Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2019/09/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]What a lot of guff is swilling around about this term. Pulling a book down from my shelf, I see "What distinguishes Doisneau's street photography of the 1940s and 1950s is a capacity for narrative" blah, blah. This comes from the 1997 Phaidon "The Photo Book". So that puts it at least 22 years old. I rather suspect the term may be a lot older, but who cares. English is an embracing and mutable tongue, and who can count the number of photography terms and movements out there? Douglas On 24/09/2019 06:33, Mark Rabiner wrote: > My two cents if the "Street Photography" term using phenomenon just > admitted what it was instead of insinuating that it's been this ongoing > longtime thing that everyone has always known about it but you were not > paying attention it would not be so bad. I have nothing much against > sometimes using a buzz word of the moment or click bait or weasel words > which pretend to mean something but which are just messing with you. > But the "Street" thing doesn't own up to it. I think many of them just > want to feel a connect with the college kids who are just flipping off > knowing anything about the art world or journalism and just want to walk > around taking pictures and somehow be meaningful... rebellious. > > But I think there are two main categories in photography which overlap a > lot: > Job titles and genres. > The Job titles describe you and the genres describe your photographs. > If you are showing somebody a landscape it's a Landscape. That?s the Genre > your image is part of. > If it?s a big part of what you always do you can say you are a Landscape > photographer and have it on your business card.. And when people see your > images they might believe you. > The Yellow Pages had two categories for photography. Doctors only got one > and Lawyers only got one. > Commercial and Portrait. > If you were a landscape photographer I think that fit into neither > Commercial nor Portrait.. > Landscape it think is a sub category of Art Photography. The Gallery > market. Art Collectors. > And you could not even look those up Art Photography in the Yellow Pages. > > > >