alanrockwood
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- Oct 11, 2006
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At least they are wearing hats with 360 degree brims. (smile)(Irony alert on)
Yeah - Vivian Maier's subjects were so much more elegant.
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(Irony alert off)
At least they are wearing hats with 360 degree brims. (smile)(Irony alert on)
Yeah - Vivian Maier's subjects were so much more elegant.
![]()
(Irony alert off)
Page 34, John Leongard's Age of Silver on Henri- Cartier-Bresson: "When I first met him in 1956, he'd tell us tyros hanging out at Magnum Photos in New York City, "I must stay anonymous. I am a street photographer."
"Street Photography" is one of those things that people see and say, hey, I can do that! And the overwhelming evidence is, they can't! A key element of any art is the ability to discriminate, edit and eliminate. Robert Frank shot nearly 800 rolls of film to end up with the 83 images in The Americans. One of the criteria I used in judging photographers' portfolios when I worked as an art director was how well they edited their work. If a photographer couldn't see what was good enough or not for their portfolio, how could I depend on them to deliver a good photo on assignment?
HCB is dead. His work survives. The "street photographer" label has been beaten to death. Multitudes of incompetent idjits call themselves street photographers...how does that honor HCB?
I dislike the term "street photography" preferring "candid photography. HCB called himself a street photographer, but I believe that was to distinguish himself from a landscape or studio photographer.
That is not "Street Photography" it is taking portraits of strangers on the street.
I wish i had a scanner, but there are Hundreds of examples on The Internet of what Street Photography is.
Garry Winogrand for example.
Different people embrace different breadths of definition of what is 'Street Photography', but the usefulness of the term begins to become diluted to the point of uselessness after it becomes overly broad.
Yes, agreed. I dislike mannerism in any photographic genre, the reliance on a particular style or technique imposed on the subject, regardless of relevance. There's a lot of it around today. It may be because the internet offers such a brief window in which to stake a visual claim. For non-commercial work, and with the exception of documenting a hobby (birds, steam trains, football, etc), I think the benefits of internet exposure are overrated. Most of it is trawling for likes. The problem with likes is there's no way of knowing how informed or sincere the liker is. Much of it seems reciprocal - I'll like yours so you can like mine.A key element of any art is the ability to discriminate, edit and eliminate.
Yes, agreed. I dislike mannerism in any photographic genre, the reliance on a particular style or technique imposed on the subject, regardless of relevance. There's a lot of it around today. It may be because the internet offers such a brief window in which to stake a visual claim. For non-commercial work, and with the exception of documenting a hobby (birds, steam trains, football, etc), I think the benefits of internet exposure are overrated. Most of it is trawling for likes. The problem with likes is there's no way of knowing how informed or sincere the liker is. Much of it seems reciprocal - I'll like yours so you can like mine.
In the days I used to do Flickr my stuff seemed to attract a disproportionate number of Explore inclusions. This meant one photograph might get 15000 hits, while the previous image would get 30. Also, Explore had no apparent objective or subjective criteria, guessing the algorithm was an exercise in futility. I need more control over how things are seen, even if the number of views are fewer. Street photography isn't the problem, the internet is the problem because it deals in memes and people are only too happy to fulfil them.
Your previous posts on the subject insist there is.There is no "problem"!
Your previous posts on the subject insist there is.
"Multitudes of incompetent idjits call themselves street photographers"What "problem" accounts for your anxiety Flickr? I've never liked it.
Some of their photographs were "excellent" (as are some in Photrio Media...but they shot massive amounts of fillum to get there and were edited astoundingly aggressively. fwiw
Gee, like almost every other genre of photography, then.
That doesn't make any sense. A still life photographer with a large format camera, tilts, shifts and studio lighting can nail every shot. A landscape photographer runs him/her close for economy. A street photographer dealing with fast moving subjects in a 3-dimensional foreground, mid and distant volatile situation will be lucky to get an exemplary shot in a month, digital or film. One classic hard to see, hard to take and hard to look at shot a year, would put him among the street photography greats.My prejudice is that better (gooderphotographers waste fewer clicks, digital or fillum.
I also don't know any photographer who doesn't have some % of unsuccessful clicks.
A food photographer can make many exposures trying for the perfect wisp of steam. Or that perfect pour. Landscape photographers can be bedeviled by wind, moving clouds and people (if not wanted). Sports photographers can leave a match/race/game with few shots that are worthwhile. Portrait photographers don't always nail it with a single exposure. I agree, street shooting has a high ratio of misses to hits, but other genres don't necessarily bat 1000.That doesn't make any sense. A still life photographer with a large format camera, tilts, shifts and studio lighting can nail every shot. A landscape photographer runs him/her close for economy. A street photographer dealing with fast moving subjects in a 3-dimensional foreground, mid and distant volatile situation will be lucky to get an exemplary shot in a month, digital or film. One classic hard to see, hard to take and hard to look at shot a year, would put him among the street photography greats.
I don't. Please enlighten me.We all know what many aspiring "street photographers" identify with.
How do you get from place to place....... don't you worry about a car hitting you head on, or a plane falling from the sky and crashing into your work-place.?well going against the common vein here, I don't do street photography because well,,, you never know when you might take a photo of criminals who don't want to be photographed.
They don't mind killing a person for "disrespecting them" by say, not saying hello or giving them a ride somewhere. What will they do when they see someone take a photo when they are up to no good?
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