I want to isolate one statement and ask a question, especially of the list members grounded in fine arts:

On 11-07-19 11:28 PM, Christine Aguila wrote:

From the Chicago Magazine article published earlier this year:

"Colin Westerbeck, the former curator of photography at the Art Institute of
Chicago and one of the country's leading experts on street photography,
thinks Maier is an interesting case. He inspected her work after Maloof
e-mailed him. "She worked the streets in a savvy way," he says. "But when
you consider the level of street photography happening in Chicago in the
fifties and sixties, she doesn't stand out." Westerbeck explains that Maier's work lacks the level of irony and wit of some of her Chicago contemporaries, such as Harry Callahan or Yasuhiro Ishimoto, and unlike them, she herself is often a participant in the shot. The greatest artists, Westerbeck says, know
how to create a distance from their subjects.

"The greatest artists know how to create a distance from their subjects."

Is this considered a fundamental truth, a given? Or is this merely one man's (likely quite learned) opinion? Was old Leonardo truly distant from his subject in the Mona Lisa (just to pick one old chestnut). Or is that not an example of a great artist?

Seems to me that in street photography there's been a movement lately to get in close with a wide angle and "get involved". Are none of those practitioners any good? OK, good, but not great?

What about the famous portraitists, like Canada's fave, Karsh. He would spend hours puttering around and getting to know his subject, even affecting him (eg Churchill and the cigar incident) to get what he wanted.

What about that famous line about "the camera looks two ways"?

I'm not trying to preach, btw. I'm quite interested in this as my art history education is sorely lacking.

-bmw

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