneity. And I'm thinking too of lots of press-type photography of famous people or major events where the particpants (from athletes to the Dalai Lama) are media-savvy performers. Nature or nurture? We all have a few of those single-shot success story images from when our instincts and our reflexes and the Gods conspired in our favour. But in my opinion, those are exceptions and not the bread-and-butter of photography and need not be mythologized as such either. Emanuel