pesphoto
Veteran
So I guess if anyone has less interest in street, he has got back some amount of mental integrity....maybe, stability.
I always knew I was unstable.......now I know why I like to do sreet photography.
So I guess if anyone has less interest in street, he has got back some amount of mental integrity....maybe, stability.
Nh3, I start to discover that street photography has connection with inner insufficiency. While those who are in harmony, enjoy nature/wildlife/etc, I guess some lack of social contacts or character of them brings some fullfillment, taking pictures of random people in random juxtapositions. First, it takes some patience to see moments worth capturing, and thus mind is feed with traces of emotions photographer sees. In some kind it's like watching sea or wood (kind of meditation) - though instinctively photographer is looking for "nerve of situation". It's emotional starving, I guess.
Second, looking at photographs, there comes second wave, having both memories from moment when picture were captured and new emotions arising in moment of looking at picture.
So I guess if anyone has less interest in street, he has got back some amount of mental integrity....maybe, stability.
marke: great story. I think you became interested in surrounding where you met or have to spend some time. You just had to accept that environment. And...people in love feel "right now" moment more than those who are married for a long years and have stopped down, kind of. So for me this explains your interest and it's another state of mind, opposite to that I described before.
marke: great story. I think you became interested in surrounding where you met or have to spend some time. You just had to accept that environment. And...people in love feel "right now" moment more than those who are married for a long years and have stopped down, kind of. So for me this explains your interest and it's another state of mind, opposite to that I described before.
Rather, I will speculate, degree of inner emotional state could be judged from what subject one chooses, how close gets to subject(s) (zooms count as mean intention to get closer, some are just more shy), what moments they try to capture, what angles are used to compose.
Thanks for that link, Ned! Several good photographers there!
Marke:
If I sense his meaning correctly about "stopped down" the bright flame of first love - after thirty years of marriage - has simmered down to glowing embers.
As for 50mm lenses and wider being a bit scary, think of it this way. If you are in a city, on the street, and you shoot someone with a 200mm lens you've got yourself a nice head shot. What you don't have is the physical environment in which that person existed/was moving through at the moment you took the picture.
With a 50mm lens you get more of that, and with a 35mm lens (my favorite for street photography) you of course get even more. With practice you can get closer and closer to your subject and still remain relatively unobtrusive.
The best street photographers have that uncanny ability to remain virtually un-noticed while working. I think HCB was one of those. I had a friend in SF who, when street-shooting, always wore a suit and tie and was immediately ignored as just another businessman walking down the street. He used a Leica, not with a neck strap but with a wrist strap, so it was much less noticeable.
There's lots of tricks. I'm an older guy, so people automatically don't see me, at least for the most part. Makes it a bit easier.
I like your responses, Marke, and "healthy nervousness" is a fine way of expressing what I might have merely described as a heightened state of consciousness.
I was blown away by Trent Parke's black and white photographs.
There is a thin line between genious street photography and totally mediocre street photography. An true great street photographer will create, will use the people on the streets as pawns, as symbols. He will play with them. The street's a stage and the photographer is the maestro.
But if I go by the principle that once one photographer starts to understand and to create with what's around instead of just snapping around like a fly without a head, there is no going back. Good street shooting is extremely hard and it's an addiction.