Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Everyone, A friend of mine Tom Burton of the Orlando Sentinel posted this on the National Press Photographers list about a new book on Magnum. Sounds like a page turner! ==========================snip================== Grove Press has just published Russel Miller's "Magnum: Fifty Years on the Front Line of History." It's a quick read and there are plenty on interesting stories about some of the most talented photographers of our era. It's not a picture book, so if you are not familiar with the work of these photographers you may want to peek at "In Our Time: The World As Seen by Magnum Photographers" which was published in 1989. Magnum was founded by Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Chim (David Seymour) and George Rodger. It is a photographer's co-operative run by the members and it is dedicated to supporting photographers in their personal work. It is very exclusive. You have to be invited by a Magnum member in order to join and then you are subjected to a review process of several years before you can become a full member. They have annual meetings where the photographers get together to party, argue and decide the course of Magnum. When reading the book, I noticed some similarities between Magnum and the NPPA-L. Some of the topics hotly debated by the Magnum photographers that sounded familiar include: - - Copyright ownership. Magnum was one of the first groups to propose that the photographers retain the ownership of their images. This was a revolutionary concept just after WWII and some people credit Magnum with introducing this idea. _ Art vs. Journalism. Good friends Capa and Cartier-Bresson couldn't have been more different in terms of their photography. But they still held some common beliefs in the power of photography. The debate continues (often in heated terms) within Magnum. - - Commercial vs. Editorial. The photographers who take on corporate accounts and make money for Magnum are often criticized by those members who stick exclusively to personal work that often makes little or no money. There is a friction between selling out for the cash or starving for principles. (note: someone like Eugene Richards rarely makes more than $20,000 a year, according to Miller) - - Business management. The photographers are the bosses at Magnum and consequently, the organization is often a disaster. The NPPA management fiasco has the flavor of a Magnum crisis. - - Factions. The Paris office photographers think there is a conspiracy in the New York office. The New York office KNOWS there is a conspiracy in the Paris office. (On the NPPA-L, the factions seems to break between big paper/small paper or staffers vs. freelancers. Like Magnum, for nor apparent reason.) - - The debates NEVER end. Elliot Erwitt talks about how "tiresome" the meetings can become because the debates go on and on and on. Every year. It's like a family reunion where the siblings bicker. Of course, the main difference between Magnum and NPPA-L is the talent level. Magnum is a small group of very, very talented photographers. One can't get in the door if they aren't first an innovative photographer. Not just good, but exceptional. For the NPPA-L, the only requirement is a modem. In fact, one of our regular contributors proclaims that individual's credentials should mean nothing in the discourse. At Magnum, everyone comes with serious credentials. (These folks are soooo serious about personal work that some members scoff at Magnum members who lower themselves to shoot for National Geographic!) But maybe "Credentials" is a poor choice of words. Magnum photographers are first judged by their photography and then by how well they fit into the Magnum philosophy. Many, and perhaps most, of the Magnum photographers are self- taught and do not have important awards before they join Magnum. I made the mistake of labeling a photographer's talent and their motivation as "credentials." Every member of Magnum is an outstanding photographer. The Magnum book is worth the time, if you like to read. If nothing else, you can find out what Sabastiao Salgado was wearing and how much his pictures earned from the Reagan assassination attempt. And there are interviews with Cartier-Bresson, Eve Arnold, Steve McCurry, Susan Meiselas and more. Tom Burton The Orlando Sentinel