Alan Edward Klein
Member
I wish I had this level of certainty about everything in life, even when I’m utterly clueless about something.
I'd like to see HCB's rejects, the ones he never showed to anyone else.
I wish I had this level of certainty about everything in life, even when I’m utterly clueless about something.
Like his Man Jumping Puddle.
That HCB was a friend of Atget I find hard to believe. HCB was only 19 when Atget died.
I'd like to see HCB's rejects, the ones he never showed to anyone else.
If you buy the Magnum contact prints book, you can see a few examples. He took full advantage of the small format camera. You can see that HCB was actually human and that his successes were at least sometimes the best of several attempts … which is no more than what he professed.
However, selection of what he chose to share or to conceal is also part of that process, and his privilege. One should respect that, since - unlike Vivian Maier, for instance - HCB did have the opportunity to exercise it. And this thread is about a photo that he evidently did want to share.
I don't put HCB on a pedestal. He made major contributions to the field and was quite talented. But I am unsure of your assertion that the originally posted image is somehow a mistake.It's nice to know he was human and made mistakes unlike most of us here.![]()
The picture as shown in the more recent post is considerably better than in the first.
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It's also from a different negative. It's not the same photo.
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Just like the Time Warp, it's just a jump to the left...
If you buy the Magnum contact prints book, you can see a few examples. He took full advantage of the small format camera. You can see that HCB was actually human and that his successes were at least sometimes the best of several attempts … which is no more than what he professed.
i consider the first picture to be better in composition.
I'd like to see HCB's rejects, the ones he never showed to anyone else.
I don’t have heroes, because everyone turns out to be flawed
Most of the contact prints I have seen of HCB's work have the individual frames cut out, leading one to think that those are his initial selection and he omitted frames from the roll. So he probably had a lot more misses than what is shown in the book and elsewhere.
I think, in a competition between two flavours of mud, mud is ultimately chosen.
Why? The rejects don't diminish the successes. And there were many successes.
Human's are naturally flawed. You acknowledge that and respect or admire them in spite of it. That said, "hero" is a bit much.
I don't put HCB on a pedestal. He made major contributions to the field and was quite talented. But I am unsure of your assertion that the originally posted image is somehow a mistake.
'Hero' is a bit much; but some posts here have questioned any criticism of the photo, essentially because he's Cartier-Bresson, which is hero-worship. Unquestioning praise doesn't do him any credit. It seems to me the original post says 'I know Cartier-Bresson to be a great photographer, but I can't see the quality in this one' - if you still rate him highly overall, that's true admiration. If instead you pretend to like everything he ever exposed and persuade yourself to see qualities in this photo, because you know it's his, that's just brown-nosing.
On another tack, I'm interested in the idea that the photo may have been of importance to Cartier-Bresson because it reflected a time in his life; not art but personal reportage if you like, but he or some editor detached that information from the photo. My photos rarely go anywhere but Flickr, and I have one account, which contains photos of something weird I saw on the street, photos I took on days out exercising one of my old cameras, photos taken as a tourist, and some which are as near as I get to photographic art. Mixed in among those are diagrams and screenshots which serve my contributions to a wiki. The captions, tags, grouping into albums, and even web-links help anyone know which kind of image I think they're looking at; so for me, Cartier-Bresson's exhibitions and books should have as much of that as possible. I really dislike captions like 'Untitled, 1952' (the Flickr equivalent is often 'IMG0012345').
The original picture posted by the OP was a terrible version that should never be included in a book. The actual picture someone posted taken from his book is better.
It’s a crappy smartphone shot. Can’t you see beyond that? Or are you stating that the OP made a mistake by posting it in the first place? Maybe before making such statements and judgmeets you could do some research on you own.
For the record, I wasn’t sure about the copyright situation. I don’t want a nasty letter from the lawyers acting for Magnum. I reasoned that a photo of a page from the book might be forgivable. Reproduction quality varies hugely between the 1980 book, the 1997 re-issued The Europeans and the various versions viewable online, but there’s no getting away from the fact that technically both negatives lack that “bourgeois thing”, sharpness.Calm down Pieter. I wasn't criticizing the OP. I was comparing two versions of a photo.
For the record, I wasn’t sure about the copyright situation. I don’t want a nasty letter from the lawyers acting for Magnum.
You specifically said "shouldn't be included in a book." That does not sound like you're talking about the posted photo, but the original.Calm down Pieter. I wasn't criticizing the OP. I was comparing two versions of a photo.
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