Jonathan Brewer
Member
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2005
- Messages
- 109
- Format
- Multi Format
It must be about the photographer/artist as it is about the subject matter.
Think about this statement of yours.............
.............. 'What makes her pictures so great is the way she is able to portray the powerful presence of the people she photographs, and I would dispute, as I believe would she most certainly, that the picture is as you say Scott "absolutely more about the photographer than the sitter.".................
.........and this part of it...........'What makes her pictures so great'.............which if you accept this, means something about the image which she incorporated into the process that's there in the image.
.......and this part of it.................'the way she is able to portray'.........
..........or this part..........the powerful presence of the people she photographs.........................
Did you realize that you talked about the photographer and how great she was, and what she was able to bring to a portrait, and you characterized all this in a way, which at least to me, was where the most important thing about all of this, was her doing the photographs as opposed to what she shot.
You're talking about how great she is at what she does,.............I suggest that in terms of eliminating as much as you can of the process, concious or unconcious, that you'd have to go in the opposite direction, where for instance, you have a birthday party with relatives over, everybody is relaxed and carefree when whoever's appointed to take snaps with their point and shoot takes whatever shots they take.
And I do believe that snapshots/candids by folks involve taken by non-professionals/folks who don't know the first thing about technique, can have an almost legitimate feeling(still an illusion) of immediacy, warmth, that you don't see in more so-called more structured work. These folks can't impose their will on an image, they don't know how.
I bring up the statement of yours, because you talk mostly about the artist producing work, yet you use this statement as an example to dispute that this is more about the subject matter than the artist.
I'm suggesting that what your saying actually goes along with what we're saying, and the logical extension of this would be as I've suggested, which is free up the subject from your involvement and let them do whatever they would like, then you're not in it, and then it can't be about you, it can then only be about the subject, as in a self portrait, which also can lie.
Think about this statement of yours.............
.............. 'What makes her pictures so great is the way she is able to portray the powerful presence of the people she photographs, and I would dispute, as I believe would she most certainly, that the picture is as you say Scott "absolutely more about the photographer than the sitter.".................
.........and this part of it...........'What makes her pictures so great'.............which if you accept this, means something about the image which she incorporated into the process that's there in the image.
.......and this part of it.................'the way she is able to portray'.........
..........or this part..........the powerful presence of the people she photographs.........................
Did you realize that you talked about the photographer and how great she was, and what she was able to bring to a portrait, and you characterized all this in a way, which at least to me, was where the most important thing about all of this, was her doing the photographs as opposed to what she shot.
You're talking about how great she is at what she does,.............I suggest that in terms of eliminating as much as you can of the process, concious or unconcious, that you'd have to go in the opposite direction, where for instance, you have a birthday party with relatives over, everybody is relaxed and carefree when whoever's appointed to take snaps with their point and shoot takes whatever shots they take.
And I do believe that snapshots/candids by folks involve taken by non-professionals/folks who don't know the first thing about technique, can have an almost legitimate feeling(still an illusion) of immediacy, warmth, that you don't see in more so-called more structured work. These folks can't impose their will on an image, they don't know how.
I bring up the statement of yours, because you talk mostly about the artist producing work, yet you use this statement as an example to dispute that this is more about the subject matter than the artist.
I'm suggesting that what your saying actually goes along with what we're saying, and the logical extension of this would be as I've suggested, which is free up the subject from your involvement and let them do whatever they would like, then you're not in it, and then it can't be about you, it can then only be about the subject, as in a self portrait, which also can lie.