dbarnes
Well-known
Do pictures tell stories?
http://life.time.com/history/w-eugene-smith-life-magazine-1951-photo-essay-nurse-midwife/#19
http://life.time.com/history/w-eugene-smith-life-magazine-1951-photo-essay-nurse-midwife/#19
This made me laugh.I agree. Yet, there are many people who think of this precise question in absolute/superlative terms: "all photographs must tell a story" or "any photograph that tells a story is mental laziness".
When people have a loose (if any) grasp of a concept, they associate another in order to make sense of it.
Do B&W photos tell stories differently than color photos? Do stories need color? Do photographs need stories? Do stories need photographs? Do the stories told by the photograph require good grammar? Are these stories in English, Simplified English, or a more universal Esperanto?
That last sentence sounds very true to me.Like an inkblot, most photos tell a story the viewer likes to "hear", and some are more evident than others.
When "telling a story" becomes a requirement, you take something away either from photography or the story-telling, and both will need each other to make the case for the other. This is not necessarily either a good or a bad thing, but it is a bad thing when you don't know why you're doing either.
This made me laugh.
I'd say it's Hyroglifics or perhaps the universal language of Charades?
That last sentence sounds very true to me.
Some people say that only good photos tell stories. I'd say they all do if you care to look. However, as you say, if the photographer does not know WHY they are doing something or have a clear understanding of the themes they want to explore it probably will not be a clear story or even a good photograph.
A black frame on the proofsheet may be the story of what the back of your lens cap looks like. 🙂
So you're saying that Winogrand and Mary Ellen Mark did not not have a clear understanding of what they were creating and didn't create amazing work because it kinda reads like that because they were two of many great photographers that believed a single photograph doesn't tell a story.
The problem when you try and narrow your vision and choices down to something that doesn't exist (a great single photograph tells a story) you wind up missing so much great work maybe in your own your work and the works of so many great photographers because of that preconceived idea.
I don't think that was typed anywhere.
Because a violin isn't being used to play beautiful music, and one says that the violin is not being played, it's not meant to say that Brahms did not have a clear understanding of opera. Because opera uses violins and a story, and Brahms used violins but not a story...etc. etc. Yes, that was quite a leap that came out of nowhere.
Brahms composed excellent music for violin. For composers whose ideals tell them that writing operas is the ultimate goal of a composer, Brahms was still a great composer.
However, there are some people that insist that any composition that is not an opera isn't worthy of being a musical composition. Pointing out that that statement isn't true isn't to be interpreted as a condemnation of opera. Unless, of course, by those who cannot possibly understand that music can exist outside of an operatic composition.
The same thing can and should be said of the dichotomy "all good photographs must tell a story".
Right.
But again apples and oranges.
If stories are apples and photographs are oranges, why are we requiring apples to be paired with oranges to become valid apples, but not requiring the same for oranges?
Shouldn't they just be either apples and/or oranges?
I don't know if I should laugh or cry...So you're saying that Winogrand and Mary Ellen Mark did not not have a clear understanding of what they were creating and didn't create amazing work because it kinda reads like that because they were two of many great photographers that believed a single photograph doesn't tell a story..
:bang: <- (...wondering if this tells a story...)The problem when you try and narrow your vision and choices down to something that doesn't exist (a great single photograph tells a story) you wind up missing so much great work maybe in your own your work and the works of so many great photographers because of that preconceived idea.
EDIT
:bang: <- (...wondering if this tells a story...)
I didn't read the whole answer, but yes and no. 😉
Really? ... surely you mean no and yes