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Author Topic: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)  (Read 9888 times)

RSL

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #160 on: September 19, 2022, 02:25:02 pm »

I Ching Readings
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Eric Myrvaagnes

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #161 on: September 19, 2022, 05:08:27 pm »

Nice!

But he should put on his philosopher's hat to read the I Ching.
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-Eric Myrvaagnes (visit my website: http://myrvaagnes.com)

francois

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #162 on: September 20, 2022, 04:06:32 am »

Interesting posture… He isn't rich yet.
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Francois

RSL

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #163 on: September 20, 2022, 11:31:40 am »

Marketplace Vietnam, 1965
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RSL

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #164 on: September 21, 2022, 09:58:59 am »

Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand, 1964
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RSL

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #165 on: September 22, 2022, 10:00:52 am »

Street Photography
By Russ Lewis


And so we come to the end of my favorite street photographs, a collection that spans nearly seventy years.

I became interested in photography in 1943, but I didn’t see it as a serious pursuit until ten years later when the Korean war ended and I had time to go downtown in Taegu and shoot pictures. I found that what interested me most was people: their interactions with each other and with their environment. That interest has never faded.

I shoot landscape, same as any photographer. After all, landscape is there. It stays still, lets you come back again and again until you have the light you prefer, and doesn’t complain if it catches you shooting its picture.

Old structures are another favorite, especially abandoned mining structures in Colorado. There’s a world of history, jubilation and pain in those old structures.

But it seems to me that street photography is what the camera really was invented for. It wasn’t, of course. The first cameras were infernal things that required you to compose upside-down under a hood. Exposures were long enough that a picture of someone blinking would show a blur instead of a blink.

But then Oskar Barnak invented the little hand camera that became the Leica, a camera that used movie film and had a relatively fast lens. At that point photography took on a new dimension. As Andre Kertesz, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Garry Winogrand and others demonstrated, the new camera could capture life as it’s actually being lived on and off the street.

Even with the tools we have today: ISOs that climb into the stratosphere and resolution beyond anything possible with film, only a vanishing few photographers do real street photography or even bother to learn what real “street photography” actually is. On the web you’ll see landscape after landscape after landscape; rarely anything else. There’s nothing wrong with landscape of course. Landscape can be lovely. But no landscape photographer can do what a really good painter is able to do: bypass problems with color relationships for instance and distort linear perspective for better effect. Yes you can approximate some of these things with Photoshop or Lightroom, but any experienced photographer can recognize the changes immediately.

Reality is reality, and that’s the reason the camera is such an effective tool for recording human behavior. Paintings such as Renoir’s “Luncheon of the Boating Party” were street photography’s predecessors. They’re beautiful and effective as an artist’s conception of reality, but they aren’t reality as it’s lived.

I sometimes hear arguments about why I shouldn’t do street photography. The most common complaint is that street photography interferes with people’s privacy. But someone in a public place has no expectation of privacy and United States law recognizes that fact. It’s shocking to think that nowadays Cartier-Bresson might be sued in France for publishing “Behind the Gare St. Lazare.”

Before street photography we had a world of relatively stiff, formal photographic depictions of human interaction, but never unposed images of life as it actually was lived. Nowadays we can show human behavior as it really is. No artistic genre is more important than that. No photographic genre is more consequential than street photography.


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Chris Kern

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Re: Reposts of my best street (in my estimation)
« Reply #166 on: September 22, 2022, 12:38:14 pm »

No photographic genre is more consequential than street photography.

And now that everyone is carrying a quite capable cellphone camera, you might think more people would try their luck at capturing the often amusing behavior that is visible all around them.  Instead, you mostly see them shooting selfies or posed snapshots of themselves, their families, and their friends—"smirks," I call them, because all they capture are repetitive pictures of faces smirking at the lens in front of more-or-less interchangeable backgrounds.
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