> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
> Behalf Of Shel Belinkoff
> 
> Thanks for all the comments and the good criticisms.  Much 
> appreciated.
> 
> I was never really very happy with this photo, although I 
> couldn't fully
> explain why. 
> 
> Shel

I think one of the reasons why this picture has been less successful
than the earlier chair portrait that I saw, or Erwitt's picture of
Casals' cello, or other similar photos (is there one like this of
JFK?) is that the artefacts in those picture are in some way
'human-shaped'. I mean that a chair is clearly something that a person
occupies, and where there is quite long-lasting physical contact; a
cello is something that the cellist embraces in quite an intimate way.
They are both closely associated physically with the person, so they
can echo with the person's absence. Something similar could apply to
an object such as a camera, a pair of shoes, and so on. 

However, this cannot normally be said about a table lamp, which is the
dominant element in your photo. 

Another successful way of portraying people through their artefacts
and possessions, which I recall you have done before, is to photograph
their mantelpiece. This doesn't have the same physical associations as
a cello or a chair, but typically the objects on a mantelpiece are of
a similar scale to each other, often of a jumble and touching each
other, and they form a natural composition along the same line. The
objects in your photo are of quite significantly different scales and
appear isolated from each other so their placement doesn't form a
particularly natural composition.

I hope this is a useful and constructive criticism! Keep trying things
out and experimenting, anyway - it is always interesting.

Regards,
Bob



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