Enoyarnam
Member
Dear all,
I first became aware of the work of Sebastião Salgado when I saw his Migration and Children series at the Barbican Centre, London. I was struck by their calm and candid nature. Seen on their own rather than in an excitable crowd the character of the children really shone through. Salgado gave each child a moment of calm in an otherwise difficult life. All the children he took photos of had been forcibly torn from their roots. Some had lost members of their family and others had yet to find them.
The question I ask is this. How important is it that a rangefinder photographer is able to produce portrait photographs and to do so in relation to the very highest standard?
I first became aware of the work of Sebastião Salgado when I saw his Migration and Children series at the Barbican Centre, London. I was struck by their calm and candid nature. Seen on their own rather than in an excitable crowd the character of the children really shone through. Salgado gave each child a moment of calm in an otherwise difficult life. All the children he took photos of had been forcibly torn from their roots. Some had lost members of their family and others had yet to find them.
The question I ask is this. How important is it that a rangefinder photographer is able to produce portrait photographs and to do so in relation to the very highest standard?