Gabriel M.A.
My Red Dot Glows For You
I thought the most reproduced photo was one of Che Guevara.
The Iwo Jima photo is certainly a very famous and powerful one.
The Iwo Jima photo is certainly a very famous and powerful one.
The quote is from Digital Journalist, which have a couple of very interesting articles on the great man.In Times Square on V.J. Day, I saw a sailor running along the street grabbing every girl in sight. I was running ahead of him with my Leica looking back over my shoulder. Then suddenly, in a flash, I saw something white being grabbed. I turned around and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse...I took exactly four pictures. It was done within a few seconds.
George S. said:I guess it depends on what generation you're from, which photos have the most "impact" on you. And it seems most of our choices have to do with war or violent figures, I guess it's because they have impacted us the most and affected our lives or the lives of our family members?.....
copake_ham said:Never saw THAT one - maybe you could upload it! 😀
Jocko said:Sorry to hi-jack the question - but for the sake of historical completeness, here is the tennis girl picture. It was an Athena poster and c.1977 was more or less compulsory on the bedroom walls of spotty British youth. Being of a very slightly later generation, albeit equally untroubled by soap, I prefered Kate Bush. 🙂
allthumbs said:You make a great point George. Leave it to a bunch of photographers to believe that the most reproduced photographs must have great aesthetic or documentary value. 🙂 I'll bet no one here thought of Farrah Fawcett's cheesecake poster, or others of that ilk.
I'm glad you mentioned Einstein, too, as that has to be one of my "most seens", although the number of his portraits in common circulation probably reduces the number for any one of them.
Did you consider that the flag on the moon was appropriated by MTV as a logo and broadcast umpteen times a day for years? Does broadcasting count as "reproduction"? Please no one answer that last one or this thread will go on forever.
AGN said:..or others of that ilk...hmm, Marilyn Monroe has been mentioned twice.
AGN
AGN said:..or others of that ilk...hmm, Marilyn Monroe has been mentioned twice.
AGN
copake_ham said:The most iconic image of "...that ilk" would have to be the Mona Lisa - and the original is not a photo - although it has been photographically reproduced many times.
[Note: I am omitting the BVM because: a) she is not of "...that ilk"; and, b) because of (a) I don't want to be struck down by lightning! 😀 ]
allthumbs said:There are no photos of the BVM, AFAIK.
Yes, I think paintings are way OT. Even icons per se are way OT, despite the fact that some photographs are iconic. The issue I was addressing was "most reproduced photo", not "most iconic". Unfortunately, that gives an advantage to the most commercially lucrative, though again that may happen to be the most iconic (in the pop sense). Derivative reproduction.... yeah, grey area--and that would also include what MTV did to the man on the moon.
allthumbs said:IMO those photos are in a different league.
AGN said:Is that to say that the Marilyn Monroe photo, with her skirt in the air, is not cheesecake photography.
Art
allthumbs said:Heh, I wasn't even thinking of that one, not to mention the nudes. Maybe it's the B&W but yes, Art, even those photographs, somehow, seem far more classy than Farah in a tank top.
JoshRoot said:The Iwo Jima photo was taken on my birthday (though not the day of my birth), who knew? That's just the sort of useless fact that will stick in my brain and push out something useful like the develoment time for Tri-x in d-76.
I actually think the VJ day photo gives the Iwo one a good run for it's money. I wouldn't bet against either of them in a "most reproduced war photo" race.