T
Todd.Hanz
Guest
impressive photography, the rest is politics!
Todd
Todd
CNN profiting from the photographer?
"profiting" made me laugh. anyone who does this sort of work knows there is no money in it.
beyond that, I find the images skilfull but a little sentimental and overly dramatic. Heavy-handed postprocessing objectifies the subjects a bit. They become archetypes rather than people.
If anything, it seems to me that Jeffries' intention was the exact opposite of exploitation.
the photographer shows great skill, and the stories the photos tell enrich all of mankind. Period.
CNN profiting from the photographer?
"profiting" made me laugh. anyone who does this sort of work knows there is no money in it.
beyond that, I find the images skilfull but a little sentimental and overly dramatic. Heavy-handed postprocessing objectifies the subjects a bit. They become archetypes rather than people.
"An ounce of experience is worth a ton of theory" V.I. Lenin.
Does the photographer know what its like to be in that situation? Is he doing this from a position of privilege? Am sure he has a comfortable home and lifestyle to go back to after. His "subjects" don't have that luxury and I very much doubt they will be invited to any private views nor get to see how they have been portrayed, their opinions don't really figure. I have a problem with that. If you really have to take photos of homeless people go cover a demonstration where they are fighting for their rights, dignity and resources to help them off the streets, that is empowering. Poverty porn no matter how good it is, is just camera fodder to be manipulated and profited from.
Care to explain how?
This is getting perilously close to "what is art." How does the Mona Lisa enrich mankind? Michelangelo's David? What's a soup can got to do with the human condition? Why show human suffering? What purpose does a symphony have? Aren't we exploiting sharecroppers when we play the blues? Allow me to roll my eyes at these questions.