Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/18

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Subject: RE: [Leica] Political Correctness
From: Peterson Arthur G NSSC <PetersonAG@NAVSEA.NAVY.MIL>
Date: Tue, 18 Jul 2000 12:36:46 -0400

Tina,

I agree with Barney.  The essence of so-called "political correctness" is
consideration for others, which of course is a good thing.  But it seems to
me that the galleries have gone way overboard here.  More importantly, that
you are considering this issue and soliciting the thoughts of others tells
me, without any doubt, that you will reach the right determination for you.
Have faith in yourself, and in the work which is a reflection of you.

:-)

Art Peterson


- -----Original Message-----
From:	Barney [mailto:barney@ncep.noaa.gov]
Sent:	Tuesday, July 18, 2000 9:09 AM
To:	leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us
Subject:	Re: [Leica] Political Correctness

Tina,

I am one of the LUG's lurkers. Let me de-cloak for a moment. I have read so
much of your stuff and have seen so many of your photos that I think of you
as a friend, even though we've never communicated.

The origins of political correctness may be innocent enough.... a way to
remind people that it's not a good thing to be offensive to women, or
blacks, or gays, or other minorities. I'm a mannerly person. So are you. Who
could be opposed to manners? But, it's grown into something far from
innocent. I think
that  there are people who have seized on it as a way of controlling and
manipulating what other people say, do, and perhaps even think.

For me to say that your artistic vision is politically incorrect and to then
go on to say that this is what you must do to make it correct is for me to
control your vision and manipulate your work. It's turning your project into
my project. Not only is what your were told bunk, it's dangerous bunk. It
they feel that strongly that that's what they want to put in their gallery
than let them hand out cameras and do their own project! Stand your ground
and have faith in your vision. When you give these things up, you also give
up being an artist.

On a practical note.....not every gallery is going to like your work, and
not every gallery can be sold on your vision. That's just life in the big
city, as it were. If  someone has something helpful to say then take it for
what it is worth. Otherwise..... the woods is full of fools. Move on to the
next gallery.

Barney


Tina Manley wrote:

> Dear LUGnuts -
>
> The Project Workshop in Santa Fe with Sam Abell was very good.  Sam is a
> wonderful teacher; however, I learned something that was both enlightening
> and disturbing.
>
> My project is "Las Familias" - an exhibit (possibly book) of my
photographs
> of Honduran families.  I learned that many galleries will not accept my
> project because it is politically incorrect - I am a photographer from the
> first world photographing people in the third world.  To make the project
> more acceptable it was suggested that I involve the families in the
project
> by (a) giving them a camera and letting them photograph their own lives
(b)
> getting them to write comments about the photographs.  (a) wouldn't work
> because the people I visit don't have time to take photographs - they
spend
> all of their waking hours trying to feed their families (b) might work
with
> a tape recorder but many of the people I photograph don't read or write -
> and several of the families in the project were killed by Hurricane Mitch
- -
> do I exclude those photographs?
>
> What do you think about political correctness?  Gallery owners and
> publishers who reviewed our work seemed to think it is an important issue,
> but it honestly never occurred to me.
>
> Leically,
>
> Tina
>
> Tina Manley, ASMP
> http://www.tinamanley.com