jamnut
Member
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2005
- Messages
- 27
- Format
- Medium Format
Well, there I was in Barnes & Noble today, looking for Focus magazine, and I came across the latest issue of Aperture. I was going to buy it, when I decided that I really didn't "get" any of the photographs in the issue.
The magazine featured Joel Sternfeld - his photos were of a woman standing on a beach, her face broken into a wide yawn. Other shots were of a sign featuring a (today, politically incorrect) "barefoot co-ed."
Also featured were Lisa Sarfati, who appeared to be a Cindy Sherman clone, and Paolo Ventura, who took toy soldiers (GI Joe?) and posed them as if they had been killed; this was his response to war photos of the past, and to Susan Sontag's book Regarding the Pain of Others. Another feature had people in various stages of , it appeared, boredom or ennui; one showed a kid sitting on a bed as if he had just woken up.
I ended up not buying the issue, and wondered what I was missing. I realize that APerture has always been on the cutting (bleeding?) edge, but Ijust don't understand this type of photography. I don't admit to geting alot of Minor White's photos, or Weston, or Siskind, or Evans, but something in them resonates more.
The magazine Blind Spot also leaves me feeling like I am missing something.
Anyone know what is going on in these magazines?
The magazine featured Joel Sternfeld - his photos were of a woman standing on a beach, her face broken into a wide yawn. Other shots were of a sign featuring a (today, politically incorrect) "barefoot co-ed."
Also featured were Lisa Sarfati, who appeared to be a Cindy Sherman clone, and Paolo Ventura, who took toy soldiers (GI Joe?) and posed them as if they had been killed; this was his response to war photos of the past, and to Susan Sontag's book Regarding the Pain of Others. Another feature had people in various stages of , it appeared, boredom or ennui; one showed a kid sitting on a bed as if he had just woken up.
I ended up not buying the issue, and wondered what I was missing. I realize that APerture has always been on the cutting (bleeding?) edge, but Ijust don't understand this type of photography. I don't admit to geting alot of Minor White's photos, or Weston, or Siskind, or Evans, but something in them resonates more.
The magazine Blind Spot also leaves me feeling like I am missing something.
Anyone know what is going on in these magazines?