Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/08/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]mr Colen, your distinction between work made on assignment and personal work, is dangerously close -- for me -- to the criticism (by many, even by other PJ's like Donna Ferrato for example) that Salgado makes a lot of money selling his work and that's bad because he shoots dirt-poor people. (Following this line, Leicas and costly N- and C- digital cameras should be banned too, "you photograph the poor with a 10,000 bucks equipment -- then everybody will work with Holgas and Cardboard instant cameras...) I think that we have to look at the image, just that. I don't care about FDR's administration for requesting images of poverty, I want to look at the image: is it good? bad? sincere? has it been staged? (like the anti-Capa slander put to rest by Whelan's book) You mentioned Peress. He said this: "Let me tell you something about my conception of the process of photography. Which is that in any photograph there is something like four authors. There is me, who makes some amount of decision. And there is reality, and reality always speaks very, very powerfully. And then there is the camera, who- which- the camera always does something, you know. And then there is the viewer. So that's in a way is really the beauty of the process, which is that it's really open text in the sense that you are the other half of the text. It is not closed text. It is not me telling you what you should think or feel". These are words of huge wisdom, which I always try to remember when looking at photojournalism. Ms Manley, I agree with you, incremental change is possible -- even tho I understand all to well mr Colen's skepticism). Audrey Hepburn, as goodwill ambassador for UNICEF said: "Anyone who doesn't believe in miracles is not a realist. I have seen the miracle of water which UNICEF has helped to make a reality. Where for centuries young girls and women had to walk for miles to get water, now they have clean drinking water near their homes. Water is life, and clean water now means health for the children of this village". Now I'm getting off my soapbox, don't worry. But try to understand: I confess I'm a sucker for Evans, and Frank, and Capa, and Nachtwey. And for my friend, the late Raffaele Ciriello, (his amazing work is still on line at http://www.ciriello.com/site/index.html ) thanks, matteo Matteo Persivale Milan, Italy - ----------------------------------------------- Japan Search: http://japan.co.jp Free E-mail: http://jmail.co.jp - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html