Brilliant marketing will do it to almost anything.
In this instance, there was something to market. Her photos are good. Her widespread popularity is due mostly to people finding her story compelling - that appeals to non-photographers. The staid "greats" are mostly of interest to photographers.
As for her life story, surely some of it is correct, is everything?
People see what they see. I was merely referring to the loud awe her photographs suddenly bring on. Sometimes it seems like poele are so ecstatic about Maier's photographs, they are almost scared how that was even possible. And yet, there are some great ones, many just as good as any, and the rest get credit for no merit.
As for her life story, surely some of it is correct, is everything? I seriously doubt it, it mostly reads like a novel written to sell, not to tell how it was. Marketing is written all over it.
In this instance, there was something to market. Her photos are good. Her widespread popularity is due mostly to people finding her story compelling - that appeals to non-photographers. The staid "greats" are mostly of interest to photographers.
Her pictures aren't "just" photographs: they're stories. You can stare at one and suddenly a narrative pops into your head. They invite you to engage in the world.
Sure, other photos can do that, too. But she does it consistently. She's a storyteller as much as a photographer. She lived a modest life with a subterranean world of imagination sparked by travel and heritage. She presented to the world in a subdued way and used the camera to identify and spin stories that are probably as much about her as her subjects.
Cezanne wasn't nearly as good a technical artist as Picasso. But Cezanne had an incredible vision. Picasso largely took his own vision from others and made them into technical masterpieces. Maier is like Cezanne.
It is currently impossible to separate the photographs from the story.
For a whole bunch of reasons extraneous to her realities, she probably would not have as much appreciation now if her photographs had been made public when she was taking them.
Something like the Disfarmer story.
I appreciate/like/am impressed by the photography from Vivian Maier that I've seen.
You're likely correct. Her photographs were less remarkable in her time - everyone was living in that narrative. Though, I'd argue that she was stellar even within her time. I suppose we venerate her in some degree because she takes us back in the time machine to understand a world we never lived in.
Thanks for the Disfarmer reference. This was new to me.
The other major factor relates to her gender - how many female street photographers from her era can you think of?
That and her relative isolation from artistic communities.
Probably because she was European, they tend to be more honest with less bravado, also being a socialist she had more empathy to the less well off.
Pity she didn't get to dictate the way her pictures are presented.
I would say that there are not generally that many street photographers in total that have gained any real recognition over the history of the discipline. Off the top of my head I can think of a few - HCB, Brassai, Atget, Winogrand ... I'm sure there are some that I'm missing, but it's not hundreds...
Some well-known "street photographers" were stone cold pursuers of human content, far more cynical than sympathetic.
It can be weird at first, but "you" do get used to it.In this neighborhood we had Dorothea Lange, who has been famous for a long time. Both women show a lot of empathy with their subjects in their pictures, even though Dorothea could be quite selfish with respect to her personal life. I tend to admire these kinds of photographs simply because I do not and cannot work in that style myself. Frankly, I can't get in anyone's face with a camera, or intrude on their privacy, unless they deliberately ask or pay me to do it; and that nearly always lends a bit of stiffness rather than spontaneity to the image.
Some well-known "street photographers" were stone cold pursuers of human content, far more cynical than sympathetic.
They shouldn't all be lumped together.
It can be weird at first, but "you" do get used to it.
I have shot all kinds of people, of all ages and economies.
You have to use your head.
People eating at a sidewalk cafe...... i do not stand at 90 degrees and 3 feet from a couple.
If you need that you can always go across the street and strap on a 105.
I am more at 10 degrees shooting down the length of the table line.
Never had a problem shooting kids in a public place like a park or street festival.
If you present a smiling, "decent person" vibe, most people are cool with it.
I usually hang out a few minutes and let myself bee seen first.
Yeah, i have had a few people bitch.
One lady was VERY Concerned what i was going to do with the pics of her 2 kids.
It was only 3 or 4 frames. She lived rather close to me. I gave her my phone number, met her when the Negs were developed and gave the negs to her.
I was happy to do it. She was happy and thankful i accommodated her concerns.
In You Face Bruce Gilden archetypes are fair game for a broken nose. IMHO
Can you.? Yes.
Should you.? ......... to each their own
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