kully
Happy Snapper
Wow.
I was in the bookshop this evening, just waiting for my wife when I chanced upon this book in the photography section, which normally never changes.
I should be in bed, I need to get up early tomorrow and I'm been sitting in a hideously contorted position as the furniture is all piled up for a new floor being put in tomorrow.
But I read it all the way through and it's the most refreshing 'photo book' I've ever read.
The book concerns a photographer, French, who goes to Afghanistan in 1986 on his first photo assignment with "Medicines sans frontieres". The photographer's name is Lefèvre I havn't read the preamble so I am assuming Guibert is the illustrator.
The book needs an illustrator as it is in the form of a graphic novel but interwoven with the painted frames are individual and multiple frames from Lefèvre's contact sheets and a few bigger enlargements.
I hate Amazon, one day they will crack their whips in triumph over all humanity - but here is a link so you can see the cover: LINK.
I loved the banality of his early shots, the power of the later shots and all the way through the markings on the negatives.
Oh. He's a Leica + Tri-X man 🙂
Anyone else read this?
I was in the bookshop this evening, just waiting for my wife when I chanced upon this book in the photography section, which normally never changes.
I should be in bed, I need to get up early tomorrow and I'm been sitting in a hideously contorted position as the furniture is all piled up for a new floor being put in tomorrow.
But I read it all the way through and it's the most refreshing 'photo book' I've ever read.
The book concerns a photographer, French, who goes to Afghanistan in 1986 on his first photo assignment with "Medicines sans frontieres". The photographer's name is Lefèvre I havn't read the preamble so I am assuming Guibert is the illustrator.
The book needs an illustrator as it is in the form of a graphic novel but interwoven with the painted frames are individual and multiple frames from Lefèvre's contact sheets and a few bigger enlargements.
I hate Amazon, one day they will crack their whips in triumph over all humanity - but here is a link so you can see the cover: LINK.
I loved the banality of his early shots, the power of the later shots and all the way through the markings on the negatives.
Oh. He's a Leica + Tri-X man 🙂
Anyone else read this?