Robert Frank - the master poet. |
David Solomons (iN-PUBLiC) |
Carry On Street Photography |
Nick Turpin, the Simon Cowell of modern street photography, has previously stressed the importance of editing, and it is true that with the advent of the digital age the internet is overflowing with rapid fire JPEG accumulation - shipping containers before lunch time full of witty and fine definition grabs have in many instances replaced a more soulful, perhaps even measured personal vision. Photography has always been a concertinaed editing process; never more so than now. Cartier-Bresson's decisive moment it would seem has travelled from the cobblestoned laneway to the late night laptop as meaty street photography decision making shifts toward cosy sit down accoutrement's like cocoa, fluffy slippers and a purring moggy brushing yer lower limbs in hope of tuna flakes, salmon jelly and room temperature moo juice.
A modern day dark poet - amazingly Gary Stochl didn't feature in Street Photography Now's top 49 |
Contemporary street photography is slick, and in many instances extracts a wry guffaw or even the occasional - "holly molly willya have a look at that" (thanks Trent) yet beneath this rich and colourful frosting I'm struggling to grasp a soulful core? I mean what's the sub text ? Or does it maybe not need an undercurrent ? Is it all perhaps so clever that the Nowhere Man has played and missed - it's frivolity serving as the perfect metaphor for this present day society of ours... what with our damned pre frab flat packed generic burbs blending from coast to coast, filled by droningly impatient tabloid ingestors, surface swooshers who live spiritually hidden, face down in electronic gizmodum, thumbs flailing, all so craving the next side serving of cheap buzz - that we queue expectantly, nostrils flaring to the http://www.delusion/ that Derulo doing Dylan is somehow culturally profound. ???
... maybe not
4 comments:
Brilliant
I very much agree with your ideas, but are you using Solomons' picture to illustrate an example of ??
Of all the photographers with work there, I find his the most 'poetic', and the least 'knock knock'.
No No I'm not meaning to single anybody out. The image was just a very straight forward example of an ironic juxtaposition.
Hey I'm not saying the stuff isn't out there - but do any of these pic's (which I really liked by the way) feature in "Street Photography Now", or are any of these being collected by the Major Galleries, or are any of these being written about in major newspaper reviews ???
My point was that the more "flippant" stuff is getting all of the above.
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