I would say the following rough sentence: Once upon a time the press was the only mass communicator. Then radio and cimematography appeared too. Still the visual hunger got its popularized answer by the magazines, who enabled to a great extent the material sustain of professional photographers, elevating their craft into a distinguishable art.
Here we are at the photo-essay that followed (or even started at - I don't know) WWII. The relationship between the photo-essay and street photography is not quite clear to me, but it seems that street photography was always there, even before the photo-essay, but it was the photo-essay that elevated it to great heights.
Then comes TV and afterwards color TV driving humaity crazy and stealing a lot of audience and resources from all other comunicators. The press and magazines became easy victyms and had to dramatically curtail expenses. Pro photogs where massively fired worldwide.
Photography also suffered from the competition of the new mass home device: video.
But now, and since quite a few and nice years, the internetization of the world has put the home computer at the center of a big fight against TV monopoly. And the internet, in its turn, has opened new horizons for photography in general, as well as for street photography.
Now, it seems to me that the rules by which we could say in the past, this person is a great photographer, this rules have changed. It seems to me too that the internet mating with photography is evolving too and we are to see a further blosoming of street photography.
But we live in a different world than that of HCB. All the pass great comunicators are still alive and co-existing one besides the other. Therefore, a great photographer is suddenly shown in a TV doco today, and tomorrow we forget his name. But the guy is still there doing his own.
The internet has opened new horizons, specially for us - the amateurs, those who cannot expect to make a good livehood from photography. We have an audience, a critical one, a selected one.
It is in this sense that I think that if we regard street photography as an art of the past, or see ourselves as fringe freaks, we are peeing out of hole. I have nothing against the founders of our art. On the contrary, they were the forerunners and nothing will take them this away, and better we become very much aware of their ways if we are not to repeat them at second rate quality.
But all this should not confuse us at least in one clear fact. We are seeing around a lot of great photographers, young, alive and kicking, and no formal recognition will byas my mind from what my eyes are actually seeing - great photographers, street photographers with great art under their wings.
It is with great pride that we can say these days, that besides looking at the past we can and must search for what is going on now.
Cheers,
Ruben