David Hall
Member
Please induldge me while I catch up after being away for a couple of days...
1) Inner essence does not necessarily have anything to do with portrait vs snapshot, in my opinion. If Donald Miller is pissed and Michael Blasnky and about to clock him, and I whip out the Fuji disposable and capture the moment, it isn't really a portrait. Although we're sure seeing the insides of Donald Miller. However, inner essence CAN be part of a portrait. Richard Avedon is perhaps best at this.
2) I still say that portraits, like landscapes, are created. And lets use landscapes as the example as it's sometimes easier to see an analogy than an illustration: Aggie is walking through the woods, with no camera. She sees a stream. If she whipped out a camera at this point, it's a snapsnot. But as she continues to walk she notices a branch crossing over the stream, with an icicle hanging from it. And as she walks and changes the relative position of the elements from her point of view, she notices that the icicle, when looked at from a specific angle, is pointing into a V of leaves suspended in the stream. And she notices a rock in the stream that causes an eddy that reflects the sky in a spectacular way. NOW if she whips out the camera, it's a creation. Because it's as much her mental assembly of the raw elements of the scene as it is the random elements of the scene itself.
And so it is in portraits. I see Jorge Gasteazoro in a particular way and as I mentially focus on him, I notice things that fit the image of him in my head. The wrinkles by his eyes add to my image of him as wise. The weather in his face reflects the Mexican sun he lives under. By the time I open the shutter, I am CREATING an image of him more than I am simply capturing one.
That, in my opinion, is the difference between a landscape or portrait and a snapshot of anything.
dgh
1) Inner essence does not necessarily have anything to do with portrait vs snapshot, in my opinion. If Donald Miller is pissed and Michael Blasnky and about to clock him, and I whip out the Fuji disposable and capture the moment, it isn't really a portrait. Although we're sure seeing the insides of Donald Miller. However, inner essence CAN be part of a portrait. Richard Avedon is perhaps best at this.
2) I still say that portraits, like landscapes, are created. And lets use landscapes as the example as it's sometimes easier to see an analogy than an illustration: Aggie is walking through the woods, with no camera. She sees a stream. If she whipped out a camera at this point, it's a snapsnot. But as she continues to walk she notices a branch crossing over the stream, with an icicle hanging from it. And as she walks and changes the relative position of the elements from her point of view, she notices that the icicle, when looked at from a specific angle, is pointing into a V of leaves suspended in the stream. And she notices a rock in the stream that causes an eddy that reflects the sky in a spectacular way. NOW if she whips out the camera, it's a creation. Because it's as much her mental assembly of the raw elements of the scene as it is the random elements of the scene itself.
And so it is in portraits. I see Jorge Gasteazoro in a particular way and as I mentially focus on him, I notice things that fit the image of him in my head. The wrinkles by his eyes add to my image of him as wise. The weather in his face reflects the Mexican sun he lives under. By the time I open the shutter, I am CREATING an image of him more than I am simply capturing one.
That, in my opinion, is the difference between a landscape or portrait and a snapshot of anything.
dgh