wlewisiii
Veteran
They got me interested; other things taught me the hows and whys.Mine were National Geographic and Life magazine. If you don't automatically understand, there is no way I could explain it to you.
They got me interested; other things taught me the hows and whys.Mine were National Geographic and Life magazine. If you don't automatically understand, there is no way I could explain it to you.
Just had my 30 year old copy signed by JM at the Photographers Gallery in London. He was an absolute gentleman and spent a long time speaking with many people in a long queue to meet him.Cape Light by Joel Meyerowitz (1979) was pivotal for me. Recently graduated with a BFA in Photography, I was still struggling with my indoctrination into the One True Path of photography: the Zone System, the f/64 school of seeing, and, of course, the notion that real photography is in black and white, period. Insecure about shooting color, and not drawn to the overblown heroics of classic landscape photography, I found Cape Light to be a revelation, and, more importantly, permission. Meyerowitz was photographing a place I knew and loved, and seeing it in a way that aligned with the sort of vision I was hesitant to allow myself until then.
Cape Light is a masterpiece in its own right, of course. But I'm grateful that it came into my life when it did, and influenced me as it did.
I have plenty of books from usual street photography suspects of film only era.
They helped to step away from typical forums primitivism in photography. It took me years of practice and studying. Not just pictures glazing. Which is, sorry, primitive. But reading about those photogs from those who been close. Watching interviews with photogs and reading texts they wrote. This is just as important as looking at pictures.
A superb selection!I started taking pictures at 14 or 15 but didn't start buying photo books until my late 20s. So I don't have any that were with me since the beginning. I will say that I like
The Decisive Moment by Cartier-Bresson published by Aperture
the 2008 Steidl edition of The Americans by Robert Frank that my public library has
Exiles by Koudelka
At Home and the World by Marc Riboud
Those are all very influential on my pictures and I review them often. For color, Modern Color by Fred Herzog, The Complete Uncommon Places by Shore and Souls Against the Concrete by Khalik Allah. I also like Deus Ex Machina by Ralph Gibson, despite being physically unwieldy. I also have a French language book called La Photographie Française, a survey by Claude Nori of the history of French photography.