surfer dude
Well-known
I took the photograph below this week, in the National Gallery of Victoria - a public gallery in Melbourne, Australia. Entry to this part is free, and one can wander around at will. Photography is allowed.
I'd taken a few earlier pictures of the statue, trying to contectualize it in an interesting way, but without much success. Walking back towards it later, I noticed this circle of students around it and my mind immediately went into "the zone" - great context now, graphic possibilities etc and walked briskly towards a point that I thought would embrace all that I wanted. However once I raised the camera to my eye, the teacher (or whatever she was) out front of the class turned her attention to me, raised her arms (see picture) and called to me "no students - you can take pictures of the statue ("Circe" by Bertram Mackennal 1893) but not the students".
I didn't take any other pictures (by that time all the students and most of the other people around had turned to look at me), muttered "no worries" or something and wandered off. I heard her explain to the students something along the lines that "you never know what some people are going to use photographs of you for". Made me feel just bloody wonderful!
I have checked the websites of the applicable state laws and the gallery and I don't seem to have contravened any laws. If I had, we wouldn't be having this discussion a I would have destroyed the negative.
It's not a great photo, but I quite like it - much as I'd previsualized and even better with the juxtaposition of the arms of the two "ladies".
Over to you - should I have asked permission first? Should I have taken it at all? Was I in the wrong? Am I in the wrong to post the photo here?
More broadly, where does this leave street/candid photography?
I'd taken a few earlier pictures of the statue, trying to contectualize it in an interesting way, but without much success. Walking back towards it later, I noticed this circle of students around it and my mind immediately went into "the zone" - great context now, graphic possibilities etc and walked briskly towards a point that I thought would embrace all that I wanted. However once I raised the camera to my eye, the teacher (or whatever she was) out front of the class turned her attention to me, raised her arms (see picture) and called to me "no students - you can take pictures of the statue ("Circe" by Bertram Mackennal 1893) but not the students".
I didn't take any other pictures (by that time all the students and most of the other people around had turned to look at me), muttered "no worries" or something and wandered off. I heard her explain to the students something along the lines that "you never know what some people are going to use photographs of you for". Made me feel just bloody wonderful!
I have checked the websites of the applicable state laws and the gallery and I don't seem to have contravened any laws. If I had, we wouldn't be having this discussion a I would have destroyed the negative.
It's not a great photo, but I quite like it - much as I'd previsualized and even better with the juxtaposition of the arms of the two "ladies".
Over to you - should I have asked permission first? Should I have taken it at all? Was I in the wrong? Am I in the wrong to post the photo here?
More broadly, where does this leave street/candid photography?