Steve M.
Veteran
Yesterday I saw a photo by Lee Friedlander in a book that really got me thinking. It was "just" a street shot, but there was so much going on w/ the composition and subject matter it seemed spiritual, in the non religious sense. He had managed to capture something beyond what you could see if you were there in person. Art w/ a capital A.
There are others who managed this feat. The 1950's and 1960's seemed to be an extremely fertile period for photographers and painters. But it was Lee's shot that got me thinking. Why was he so good? How did he capture something on film that wasn't there in person? By that I mean he truly captured a moment in time, while we live in it's flow. There's more going on in some of his images than there should be, on a rational level. Looking at his work, and looking at mine and what we see here on our galleries and posts, it's real different. Not just here, but on other forums, and at contemporary art galleries too. Why was he so much better than us?
Photography isn't like drawing or painting. There aren't a lot of decisions being made over the course of an image's development. There's no time for that, and unlike a drawing, you never see what your image actually is until later. He simply went out and took a photo, had it developed normally, and somehow captured something that I'm sure wasn't there in real life EXCEPT for that one instant when he pressed the shutter. It didn't happen by accident, because it comes up again and again in his best work. How? I have absolutely no idea. It sure has me thinking.
Here's a link to a website at MOMA that shows one of his photos. A lesser one in my opinion than the street shot I saw, and one that seems carefully staged, but it still has that, well, presence that's in his best pieces. The photo seems to exist in a realm separate from what was there at the time. It's a better image than I'll ever make, I know that for a fact. I'm not sure what the forum's rules are on posting his photos, nor of the copyrights on his work, but a link should be OK I hope. The second link has a street shot (bottom photo) that is similar to the one I saw in the book. This is one, very very odd photo;
http://moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3AAD%3AE%3A2002&page_number=18&template_id=1&sort_order=1
http://www.mocp.org/collections/permanent/friedlander_lee.php
There are others who managed this feat. The 1950's and 1960's seemed to be an extremely fertile period for photographers and painters. But it was Lee's shot that got me thinking. Why was he so good? How did he capture something on film that wasn't there in person? By that I mean he truly captured a moment in time, while we live in it's flow. There's more going on in some of his images than there should be, on a rational level. Looking at his work, and looking at mine and what we see here on our galleries and posts, it's real different. Not just here, but on other forums, and at contemporary art galleries too. Why was he so much better than us?
Photography isn't like drawing or painting. There aren't a lot of decisions being made over the course of an image's development. There's no time for that, and unlike a drawing, you never see what your image actually is until later. He simply went out and took a photo, had it developed normally, and somehow captured something that I'm sure wasn't there in real life EXCEPT for that one instant when he pressed the shutter. It didn't happen by accident, because it comes up again and again in his best work. How? I have absolutely no idea. It sure has me thinking.
Here's a link to a website at MOMA that shows one of his photos. A lesser one in my opinion than the street shot I saw, and one that seems carefully staged, but it still has that, well, presence that's in his best pieces. The photo seems to exist in a realm separate from what was there at the time. It's a better image than I'll ever make, I know that for a fact. I'm not sure what the forum's rules are on posting his photos, nor of the copyrights on his work, but a link should be OK I hope. The second link has a street shot (bottom photo) that is similar to the one I saw in the book. This is one, very very odd photo;
http://moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3AAD%3AE%3A2002&page_number=18&template_id=1&sort_order=1
http://www.mocp.org/collections/permanent/friedlander_lee.php
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