Is that an adage? If so, I don't agree with it.Strand was a dour, taciturn man -- perhaps this is the ultimate example of the addage that the images of great photographers are always of themselves, not of their subject.
Is that an adage? If so, I don't agree with it.
Cate
If you watch the Strand movie they talk about the project that this picture was a part of. All of these brothers served in the Italian resistance during WWII. The father was killed I think. They are all surrounding their mother whose positioning in the doorway and the darkness serves to link her to each of them compositionally. Great picture. Strand's wife talks about how horribly unpicturesque the town was. He and the Italian that he was working with (director of the Bicycle Thief I think) decided on this village by randomly sitcking pins in a map. This town was the third they hit, and happened to be the hometown of the director.
Best,
Will
I saw a vintage print of this in a New York gallery a few years ago and it was incredibly powerful and moving. Online and even good book reproductions do not do it justice (like most photographs).
As I recall, I could have traded my house for it with enough leftover for a nice frame!
If you watch the Strand movie they talk about the project that this picture was a part of. All of these brothers served in the Italian resistance during WWII. The father was killed I think. They are all surrounding their mother whose positioning in the doorway and the darkness serves to link her to each of them compositionally. Great picture. Strand's wife talks about how horribly unpicturesque the town was. He and the Italian that he was working with (director of the Bicycle Thief I think) decided on this village by randomly sitcking pins in a map. This town was the third they hit, and happened to be the hometown of the director.
Best,
Will
I wonder what the fellow next to the bike and the fellow seated on the left side are looking at? The others are looking at P.S.
Donald... fill me in...
You see radial balance?
I don't...
To me, the balance comes from the cluster of heavier elements near the center left of the image, vs the lone man and bike at the far right...
What brings balance being the weight of the black square framing the old lady, and that the guys near her are also nearer the center of the pic... leveraging the lone man, far right....
I'd think of Mandalas, bicycle wheels, sunflowers... etc as radially balanced...
Where the elements are arranged around a central AXIS. . ..
Can you enlighten me as to how you see it arranged here?
I like this picture for the composition and the feel of it but, as someone who has "posed" hundreds of groups I find this has a "you look here, and you look here" kind of feel to it. It seems a bit contrived on where the people are looking.
To some it may seem "more natural" than everyone looking at the camera but to me it still has that contrived feel, mainly because there is no real reason for the subjects to be looking where they are looking.
However I do like the compostion, clothes attitudes etc.
Michael
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