SausalitoDog
Well-known
Do you enjoy looking at it?
Do you enjoy shooting streets?
Then, no, I guess not 🙂
Do you enjoy shooting streets?
Then, no, I guess not 🙂
Ditto, and props to Keith for making me look.
I've watched this scenario very up close, twice. You are brave to document this, but then it may be therapeutic.
One day at a time. . . .
I'm glad someone took the trouble to take a look at those images.
The irony of discovering those amazing photographs of that woman in this thread is not lost on me ... or you I suspect! 🙂
Is Street Photography Dead?
Sadly, the way I see it - yes.
No, you can go and shoot streets all day long, and it does not even cost you much as we are shooting digital... But the main purpose of street photo is lost, I think. People, at least in US, besides few cities like NY, Chicago maybe... they don't live ion streets, they don't spend life time on streets. They just go somewhere. They live in malls, houses in burbs and restaurants.
Another thing, perhaps even more important: what breakthrugh in photo can you get on street now, that has not been already done?
So, yes. Street photo in it's classical form is dead, I beleave.
...really? NYC has to be one of the hardest places to shoot street photography in a sense. Anyone who has been there for longer than 3 days knows that people just walk from one shop to the next. Nothing really ALIVE happens on the streets in manhattan. It's a tourist city with hollow tourist characters and situations. Unless you REALLY know the city, hang in the hoods of harlem, drink with the bums at Coney Island, explore the alleyways of the lower east side....you're pretty much just getting people walking to work, going shopping or looking up.
Granted, you get the occasional character or group on the streets of Manhattan. But for the most part, you need to give up the white-washed comfort zones and really explore outside the rich/middle class areas to get anything truly great.
Doesn't this confirm my point?
Maybe it is dead. Has anyone practiced it at the level of a Frank or a Winogrand? Has anyone since the seventies created anything as vital with it? If they did, was there an audience?
Photography took a different turn in the eighties, away from the documentary style. It was a turn away from what interested me about the medium, but I understand that people need change. Something new.
If it is dead, maybe that is the best time to do it.
Here is an interesting related essay by Paul Graham that you might want to read...
http://www.paulgrahamarchive.com/writings_by.html
Thanks for the link! Very well written in my opinion. Offers really good insight....Street photography is not dead you just have to dig deeper to find the good stuff...
where can i find this underground in edmonton?
As a countryside dweller, I find the city a fascinating place and a welcome distraction. The sooner I finish the repairs to my campervan, the sooner I can get to one. 🙂