sanmich
Veteran
Very good stuff. Thanks John
his curiosity and passion for the surrounding world is refreshing
his curiosity and passion for the surrounding world is refreshing
I really enjoyed his photos and I find the critique of them a bit misguided and smacking of envy. They perhaps look posed as a result of a good deal of patience on his part...or maybe he just raised the camera at the right moment. Either way, he was there.
I think the negative comments against his work are a bit rich coming from members of a forum that is filled with images of cats, lawn chairs and brick walls.
And I disagree completely that they lose something due to the fact that they are in color. When I was a press photographer in Washington, DC and we had the White House Press Photographers Association annual image contest, the running joke was that you could take any image convert it to Black & White and win an award with it.
Everyone has their opinions but the negativity kinda got to me today. I hope everyone has a terrific weekend.
I really enjoyed his photos and I find the critique of them a bit misguided and smacking of envy. They perhaps look posed as a result of a good deal of patience on his part...or maybe he just raised the camera at the right moment. Either way, he was there.
I think the negative comments against his work are a bit rich coming from members of a forum that is filled with images of cats, lawn chairs and brick walls.
And I disagree completely that they lose something due to the fact that they are in color. When I was a press photographer in Washington, DC and we had the White House Press Photographers Association annual image contest, the running joke was that you could take any image convert it to Black & White and win an award with it.
Everyone has their opinions but the negativity kinda got to me today. I hope everyone has a terrific weekend.
Yup, making a good color photo is just that easy 🙄
Then again why bother shooting in color since it will never be "music" like B&W?
Thanks for posting this, John. I like his work a lot. He has a wonderful eye and a great sense of humor in his work.
I find the whole discussion regarding his work looking staged to be a bit odd. In his own words, he is interested in "facts" and not "fiction". I'm guessing the staged look to be another way of saying that he has a great compositional style.
For as long as human beings inhabit the earth we will find fascination looking at ourselves, or more accurately, those we think different to ourselves. I find it ironic that despite the human condition having remained largely unchanged since we first trod the earth, our apparent circumstances have and it is the circumstances that allow us to see our own reflections. Knowing history cannot provide us instant self-realisation and therefore it for every generation - every individual - to learn and figure things out for themselves. Nobody wakes up at 16 years old having read some good books on the topic knowing all there is about what it is to be human! With each generation we ask who and what we are and this, to me, is what street photography is often about.
Matt's work is very much on the photographic/visual side rather than the social commentary but this is my response to the idea that street photography died after Fran's Americans! I would argue that Frank was very much a documentary shooter who shot a great deal on the street rather than what we would perhaps describe nowadays as a 'modern street photographer' engaged more in the visual side of things rather than the message. He is arguably far closer to HCB therefore than Frank IMHO. Frank and HCB have very little in common, surely?
I agree that Matt has selected a tight niche, but he has done it very well and it does not mean that he will not diversify in time. Clearly he is not a social documentary photographer, but I suspect he could turn his hand to all sorts of things based on what I have seen. He sees things most people dont and that can take you places.
very interesting...some nice shots there...one camera, one lens, no bag...