Keith
The best camera is one that still works!
I think he's a lot like Warhol ... he was an event in space and time as much he was an artist!
I think that they weren't a product of his talent dropping off, but instead they were part of an attempt to test the limits of street photography, to see whether he could make his work to be as mundane, random, and accidental as possible and still come out with something worth looking at. Taken this way, those last photographs are as potent and troubling as anything Winogrand ever did.
If you give one man five darts and only three of them are in the bulls-eye, and you give Winogrand 50,000 darts and only five of them are in the bulls-eye, who is the better shooter?
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I like his point at the end, pertaining to GW's latter work:
quote:
I think that they weren't a product of his talent dropping off, but instead they were part of an attempt to test the limits of street photography, to see whether he could make his work to be as mundane, random, and accidental as possible and still come out with something worth looking at.
Taken this way, those last photographs are as potent and troubling as anything Winogrand ever did.
~Joe
OK, so if The Beatles takes out 1,000 songs and about 100 are extremely good, and only 500 are really bad...and The Winogrand Experience takes out 50,000 songs and only five are extremely good (40,000 are really bad), is The Winogrand Experience a good band?
gns said:Do music fans give a crap about this? Nobody goes to a concert and wonders how many bad songs, false starts, etc the musician made before coming up with the good songs in his performance.
Making photographs is not like throwing darts at a target. You are not trying to do the identical thing over and over. You are trying to create something. You are trying to say or reveal or share something new...about the subject, the medium, yourself maybe.
Excellent point. Fans do not give a crud. I would go further and say that a properly curated book or exhibit is like a properly edited record or concert programme. Some need more post-production than others.
Was Winogrand trying to create photographs, or just snap them?
I think that, if you realize that whether one thinks of throwing darts a sport or a pastime, the focus and the results are completely different. And one realizes if whether one's doing it with training (as a sportsman would), or merely chance (not as a sportsman would).
And before someone says "bad analogy": yes, bad analogy. All analogies are bad because in the analogy the subjects are not the same. They're only good if you agree with them.
If you give one man five darts and only three of them are in the bulls-eye, and you give Winogrand 50,000 darts and only five of them are in the bulls-eye, who is the better shooter?
I guess art is about the result and not the hit ratio, so you can answer the Q. yourself.😉
Clever Editing is 90% of the success a choice that was taken from Winogrands later work others choose for him Curators and such. Saying his later work is lacking is imo simple stupid because Winogrand might have chosen other photographs that would have blown away the art world but he did not for the simple reason that he was dead. Furthermore looking at some of his later work I found a lot of similiarities to his earlier work. He just seemed more driven (dynamic) than in his younger years.
No clothes on the emperor.
When historians look back on Winogrand in the future they will question why he was considered "great". He left behind a mountain of garbage.
If you give one man five darts and only three of them are in the bulls-eye, and you give Winogrand 50,000 darts and only five of them are in the bulls-eye, who is the better shooter?
Museums, magazines, galleries, and newspapers do not keep such stats... because photography is not target shooting.
At least historians will be looking at him. I feel sad for anyone who truly thinks he has no talent at all.