Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/03/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Yesterday I went to a photographic exhibition, called 'Women of the world'. The (female) photographer was Ulla Lemberg, who had worked for 10 years with this project. Then final printing took another 2 years. The interesting thing with Ulla, is that ALL pictures were taken with a short tele, or a 80-200 zoom (She used to be a press photographer at 'Aftonbladet' 1970-1985). Until I saw this exhibition, I had a firm belief that you had to go close with short lenses, in order to get strong pictures with presence. Now, I am reconsidering this, as I have seen the power of frame filling portraits, and the way a long lens can isolate objects from the background. 'Street photography' CAN be done with short teles, and maybe this is the only way in countries like India, Iraque, Vietnam or places where you don't understand the language. In short, a very powerful exhibition, that shook my belief in the rangefinder camera as the tool par excellence for this type of photography. Ulla has convinced me that a SLR with short tele can be a strong alternative to a M with shorter lenses. Her technique is to 'meet people' by taking contact, and then take the pictures. This creates presence also with longer lenses, as the object will look into the camera, also when the photographer backs up to compose the final picture. And wow, those close distance frame-filling face portraits of old women so sharp that eyebrews could be counted! Unfortunately none of these pictures are published on the web. /Hans