Biber
Established
Slightly out of Focus. I'm not sure which category it belongs to but it was very interesting to read.
sleepyhead said:A REVIEW OF "BYSTANDER: A History of Street Photography"
Hi Everyone. I've read "Bystander" recently, pretty much cover to cover, and leafed through the pictures many times. I can highly recommend it as a HISTORICAL overview of street photography (loosely defined as "photography of human activity in public places" - note this is my definition as an impression of what I read/saw in the book). One nice touch is that the editors, in general, have chosen pictures that haven't been very widely published (i.e., not the same kertez, HCB, Winograd, etc. pics that we've already seen a hundred times). The text is quite well written and not too dry.
If you're after TECHNIQUE information, then "Bystander" won't be very useful, it pretty much avoids the subject. I did learn however, that people like Winograd used Tri-X pushed to around 1200 ASA. ANYBODY KNOW WHAT DEVELOPER? His pictures don't typically strike me as GRAIN-CITY.
A small disappointment for me (being a big fan of Robert Frank), is that while "Bystander" included pretty much a whole chapter on Frank, NONE of his pictures were shown due to the fact that RF doesn't allow reporduction of his photos in books that he's not directly involved in. Interesting, huh?
FINALLY, the edition of "Bystander" that i have had a nice "Update" on Street photography from the 1970s to the 1990s. There were some great photos in that final section, but also some that weren't better than some I've seen by Rangefinder Forum members in my casual browsing. PRETTY ENCOURAGING, HUH!
Best regards,
sleepyhead
Biber said:Slightly out of Focus. I'm not sure which category it belongs to but it was very interesting to read.
I'm almost done reading it and I like it very much. The text is quite heavy (in a good way); I have to take it in in small doses. Lots of thoughtful quotes by the man himself.RML said:Just today I ordered "Henri Cartier-Bresson and the Artless Art". No idea whether it is a good read or not but what I read on Amazon sounded good.
StuartR said:I am reading a book on him by Pierre Borhan. It is excellent. I am also reading on Jacques-Henri Lartigue who is also very interesting and a lot of fun. My friend who works at Yale Press gave me their giant "History of Japanese Photography" which I still want to go through carefully. Beyond that, I am reading Gunter Osterloh's "Leica M Advanced Photo Course" which is excellent.
For daily reading however, I am reading Henning Mankell's Swedish detective novels. They are fabulous. I am on book five or so -- "One Step Behind". I highly recommend them to anyone. I guess they are outselling Harry Potter in Germany, but they are still not that widely known in the US.
StuartR said:Are there any translated into English? I can read Russian, but it takes me a long time and I would expect that it is more the story than the writing that makes him good no? I will make the effort for Pushkin or Nabokov, but for a detektivy...I don't know. Any particular ones you recommend?
RayPA said:OK. I'll add my non-photo related reading: Blink by Malcolm Gladwell.
🙂
JOE1951 said:I've seen that in the bookstores, anygood?
My understanding is that it's about how people "think and do" before actually realizing they are thinking about what they are doing...
does that make sense, or am I way off track?
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