On 5/9/07, Norm Baugher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Without a title, this thread expanded on my screen looks like a big
> worm...cool.

Can you give Andy and Opie a call, and we'll head out to the fishin hole

Dave
> Norm
>
> Cotty wrote:
> > On 8/5/07, Tom C, discombobulated, unleashed:
> >
> >
> >> What?  Is Godfrey in a 3rd grade photography?  :-) Sorry to appear rude.
> >>
> >> What is good about this picture?  I don't find anything appealing about it.
> >> I don't see that it took any more effort than haphazardly raising the 
> >> camera
> >> to one's eye and pressing the shutter release, maybe not even looking
> >> through the viewfinder.
> >>
> >> Not only  is the main subject not in clear focus, the secondary subject is
> >> not either, and both are cut off.  I'm not a believer that some sort of
> >> unspoken social commentary, makes a photograph a good photograph.
> >>
> >> If this is the kind of image that constitutes an incredible photograph, 
> >> then
> >> by God, every person that ever picked up a camera and pressed the shutter
> >> release a half dozen times is a good photographer, and we should all stop
> >> trying.
> >>
> >
> > I think there's one thing you missed Tomas (sic)
> >
> > It's not just all of the above, but the decision as to how that frame
> > actually is presented as the finished piece. The actual frame chosen,
> > the composition decided upon, possibly post-production, the rendering -
> > how it was printed (in old fashioned speak). That's all a cognitive
> > process beyond just snapping the pic as you intimate.
> >
> > To me, a photograph - any photograph - is more than just what was
> > recorded in front of the lens. To me, it's about what the viewer *feels*
> > when looking at the image. It's about the emotions that one recalls,
> > about one's own experiences, and how that relates to what the
> > photographer has presented.
> >
> > We've all walked past a homeless lady with a dog at some point in our
> > lives, and we all react differently. What makes the shot more than just
> > a fuzzy grab to me is that the image presented by Godfrey conveys what I
> > feel when I walk past a scene like that - slightly blurry because I
> > steal a glance, only recalling the vital elements of the scene - the
> > head, the blanket, the dog. That's all i wanted to see, otherwise I
> > would have gone back and looked harder, looked longer. To me, Godfrey's
> > photograph has captured beautifully the essence of the scene he saw, and
> > turned it into something that I can relate to, and that's the whole
> > point of the exercise.
> >
> > I would go so far as to compare Godfrey's pic to Robert Frank. I look
> > through The Americans and I see echoes of it, and vice versa. Of course,
> > Godfrey is exploring a style here, and Jimminy Cricket, it works for me.
> > Look at Juan Buhler's work and see something else, yet also that works
> > conveys emotions and feelings, and I see fabulous things there, I'm sure
> > a lot of folk on the list do.
> >
> > Can I just end by going over your last para again:
> >
> >
> >> If this is the kind of image that constitutes an incredible photograph, 
> >> then
> >> by God, every person that ever picked up a camera and pressed the shutter
> >> release a half dozen times is a good photographer, and we should all stop
> >> trying.
> >>
> >
> > I wouldn't describe it as incredible, but totally credible yes. I would
> > describe it as indicative of what I feel when in proximity to such a
> > scene, and as a standalone piece of work I think it excels beautifully.
> > As such, i wouldn't consider hanging up my cameras just yet. In fact,
> > it's a pic like this that inspires me to go out and try and convey a
> > scene that I know of - try and present something that I like to look at,
> > and maybe someone else will like it too.
> >
> > HTH
> >
> > best,
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> [email protected]
> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
>


-- 
Equine Photography
www.caughtinmotion.com
http://brooksinthecountry.blogspot.com/
Ontario Canada

-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net

Reply via email to