Andrea Taurisano
il cimento
One of the things that fascinate me the most, when I watch interviews to great photographers, is when they tell the stories behind their famous shots. No matter how good or iconic the image, there is always much that one photo alone can't tell. Once that story or background is known, that image becomes even more valuable. I guess someone shares this, or not?
Anyway, I would love to see a photo that means something to you because of the story it has behind (whether that story comes easily through or it needs additional text). I'll start with one of mine.
This is a portrait of an Afghan man I met in the Hindu Kush mountains while surveying village threatening landslides just over a year ago. This man was walking for two days (each way) across steep mountains, with a piece of old bread in his pocket and the sky as a roof, simply to give some news to a man who lived in the next valley. As most Afghan men, he kept staring into my lens proud of being photographed. And there, at the closest focusing distance of a Summicron, you had two men face to face: one with a Leica, a PhD, a blog and the latest iPhone in his pocket, the other who owned virtually nothing but his great dignity (Badakhshan is among the world's poorest regions, where 1 of 4 children die before tuning 5yr).
Anyway, I would love to see a photo that means something to you because of the story it has behind (whether that story comes easily through or it needs additional text). I'll start with one of mine.
This is a portrait of an Afghan man I met in the Hindu Kush mountains while surveying village threatening landslides just over a year ago. This man was walking for two days (each way) across steep mountains, with a piece of old bread in his pocket and the sky as a roof, simply to give some news to a man who lived in the next valley. As most Afghan men, he kept staring into my lens proud of being photographed. And there, at the closest focusing distance of a Summicron, you had two men face to face: one with a Leica, a PhD, a blog and the latest iPhone in his pocket, the other who owned virtually nothing but his great dignity (Badakhshan is among the world's poorest regions, where 1 of 4 children die before tuning 5yr).

