Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dear LUG, I had the pleasure of visiting the Robert Capa retrospective at the International Center of Photography in New York this past weekend. Once again I am reminded what a powerful machine these Leicas can be when properly wielded in the hands of a person of vision, skill and sensitivity. Wow! Forget sharpness. Forget Bokeh. Forget who made what glass. The intimacy these machines provided Capa in portraying the world around him- a world in constant tumult, despair, epiphany and hope- is absolutely amazing. You, the viewer, are right there, a participant in history, in the whole human drama. Would that my own images could achieve even half that power. But after seeing this exhibit, which runs until June 7, I must say that I came away richer for the experience and even more inspired to USE my Leica machines to help portray the times we live in hopefully with some of the same complexity, compassion and sensitivity that this man did with his own. I urge anyone who has the opportunity to see the show and, more important, to make images with meaning and strength. It also reminded me of one of my fellow photographers I used to work with on our daily paper. He died a couple years ago from colon cancer that had reached his liver. When I first started there at my all knowing age of 24 he scared the hell out of me. And he would constantly hit me with the following question whenever I would print one of my esoteric photos. "What does it mean?" He would ask. He turned me onto D.D. Duncan and Robert Frank. Well, Capa's work was so full of meaning I could not escape the memory of my mentor and his question. And it rings in my brain everytime the camera approaches my eye. - -- Carl Socolow Sometimes the wrong thing is exactly the thing you should do.