Archiver
Veteran
Maxim Dondyuk, Ukrainian photojournalist, is not a member of Magnum but has been a finalist and winner in Magnum photography awards. His documentation of the war in Ukraine and other Ukrainian issues is vast and incisive. He started with a Nikon D70, went to the D700, D3S, got a D810 in 2015, and a D850 in 2023. He got a Fuji GFX100 in 2022 and Leica gave him a M11 for a year in 2023. Someone on RFF posted about him a couple of years ago, and I've been following his work ever since.
www.lensculture.com

Ukraine: Culture of the Confrontation - Photographs by Maxim Dondyuk | LensCulture
The winter of 2013 changed Ukraine forever — three months of bloody clashes, tears, fear, Molotov cocktails, burning car tires, deaths, and the struggle between groups with two opposing world views


A Long-Lasting Battle
This photo essay contains graphic images. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
www.truthinphotography.org
JohnWolf
Well-known
Thank you for that. Very moving pictures and interviews. The things we do to each other, and for what? Heartbreaking.Maxim Dondyuk, Ukrainian photojournalist, is not a member of Magnum but has been a finalist and winner in Magnum photography awards. His documentation of the war in Ukraine and other Ukrainian issues is vast and incisive. He started with a Nikon D70, went to the D700, D3S, got a D810 in 2015, and a D850 in 2023. He got a Fuji GFX100 in 2022 and Leica gave him a M11 for a year in 2023. Someone on RFF posted about him a couple of years ago, and I've been following his work ever since.
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Ukraine: Culture of the Confrontation - Photographs by Maxim Dondyuk | LensCulture
The winter of 2013 changed Ukraine forever — three months of bloody clashes, tears, fear, Molotov cocktails, burning car tires, deaths, and the struggle between groups with two opposing world viewswww.lensculture.com
![]()
A Long-Lasting Battle
This photo essay contains graphic images. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.www.truthinphotography.org
Last edited:
Out to Lunch
Ventor
Uppsala University has identified 285 distinct armed conflicts since 1946.The things we do to each other
Out to Lunch
Ventor
Martin Parr
Analog: Leica M2 with 35 and 50mm lenses; Plaubel Makina—he found them unreliable and switched to Mamiyas and Rolleiflexes; a Nikon SLR.
Digital: various Canon 5D models and, more recently, Fuji mirrorless cameras.
Analog: Leica M2 with 35 and 50mm lenses; Plaubel Makina—he found them unreliable and switched to Mamiyas and Rolleiflexes; a Nikon SLR.
Digital: various Canon 5D models and, more recently, Fuji mirrorless cameras.
Godfrey
somewhat colored
Well executed SLR viewfinders are excellent, and in particular: the larger the format, the better. However, light transmission when you get down to APS-C and FourThirds format really suffers, and it is with these formats that the EVF really comes into its own as a "better" tool for focusing and framing ... as long as I'm not in very bright sunlight, they work fine.
I use the Visoflex 020 on M10-R/-M quite a lot when I'm doing negative copy, tabletop, and indoor work, and of course it gives me access to using Macro and long lenses that an RF camera doesn't ordinarily work well with.
No one camera is perfect for everything. This is why I still have a complete FourThirds system alongside the Leica M system and the Hasselblad V-plus-X system setups. They all have their uses and purpose.
G
I use the Visoflex 020 on M10-R/-M quite a lot when I'm doing negative copy, tabletop, and indoor work, and of course it gives me access to using Macro and long lenses that an RF camera doesn't ordinarily work well with.
No one camera is perfect for everything. This is why I still have a complete FourThirds system alongside the Leica M system and the Hasselblad V-plus-X system setups. They all have their uses and purpose.
G
JohnGellings
Well-known
I never knew he used Rolleiflexes... for which project? A switch to a Mamiya 7 would make sense based on the aspect ratio of known projects. Never heard that he uses Fuji either, but honestly I haven't seen anything since the Canon DSLRs.Martin Parr
Analog: Leica M2 with 35 and 50mm lenses; Plaubel Makina—he found them unreliable and switched to Mamiyas and Rolleiflexes; a Nikon SLR.
Digital: various Canon 5D models and, more recently, Fuji mirrorless cameras.
wlewisiii
Just another hotel clerk
The Limiteds are why I am really loving my recent foray into Pentax. The HD 20-40 limited is easily the finest zoom I've ever used but the primes are exquisite.I found Leica M lenses seized up less than AiS Nikkors. I had not tried MF Pentaxes, but the HD Limiteds will go with me on my next trip.
Bob Michaels
nobody special
I had and interesting discussion with a Magnum photographer just before the opening of his exhibit. He had spent time as a part of the White House press pool but did a personal project "behind the velvet rope" of everything that went on behind the scenes. His personal work was b&w. In a group conversation, he told of his camera bag being run over by a truck and needing to replace his Leica and lens. He knew his camera was a M-6 but when asked what replacement lens he paused, them finally said "the Leica 35mm lens" When probed as to which Leica 35mm lens, it became apparent he had no clue. He could not has held his own in a RFF discussion of the different models and versions of Leica 35mm lenses.
Someone asked him in that discussion about the time it took at shoot a full manual camera. While never glancing down at the M-6 hanging around his neck, he quickly set shutter, aperture, and focus, all by feel in about a second. Then he handed his camera to the guy who asked the original question and asked "slow like this?" The questioner commented not only was the exposure set, but the focus was dead on between the two of them. So Mr. Magnum may not have know much about the lens but had used the camera enough so it was totally reflex to use.
In the formal presentation, he mentioned Tri-X by name several times. I asked him about that later. His comment was "Kodak has been very good to me".
Someone asked him in that discussion about the time it took at shoot a full manual camera. While never glancing down at the M-6 hanging around his neck, he quickly set shutter, aperture, and focus, all by feel in about a second. Then he handed his camera to the guy who asked the original question and asked "slow like this?" The questioner commented not only was the exposure set, but the focus was dead on between the two of them. So Mr. Magnum may not have know much about the lens but had used the camera enough so it was totally reflex to use.
In the formal presentation, he mentioned Tri-X by name several times. I asked him about that later. His comment was "Kodak has been very good to me".
Archiver
Veteran
Now that's skill. Love it. There was a similar article on Luminous Landscape some years ago like that, where someone dialed in the focus of his Summicron 35 by feel and handed it to someone on the other side of the table, and it was spot on.Someone asked him in that discussion about the time it took at shoot a full manual camera. While never glancing down at the M-6 hanging around his neck, he quickly set shutter, aperture, and focus, all by feel in about a second. Then he handed his camera to the guy who asked the original question and asked "slow like this?" The questioner commented not only was the exposure set, but the focus was dead on between the two of them. So Mr. Magnum may not have know much about the lens but had used the camera enough so it was totally reflex to use.
I wonder what that meant, whether Kodak sponsored him financially, if they gave him boatloads of free Tri-X and processing, or both.In the formal presentation, he mentioned Tri-X by name several times. I asked him about that later. His comment was "Kodak has been very good to me".
Godfrey
somewhat colored
This is kinda what I expect of a professional photographer. It is, in large part, how I handle my cameras ... I rarely spend more than a second or two adjusting anything. I know what settings to use for most lighting and scene conditions, and I've been setting focus distance by estimation and scale for 50+ years......Someone asked him in that discussion about the time it took at shoot a full manual camera. While never glancing down at the M-6 hanging around his neck, he quickly set shutter, aperture, and focus, all by feel in about a second.
...
Which is why most fully automated cameras often just annoy me and get in my way. 🤷♂️
G
gzisis69
Established
Thats a great story that shows that the most important thing in photography is to photograph. I have a friend who changes his equipment every 6 months or maybe earlier and is never happy with what he has. He takes many photos but all of them are crap. He once gave to a common friend a pentax mx he didnt want with a 50 or 35 lens i can not remember exactly. The guy had no clue what to do with the camera since he was using his phone mostly. He invested 1 week to learn the camera and how to use it and he took some great pictures in his first 2-3 films. One has to got the eye for photography but he has to train it too to evolve. Everyone can learn light, composition distance if he trains a lot. But very few have the eye to take a photo.I had and interesting discussion with a Magnum photographer just before the opening of his exhibit. He had spent time as a part of the White House press pool but did a personal project "behind the velvet rope" of everything that went on behind the scenes. His personal work was b&w. In a group conversation, he told of his camera bag being run over by a truck and needing to replace his Leica and lens. He knew his camera was a M-6 but when asked what replacement lens he paused, them finally said "the Leica 35mm lens" When probed as to which Leica 35mm lens, it became apparent he had no clue. He could not has held his own in a RFF discussion of the different models and versions of Leica 35mm lenses.
Someone asked him in that discussion about the time it took at shoot a full manual camera. While never glancing down at the M-6 hanging around his neck, he quickly set shutter, aperture, and focus, all by feel in about a second. Then he handed his camera to the guy who asked the original question and asked "slow like this?" The questioner commented not only was the exposure set, but the focus was dead on between the two of them. So Mr. Magnum may not have know much about the lens but had used the camera enough so it was totally reflex to use.
In the formal presentation, he mentioned Tri-X by name several times. I asked him about that later. His comment was "Kodak has been very good to me".
xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
They probably now use the latest iphone in their pocket.
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