cjago
Member
I'm playing with the idea that *great* street photography always has humour in it. Sometimes this is intentional (like Elliott Erwitt) and sometimes not (the HCB photo of the man leaping across the puddle is great partly because we know he is going to get his feet wet).
If anybody can point me in the direction of a body of street work which is in the great category where humour is not an intrinsic part I would be very grateful.
(There is the potential here for getting into a debate about whether something is street or documentary or portraiture and so on. That is not my intention. If the work you suggest is street to you I will take it like that and form my own opinion without throwing it back if I happen to disagree. The only type of work that I suggest we exclude is the area of war photography which could be considered street in some circumstances but might be a special case for the obvious reasons).
Cheers, Colin
www.auspiciousdragon.net
If anybody can point me in the direction of a body of street work which is in the great category where humour is not an intrinsic part I would be very grateful.
(There is the potential here for getting into a debate about whether something is street or documentary or portraiture and so on. That is not my intention. If the work you suggest is street to you I will take it like that and form my own opinion without throwing it back if I happen to disagree. The only type of work that I suggest we exclude is the area of war photography which could be considered street in some circumstances but might be a special case for the obvious reasons).
Cheers, Colin
www.auspiciousdragon.net