Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/05/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At the bottom you can click on this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_street_photographers List of street photographers. Id like to suggest that on this list of a hundred or so names 99 of them had never ever heard the term "street photography" in their life. I don't think there is a difference between candid photography and/or documentary photographer and this so called "street photography". Which doesn't need an urban environment or even people according to this BS article. And certainly not streets. I guess you can do street photography of trees... As long as you don't pose the squirrels. I think street photographers are photojournalist wanabee' s who can't find a job or who have never had one in photography. But they want to feel important anyway. Hence the cool sounding title. "I am not just walking around the block with a roll of tri x I am doing STREET PHOTOGRAPHY". A few tats and a piercing and a beret and an olive army surplus bag to put your camera in and you're a street photographer dreaming about the good old tri x days. Its time to start cutting out the BS. Photography is fun and meaningful enough we don't need to just make stuff up and pretend we all belive in it. On 5/2/15 12:46 PM, "Mark Rabiner" <mark at rabinergroup.com> wrote: > I was just looking at the Wiki on "Street Photography." > At the top of it is a box with words in it which says: > "This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help > improve > this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material > may > be challenged and removed. (December 2013)" > We see these a lot on Wiki it would seem to be a basic BS alert. > In other words caution; what you are about to read was made up off the top > of > the head of the person writing it. It's meme making. > I started shooting Tri X in 1965 and doing and reading everything I could > get > my hands on on photography and I'm trying to remember the first time I ever > heard the term "Street Photography." as it was sure as heck not in the > 60's or > 70's. And I'm not sure about the 80's or 90's either and my memory is > pretty > good but I cant remember when I started thinking that. > The internet has gotten photo enthusiasts and photographers talking on a > level > we could not imagine in the Shutterbug 80's. I think the internet hit in > the > mid 90's. Was that when AOL bit it and we didn't have to pay by the minute > any > more? > I think in the history of "Street Photography" most of the "Street > Photographers if you told them they were doing "Street Photography." would > look at you like you were nuts they had never heard the term. > I think the term came out in the late 90's with chat lists on the internet > but > I'm looking for other peoples recollection on it. As mine is clouded with > decades of me being me. > > I'd heard of Atget as being the Bach or Shakespeare or Einstein or Freud of > photographers in other words.... The Man. But just the other day I'd heard > of > him as "the father of street photographers" and as he shot mainly lifeless > facades of buildings as I mainly do I found that both invigorating and > unnerving. > He is mentioned as such in the Wiki thing on so called street photography. > I think it may be about the time we draw back the certain on this so called > street photography thing (meme) and find out what's really going on. Is it > for > real or not? Because I think its a classic case of people making up stuff > as > they go along and calling it history or reality. I'd call it meme making. > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_photography > I think we need to get in touch with what scientists call their "Baloney > Detection kit". An idea I think put together by Carl Sagan. > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_photography > http://www.brainpickings.org/2014/01/03/baloney-detection-kit-carl-sagan/ > -- Mark William Rabiner Photographer http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/lugalrabs/