Goodyear
Happy-snap ninja
Interesting. I've pondered this many times, and often been consumed with middle-class guilt over it.Michael I. said:I think photographing homeless people is immoral
a)better sell your fancy camera and buy them a hot meal
(By the by, I deliberately don't photograph people living on the street, because to me it feels like I am deriving the pleasure I get from making an image from their miusfortune. This would be different were I making the image for some purpose other than my own recreation.)
But to return to Michael's observation...
My wife and I support a variety of charities, mostly those working against poverty issues. Some we support practically, some financially, some by making different decisions as to what groceries we buy and where. I say this not to say "Oh look, aren't we good", but rather to provide context.
She and I both enjoy photography greatly. When we go out shooting together, depending on where and what we are trying to photograph, we can be carrying along equipment that represents a frightening financial investment (not in the sense of expecting financial return - you know what I mean).
Or if we go out somewhere, we're travelling in a car that costs us several hundred pounds a month in repayments, fuel, insurance, maintenance and so on.
Or if we get a few days off together, it's a rare enough occurrence that we won't think too long at all about spending a similar several hundred pounds on a nice hotel, nice food, nice entertainment, travel, etc.
These and other characteristics of our lifestyle I find incredibly and increasingly difficult to reconcile with our ideals. Does our really quite comfortable activism cancel out a lifestyle that is unavoidably decadent when measured by global standards? Or is it just hypocrisy?
I am quite often tempted to photograph people sitting begging in Edinburgh. There's a Starbucks on one of the really upmarket shopping streets in town, and there's always someone begging outside. That would make a powerful and provocative image that could be relevant to all kinds of observations from local capitalist culture to global corporate culture. But it's all these thoughts, that make me shuffle my feet and mumble, that stay my hand. I think I'm concerned and respectful and idealistic, but I wonder am I just telling myself that to make me feel better.
I wouldn't be prepared to make such a blanket statement as "photographing homeless people is immoral". But I'm pretty sure that for me, if I was just out shooting for a Saturday morning, then it would be... not quite right, at least.
I'm sorry if this has strayed just a little bit OT. Or even OTT. I don't know.
But to me it's all relevant, because it's a large chunk of what informs my thoughts on the subject.