akremer
Established
1. The book is a lot more important now than then. Now, it has influenced our world for decades and changed photography in some degree... And now it's seen as a universal piece of modern art, maybe the highest -as a book- in photography history. Then, some people just didn't like it for showing real parts of american life...
2. If by visually you mean "pictorialism" or "precise composition and framing" or "image quality", I understand it does nothing for you: the book isn't related to any superficial beauty of light or technical skill, but to the darkness of our souls and lives. Frank didn't care at all about photography, just as Bresson used to say about himself: they were not interested in photography but in life. That's why Frank easily and definitely stopped photographing very soon after those shots. He wanted to continue talking about life in other media: movies.
3. If you feel nothing after seeing the book, I mean, something deep, I'll tell you what one of my teachers told us once in class: "Take another look, or start worrying about your photography."
Cheers,
Juan
I'm sure it's influenced countless photographers and I recognize it's importance.
I'm sure that this work has indirectly influenced me on some level through my personal influences.
By 'visually' I mean that the photos just don't get me off for some reason. It's not about pictorialism or lack of precise composition and framing or image quality.
"If you feel nothing after seeing the book, I mean, something deep, I'll tell you what one of my teachers told us once in class: "Take another look, or start worrying about your photography."" - That's ridiculous.
Again, I'm not a street guy and as far as old school American life goes I prefer Eggleston.
Juan Valdenebro
Truth is beauty
"If you feel nothing after seeing the book, I mean, something deep, I'll tell you what one of my teachers told us once in class: "Take another look, or start worrying about your photography."" - That's ridiculous.
OK, I'll tell my teacher...
Nothing personal... There's space for all opinions here on RFF.
Cheers,
Juan
akremer
Established
OK, I'll tell my teacher...I'll also recommend him to spend his class time talking about your cup of tea Gilden instead of Frank.
Nothing personal... There's space for all opinions here on RFF.
Cheers,
Juan
What I'm saying is, you don't have to like everything that you're told to like or taught. That's ridiculous. I understand that Frank's work is often used in university teachings, but that doesn't make me like it. Frank's got this historical significance but doesn't tickle my eyes right.
Please tell your teacher how much I enjoy your profile portrait.
Ducky
Well-known
It's true there are many who broke the ground and set the standards for today's photographers, RFF'rs included, and we owe them a debt of gratitude.That being said, some leave me cold while others still fascinate me.
By comparrison I suggest you randomly visit the flickr sites of some of our active members and take a run through a slide show or two. Some of the work is fantastic, classic in some cases, fresh in others but always new to the eye. Lots of talent here.
By comparrison I suggest you randomly visit the flickr sites of some of our active members and take a run through a slide show or two. Some of the work is fantastic, classic in some cases, fresh in others but always new to the eye. Lots of talent here.
Spyro
Well-known
I guess I can't really comment because I'm not really into street, but Bruce Gilden is more my cup of tea.
To be honest, mine too. And Eggleston
But you're right, Gilden and Frank's photos are visually very much apart and I agree that Gilden is more eye catching. Funny thing though, to me they both register the same way at a visceral level, same emotion and content, just different intensity.
Latecomer
Making up for lost time
I think Gerard Manly Hopkins's statement about the impact on him of poets considered to be greater than he is relevant to this discussion: He said they caused him to admire and do otherwise.
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250swb
Well-known
I don't know, maybe Frank's work is to subtle or to personal in an age of 'in your face' photographers like Gilden such that the message is lost if it isn't beating you on the head. But I see 'The Americans' as a body of work that not only summed up a generation, but tidied up many strings in photography up until that point and then presented them in a way that took photography forward.
It has its weaker moments in retrospect, but who's work here wouldn't be re-edited fifty years on? So lets not dwell on niggling little things like that. Its the overall sequenced begining to end poetry of 'The Americans' that makes it stand well above other bodies of similar work. Its quiet, its loud, is sad, its happy, its cynical, its optimistic, its funny. And more importantly it was 'punk' photography that insighted hate, love, inspiration and castigation. In many ways 'The Americans' was the first body of work with attitude. And thats not something that can be said about many street photographers today, who can pull out of the bag a great individual image, but who's work leaves you feeling vacant because it has no opinion to offer, nothing that makes you think beyond the image about the people, about the politics, about the culture.
So, that is why 'The Americans' is such a good book, and Frank is such a good photographer. The only photographer that comes close is Koudelka, and is perhaps the greater of the two. Many others in the genre, Gilden for instance, have a style, have a body of work, can make people's eye's open with their virtuosity, but offer it as a meal that leaves you hungry again half an hour after finishing it. Or 'all tits and tinsel' in other words.
Steve
It has its weaker moments in retrospect, but who's work here wouldn't be re-edited fifty years on? So lets not dwell on niggling little things like that. Its the overall sequenced begining to end poetry of 'The Americans' that makes it stand well above other bodies of similar work. Its quiet, its loud, is sad, its happy, its cynical, its optimistic, its funny. And more importantly it was 'punk' photography that insighted hate, love, inspiration and castigation. In many ways 'The Americans' was the first body of work with attitude. And thats not something that can be said about many street photographers today, who can pull out of the bag a great individual image, but who's work leaves you feeling vacant because it has no opinion to offer, nothing that makes you think beyond the image about the people, about the politics, about the culture.
So, that is why 'The Americans' is such a good book, and Frank is such a good photographer. The only photographer that comes close is Koudelka, and is perhaps the greater of the two. Many others in the genre, Gilden for instance, have a style, have a body of work, can make people's eye's open with their virtuosity, but offer it as a meal that leaves you hungry again half an hour after finishing it. Or 'all tits and tinsel' in other words.
Steve
Juan Valdenebro
Truth is beauty
What I'm saying is, you don't have to like everything that you're told to like or taught. That's ridiculous. I understand that Frank's work is often used in university teachings, but that doesn't make me like it. Frank's got this historical significance but doesn't tickle my eyes right.
Please tell your teacher how much I enjoy your profile portrait.
Dear akremer,
I wasn't taught to like Frank's photographs: I admired him years before I cursed my career in photography.
The relevance of The Americans can make (and did) a great and for decades History of Photography teacher think if someone who photographs seriously, looks at those beautiful and deep images and says "they don't tickle my eyes right" possibly that person has his eyes wide shut or even will never understand what photography is about... Maybe there's something (a personal fear or any other thing) that made you classify that book as a not very interesting one to you... But you're in your right... If you want to keep that opinion or not...
Cheers,
Juan
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It never occurred to me that someone wouldn't like The Americans. 
semilog
curmudgeonly optimist
... Its the overall sequenced begining to end poetry of 'The Americans' that makes it stand well above other bodies of similar work. Its quiet, its loud, is sad, its happy, its cynical, its optimistic, its funny. And more importantly it was 'punk' photography that insighted hate, love, inspiration and castigation. In many ways 'The Americans' was the first body of work with attitude.
Well said.
And thats not something that can be said about many street photographers today, who can pull out of the bag a great individual image, but who's work leaves you feeling vacant because it has no opinion to offer, nothing that makes you think beyond the image about the people, about the politics, about the culture.
I offer John Brownlow's Human Traffic as a contemporary counterexample. I think that this level of talent, this kind of coherent and singular body of work, has been uncommon all along.
So, that is why 'The Americans' is such a good book, and Frank is such a good photographer. The only photographer that comes close is Koudelka, and is perhaps the greater of the two. Many others in the genre, Gilden for instance, have a style, have a body of work, can make people's eye's open with their virtuosity, but offer it as a meal that leaves you hungry again half an hour after finishing it. Or 'all tits and tinsel' in other words.
Bullseye.
akremer
Established
I just read an interesting piece on The Americans over and American Suburb X - great read.
Juan Valdenebro
Truth is beauty
Dear Doug,
I feel surprised: first a forum member gives an out of post theme opinion than can be easily considered confrontational or bad intentioned towards me (irony on my avatar), and then I invite him to really give an opinion on the avatar he talked about without any fine reason... Then today I see you did edit my words, but you left the other member's first and original confrontational comment... Wow! You even deleted my explanation on the avatar being a quick snap made by a girl... Why?
Cheers,
Juan
I feel surprised: first a forum member gives an out of post theme opinion than can be easily considered confrontational or bad intentioned towards me (irony on my avatar), and then I invite him to really give an opinion on the avatar he talked about without any fine reason... Then today I see you did edit my words, but you left the other member's first and original confrontational comment... Wow! You even deleted my explanation on the avatar being a quick snap made by a girl... Why?
Cheers,
Juan
tonal1
Established
The great thing about 'The Americans' is that it didn't exist before it was made!
New ideas don't stay that way.
New ideas don't stay that way.
Juan Valdenebro
Truth is beauty
Hi akremer,
I was really curious to understand what you didn't say clearly about my avatar... No one's ever told me anything about that image, and I found it interesting you decided to make public that you consider it something I just can't guess... I'd enjoy hearing your opinion: no confrontation here... And about my teacher's words, they were a bit rough to some of us when we were students, but were his real words...
Cheers,
Juan
I was really curious to understand what you didn't say clearly about my avatar... No one's ever told me anything about that image, and I found it interesting you decided to make public that you consider it something I just can't guess... I'd enjoy hearing your opinion: no confrontation here... And about my teacher's words, they were a bit rough to some of us when we were students, but were his real words...
Cheers,
Juan
lawrence
Veteran
I offer John Brownlow's Human Traffic as a contemporary counterexample. I think that this level of talent, this kind of coherent and singular body of work, has been uncommon all along.
Thanks for the link but to my eye these are just average street shots and in many the subject matter is too far away to be of interest; rather than any sense of intimacy (or alienation) you simply feel that the photographer was uncomfortable with what he was doing.
The problem that so many photographers have today is editing their work, possibly because it is just too easy to slap everything up on the web. The result is that viewers are subjected to endless collections of indifferent photographs in the possibility of finding one or two gems.
Sorry if this sounds overly negative but it's just my honest 2p worth...
Thanks for the link but to my eye these are just average street shots and in many the subject matter is too far away to be of interest; rather than any sense of intimacy (or alienation) you simply feel that the photographer was uncomfortable with what he was doing....
While I agree on the average part... I don't agree on the too far away part. I guess you are assuming the people are the only subject matter, but I feel that he did the right thing by including their surroundings. I can tell he was thinking of using his whole frame and made the choice to include more than just a tightly cropped person or people.
lawrence
Veteran
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_03/pages/012.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_03/pages/018.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_04/pages/011.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_05/pages/005.html
Random examples of what I was referring to. Looking through these again reinforces my feeling that they would benefit from some editing. Quite a few of the photos in these portfolios are at odd angles but for no particular reason. Yes, I know we all love Winogrand but his angles tend to enhance rather than detract...
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_03/pages/018.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_04/pages/011.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_05/pages/005.html
Random examples of what I was referring to. Looking through these again reinforces my feeling that they would benefit from some editing. Quite a few of the photos in these portfolios are at odd angles but for no particular reason. Yes, I know we all love Winogrand but his angles tend to enhance rather than detract...
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dfoo
Well-known
I like that last image alot. The eye contact through the crowd...
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_03/pages/012.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_03/pages/018.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_04/pages/011.html
http://www.johnbrownlow.com/phb/portfolios/humantraffic/portfolio_05/pages/005.html
Random examples of what I was referring to. Looking through these again reinforces my feeling that they would benefit from some editing. Quite a few of the photos in these portfolios are at odd angles but for no particular reason. Yes, I know we all love Winogrand but his angles tend to enhance rather than detract...
I agree that these are average, but I'm just saying the person might not be the only subject.
JohnL
Very confused
My personal beef about this book is that I thought it unbalanced - negative / pessimist - for a photo essay that ended up regarded as a sort of social survey of the USA of the time (whether or not it was intended as such from conception). Having said that, there are many great photos in it.
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