Curt
Member
I'm completely unfamiliar with the man. What is he known for? Portraits? Nudes? Still lifes? Landscapes? Street photography? Commercial photography? Was he stylistically a modernist?
LIFE.
I'm completely unfamiliar with the man. What is he known for? Portraits? Nudes? Still lifes? Landscapes? Street photography? Commercial photography? Was he stylistically a modernist?
i just got this through ebay. from the u.s., might take some time to arrive.There is fantastic biography book: W. Eugene Smith : Shadow & substance : the life and work of an American photographer / by Jim Hughes.
ah, thanks for describing that one. i thought this was a picture-only book of the series on albert schweitzer."Let the Truth be the Prejudice".
i absolutely agree about the retrospective book. i'd love to have a big book with all the images (or a good cross section) and some quality info.IMO, if there is one photographer who deserves a properly done retrospective book today, it is E.Smith. I have three of his books, the big "The Camera as a Conscience", the Pittsburgh project and the small book by Phaidon. I have probably browsed through several others.
well, as a photographic purist, you certainly look at it this way. i'm definitely no purist, so i'm fine with it. and the contrasty look is a matter of taste. i love it. most of the b/w stuff i see is too flat and greyish in my eyes.I've never seen original Smith prints but IMO I'm not convinced he was a great printer.
Much of his work appears very contrasty and he wasn't shy about manipulating prints or adding
components to them. For two examples, The picture of Schweitzer with the hand in silhouette in front
of him, the hand is not in the original negative and there are at least two variations withe the hand in different positions.
The print in the Spanish village has had the eyes of at least one woman both brightened and changed the direction in which she was looking.
To my mind this isn't so different than combing different negatives in Photoshop. This is more important when you consider the sort of work he did.
in the article in "darkroom" he explains the story behind the schweitzer image. due to a a bad lens and the light coming towards the lens, the bottom part of the image was fogged. but he absolutely wanted the image as the cover piece, so he didn't throw the negative out, but had to print it. he said, he printed the original once, but it was so much work, that all later copies are from a copy negative.
I bought a book about Gene Smith last year, but I can't find it right now. I do remember that he was fired from almost every job that came his way because of his refusal to "follow the rules". He was consistently late delivering his prints because he insisted on printing them himself. Shouting matches with editors were commonplace. Yet he has delivered some haunting images, such as the Minamata photos, and Walk to Paradise Garden. Of the latter, it was said that it took him two days in the darkroom to finally print that negative to his satisfaction.
strange, i wonder why he would lie about that. it is a rather big part in the story and he also jokingly added that all the stories of him taking five days for each negative to print were based on this one difficult negative....Unfortunately, Smith was not telling the truth here. In the book "The Negative", John Loengard ...
this is great. i will definitely get this too. it should be out end of this month.The book was mentioned in the original posters nytimes article - came across the website the other day. As a jazz fan and a photographer this looks like a must-buy:
http://www.jazzloftproject.org/
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |