ian_watts
Ian Watts
Eagerly awaiting:Guy Bourdin: Untouched
Early monochrome from the 50s, looks fascinating, spotted from here:
It's a great book and was a real eye-opener for me.
Eagerly awaiting:Guy Bourdin: Untouched
Early monochrome from the 50s, looks fascinating, spotted from here:
It's a great book and was a real eye-opener for me.
Hi Mark A. Fisher,
" Wright Morris - "Photographs and Words"
Wright Morris - "Time Pieces: Photographs, Writings and Memory"
I remember being captivated by Wright Morris, but I didn't see any discussion of his work and, aside from a few pictures in magazines, I haven't seen many of his photographs.
What interested you about Morris?
I am currently working on a project that would lend itself well to inclusion of text. Morris' approach to "text-photo" combinations is similar to what I'd like to achieve, but not as lengthy on the text component - he was a novelist, after all. Morris is a good source for this project. "Time Pieces" is an excellent collection to discover his philosophy and methodology for the written/photo combination.
I also have been looking at "Approaching Nowhere", by Jeff Bruows, "Allen Ginsberg's Photographs", and others who have included the written word as an expansion/elaboration/extension of their images. On the flip side I have heavily immersed myself in all the works of Nathan Lyons, whose collections were completely sans text - "Notations in Passing", "Riding First Class on the Titanic", "Return Your Seats to the Upright Position", and "After 9/11", plus the classic collections of "Walker Evans: American Photographs" and Robert Frank's "The Americans".
I don't know if I'll ever decide to use a text or non-text approach for my own work, but merely exploring both approaches has been a terrific excuse to buy more books! I like the challenge presented by Lyons to create a cinematic structure of images that interact with each other without further explanation or guidance for the viewer, but many of the photographs I have made also have stories to be told beyond the image alone. A perfect example of that process would be "West of Last Chance", photographs by Peter Brown, text by Kent Haruf. For the moment at least that is the standard set for me, a template for how best to proceed. Haruf's words are wonderfully crafted, his story rich with simplicity. Brown's photographs are crisp, clean, spare, startling in their honesty.
I'll figure this out - text vs. non-text - and then the difficult part will be discovering if there is an audience to embrace it. Hope springs eternal.
Mark
If you're open to suggestions of additional material to explore...
Jim Goldberg, Rich & Poor. Text written by the subjects of his photos.
Leo Rubenfein, Wounded Cities. Heavy on text, with photos throughout.
The obvious and classic text/Photograph documentary project, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men by Agee & Evans
Mark,
Another example of minimal text (also provided by the subjects)...
Bill Owens, Suburbia (Early 1970's documetray project)
I love this book! One of the first examples of documentary work I saw as a photo student way back in 1979 or so. He has another collection out now, in color, but Suburbia is far superior to this later work IMHO.
Thanks for these suggestions!
m
Agreed.
If you want to follow up and dig a little deeper, look up John Collier, anthropologist and educator who was an innovator in the field of visual anthropology. He was a teacher of Owens and a big influence, I think.
Andrey Tarkovsky: Instant Light (Polaroids)
one of those out of print small albums with astronomical prices (sticker price 16.95£), but hell I wanted it for too long.