What to read?

konicaman

konicaman
Local time
12:07 PM
Joined
Apr 1, 2009
Messages
889
I am looking for suggestions on what to read - main subjects here being philosophy and/or history/biography/working methods of the masters.

So far I have read:

Susan Sontag. Didn´t understand half of it; the other half I had one heck of a time relating to photography. It made me wonder if Susan ever pressed the shutter button on a camera. This may of course be due to my limited intellectual capabilities...:rolleyes:

The ongoing moment. I understood that (at least in my imagination), but apart from giving some sleazy and rather interesting biographical details on the photographers, it gave me the impression that photography is something that only takes place in the US - and that American photographers only shoot: Benches, blind people, abandoned stores, and fences :confused:

OK - I am not trying to be provocative here - or start a discussion for that matter. Every person is entitled to his/her opinion. Just asking for suggestions suited for my limited intellect and rather pragmatic approach to things.
 
Four books I have found most enjoyable in this vein:

On Being A Photographer by David Hurn and Bill Jay (available from Lenswork.com)

Art & Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland (available from Amazon.com)

Seeing Is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees by Lawrence Weschler (available from Amazon.com)

The War of Art by Steven Pressfield (available from Amazon.com)

G
 
I second the Art of Fear, a book that I keep going back to
and I also recommend The Tao of Photography by Philippe L. Gross and S. I. Shapiro
 
The Nature of Photographs - Stephen Shore
Possibly the best primer on the photographic image published today.

Why People Photograph - Robert Adams
Brilliant essays from one of the most important landscape photographers alive.
 
Anything by David Vestal. His magazine articles, his two books...chock full of things that make one think about what one is doing with a camera.
 
Anything by David Vestal. His magazine articles, his two books...chock full of things that make one think about what one is doing with a camera.

Second David Vestal... I still have my copy of "The Craft of Photography" given to me for my birthday in 1975 . Great book.
 
Moby Dick is philosophy, history, autobiography and it explains the working methods of some master harpooners. I know you meant photography but I just finished it and it's probably the best book I've ever read, and it offers great insight.
 
The problem with a lot of the books about photography out there, especially the philosophical/criticism books, is that the authors are often people who know very little about and have little appreciation for...photography. Songtag and Dyer are both examples of that.

I can recommend anything by A.D. Coleman. I do not always agree with his ideas, but he truly loves photography and has a deep understanding of its history, technology, and aesthetics.

David Vestal is another one, and he is a working photographer, too. His column in Photo Techniques is the only thing worth reading in that magazine anymore, and is alone worth the price of the mag.

For a good introduction to photography's history, Beaumont Newhall's History of Photography is a good one. It suffers from the same problem all art history books have: the author projects his biases onto history. In Newhall's case, he champions modernism and dislikes pictorialism. As I said, all art historians have biases they work into their writing, and I think as a general introduction, Newhall's book is the best, as he wrote it for anyone to understand. Unlike some art history and criticism, you do not need a PhD in art history to understand what he's saying.
 
I think it might be useful to read these:

Robert Adams - Beauty in Photography
Gross and Shapiro - The Tao of Photography
Herrigel - Zen in the Art of Archery

But the most important thing to read, is this little essay by Bill Jay on pages 31-39 of this issue of Lenswork:
http://www.lenswork.com/lw31e.pdf as kindly suggested by johnwolf on this forum.
 
Try "The art of racing in the Rain" (Garth Stein). It's not a photography book. It's a book about dedication and loyalty to craft and heart. I highly recommend it. (a novel that takes only a couple evenings to read as well).
 
Interesting suggestions.

Love the "Tao of Photography." If you like that, you might also like "The practice of contemplative photography: seeing the world with fresh eyes" by Karr and Wood. It's a book I go back to again and again, and learn something new from it each time.
 
I thought On Photography brought up some interesting question and a lot of ethical issues but I disagree with her summation. I mean yeah we do keep needing a bigger bang or shock but I think the art form is bigger than that and the book which actually was a series of essays written in the 1970s is a bit dated reading it now. I do think Annie Leibowitz's strongest work was her images of Susan Sontag fighting terminal cancer.

Agree about the Weston Daybooks and Adams autobiography is worth a read to.

My favorite books the feature photography are of course

Robert Franks "The Americans"
Bruce Davidsons "East 100th St" "Brooklyn Gang" and "Subway"

Adams "Yosemite and the Range of Light"

Joel Meyerowitz "Cape Light"

Bressons "Mexican Notebook"

Roy DeCaravas "A Retospective"

Ralph Gibsons "Infanta"

Imogen Cunningham "Flora"

I gotta stop sorry...
 
Back
Top Bottom