Mainecoonmaniac
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- Joined
- Dec 10, 2009
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I see the same guy in 6 different poses. What I see as lacking is the atmosphere and environment that speaks for the sitter. For example, if he was a fisherman then he should have been photographed in his attire and in his environment. Otherwise you would have to put a title under the photo stating . . . "Portrait of Bob the fisherman . . . use your imagination." No wonder the photographers couldn't pull this off . . . both hands were tied.
So do photographers bring their emotional baggage when they get behind the camera when shooting people?
So do photographers bring their emotional baggage when they get behind the camera when shooting people?
So do photographers bring their emotional baggage when they get behind the camera when shooting people?
http://www.bernardvoyer.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/web_edmund-hillary_large.jpg
What does he resemble the most? A Plumber, a Singer, a Writer or a Mountaineer? Of course, he could be a Fisherman.![]()
I think it is bogus. He looks much the same in every photo.
And landscapes, and ...
I can absolutely see that it is the same person in each photo.
Instead of bogus though, I see that the shooters worked with what they had to pigeon hole him into a context. Right or wrong we all do this with our photos.
One of the things that we need to remember about portraits though is that they don't hang in a vacuum; they are typically hung in a context that defines them. They hang on our walls, in our homes, with our junk, and our families surrounding them.
The photo here is no more indicative of the subjects job than the "fisherman" referenced above. The context around a photo, things outside a photo, always help us define the photo. In this case fame and history. Same here.
Some photos give us more hints with costume or internal context. Even with the extra hints we need more external info to understand the photo. There are lots of people alive today who would not know why these people were important.
Karsh did a good job of playing into the context his famous subjects lived in, even still they can't stand on their own, they need context.
I don't get this photographers interpretation thing. Don't we just record?
If we just record, we're just a monkey with a finger to press the shutter.
GrantedThen I wish to be that Zen monkey.
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