agi
Well-known
I hope this wasn't posted because I couldn't find but there are some amazing photos from the winners..
World Press Photos Winners Gallery
World Press Photos Winners Gallery
Good point. You're absolutely correct, but does it really matter?jlw said:If the exact same picture had been entered with the caption, "American soldier with hangover, Passaic, New Jersey, 16 September", would it have been "Photo of the Year"? Would it even have gotten into the awards? I doubt it very much.
jlw said:I've gotten in trouble by pointing this out before, but I feel that in many cases what makes these pictures "prize-winning" is not the picture, but the caption.
Example: The "photo of the year" is a dark, monochromatic image showing a man in fatigues holding a hand to his head. The caption: "American soldier resting at bunker, Korengal Valley, Afghanistan, 16 September"
If the exact same picture had been entered with the caption, "American soldier with hangover, Passaic, New Jersey, 16 September", would it have been "Photo of the Year"? Would it even have gotten into the awards? I doubt it very much.
Or the first-place spot news photo: It's a dark, tilted, blurry image that appears to show some men standing around facing the camera, with an orange glow and some smoke behind them.
The caption: "Assassination of Benazir Bhutto, Rawalpindi, Pakistan, 27 December"
But what if the caption had read, for example, "Members of Sigma Nu fraternity in front of bonfire, University of Illinois, 27 December"? Absolutely zip. The only thing that gives the picture news value is the assertion that the orange glow behind the men is the explosion that killed Mrs. Bhutto (or that accompanied the gunfire that killed Mrs. Bhutto, depending on whose explanation you believe.)
Either of my made-up captions would have fit the images just as well, and would have completely neutralized their chance of competition success. In fact, without the magic captions, the photos themselves are utterly trivial.
This underlines my view that in many cases of highly celebrated "great" photos, what matters is not what's in the photo but what we're told about the photo.
It's one reason I got out of the photojournalism business.
Jarle Aasland said:Good point. You're absolutely correct, but does it really matter?
Most, if not all, photos are better with a good caption. Even highly dramatic, iconic shots - like the airplane crashing into the WTC - are only "good" because of the circumstances under which they were taken.
Without good captions and some background info, all great photos ever made could have been taken from a faked scene in a Hollywood movie.
One could argue that any photo, in itself, is more or less worthless. This is, obviously, a philosophical question.
Jarle
First, I was primarily commenting on "news photos" as this was the topic of this thread. Portraits and landscape photos (to name a few) are "great" for different reasons.Tuolumne said:.. if you look at memorable photos of great photgraphers, say even a portrait by Richard Avedon, they need no caption to hold our interest. Ditto for great landscapes. Therefore, I conclude that a truly great image needs no caption. The image speaks for itself.