This might be a bit of a ramble. I've been thinking about this for a while.
I'm 63 and grew up as a photographer. I worked full time at five newspapers before switching full-time to sports photography where I spent a career working with MLB and the NFL.
While working at newspapers I attended regular meetings of news photographers and listened to the great shooters of the time. David Burnett, Eddie Adams, Mary Ellen Mark and countless others made the rounds on the 'rubber chicken tour' as speakers at news conferences.
I realize Mary Ellen wasn't a war photographer but the other two were both at Vietnam and seemed to indicate those tough days where part of the road to the successes they found afterwards.
Now this is my question. If the current war in Ukraine is the biggest news story in the world, are the next generation of great photographers over there cutting their teeth? And for all the press and rants from influencer's about how they're giving a voice to people without a voice, or they're the greatest street shooter ever, or how great film photography is, are they going over there with their new Leica M6 (2023) and a hundred rolls of TriX to take important photos, or have they revealed themselves to be a bunch of 'posers'?
Peter Turnley did a great photo essay on people fleeing from the Ukraine by train when the war first broke out.... he did a great job and I can't express how wonderful it was, but he wasn't in the conflict zones or with the troops. But I'm not trying to take anything away from how great the photo story was. (Shot on digital, just to be clear since this is a film website)
Do you feel the next generation of world leading photojournalists are in Ukraine learning how to be photojournalists, or will we be forced to look at photos of the greatest gear ever created for photography, next to a cup of coffee in the safety of the local Starbucks?
Just wondering.
And I could be wrong about this, I'm wrong all the time, just ask my wife.
You can do a google search for Turnley's photos from the Ukraine or find the piece in the Post here..... https://www.washingtonpost.com/magazine/interactive/2022/agony-endurance-escape-ukraine-pictures/
I'm 63 and grew up as a photographer. I worked full time at five newspapers before switching full-time to sports photography where I spent a career working with MLB and the NFL.
While working at newspapers I attended regular meetings of news photographers and listened to the great shooters of the time. David Burnett, Eddie Adams, Mary Ellen Mark and countless others made the rounds on the 'rubber chicken tour' as speakers at news conferences.
I realize Mary Ellen wasn't a war photographer but the other two were both at Vietnam and seemed to indicate those tough days where part of the road to the successes they found afterwards.
Now this is my question. If the current war in Ukraine is the biggest news story in the world, are the next generation of great photographers over there cutting their teeth? And for all the press and rants from influencer's about how they're giving a voice to people without a voice, or they're the greatest street shooter ever, or how great film photography is, are they going over there with their new Leica M6 (2023) and a hundred rolls of TriX to take important photos, or have they revealed themselves to be a bunch of 'posers'?
Peter Turnley did a great photo essay on people fleeing from the Ukraine by train when the war first broke out.... he did a great job and I can't express how wonderful it was, but he wasn't in the conflict zones or with the troops. But I'm not trying to take anything away from how great the photo story was. (Shot on digital, just to be clear since this is a film website)
Do you feel the next generation of world leading photojournalists are in Ukraine learning how to be photojournalists, or will we be forced to look at photos of the greatest gear ever created for photography, next to a cup of coffee in the safety of the local Starbucks?
Just wondering.
And I could be wrong about this, I'm wrong all the time, just ask my wife.
You can do a google search for Turnley's photos from the Ukraine or find the piece in the Post here..... https://www.washingtonpost.com/magazine/interactive/2022/agony-endurance-escape-ukraine-pictures/