Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/08/23

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Subject: RE: [Leica] Photo education
From: "B. D. Colen" <bdcolen@earthlink.net>
Date: Fri, 23 Aug 2002 09:26:22 -0400

No, it is not a beginning how-to course; it can, however, be a beginning
course for people more interested in the documentary process than in
technique. I had a wide range of students in the class - not one of whom was
an art or photo student; MIT doesn't have them.;-) A few of my students were
technically quite accomplished and good shooters to boot - one strings
regularly for the AP and the Boston Globe, two were or had been photo
editors of the student paper. On the other hand, I had some people who's
technical skills were quite rudimentary, but who had excellent eyes, and did
some imaginative, meaningful work. Do you really mean you don't think you
could write about the contrast in styles between Richards and Salgado, and
what those styles add to, or take away from, the purpose of their work,
without having studied HCB - a surrealist with a camera, NOT a documentary
photographer or photo journalist for that matter - or a Brady or a
Stieglitz? Most of my students had very rudimentary photo history
backgrounds, if they had any at all, and they wrote some damn interesting
papers.

I wasn't suggesting, btw, that my course was a course for students trying to
learn where to put the film in the camera and what f stops are. But then I
believe there is a book entitled "Photography for Dummies" that can answer
all those questions in a single afternoon's setting - along with hundreds of
other very basic books that can do the same thing.

It seems to me that in addition to teaching the students in a hands on way
the fundamentals, someone can throw into a basic course something about
issues in photography, the purposes of photography, the history of, to give
them a sense of why we take photos in the first place. If nothing else, a
few selections from Sontag are certainly worth considering.

B. D.



- -----Original Message-----
From: owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us
[mailto:owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us]On Behalf Of
DFangon@aol.com
Sent: Friday, August 23, 2002 2:36 AM
To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us
Subject: Re: [Leica] Photo education


In a message dated 8/21/02 9:33:55 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
bdcolen@earthlink.net writes:

<< It's not exactly a beginning class...but if you go to
 http://web.mit.edu/21W.749/www/syllabus.html >>

This is definitely not beginners.  The course has moved from the technical
to
the philisophical.  It's a course I would love to take......after I learn
about lighting and exposure and aperture and shutter speed and different
kinds of films,  after I can tell the difference between 35mm and medium
format,  after I can differentiate a rangefinder from an SLR from a TLR from
a P&S and understand the strenghts and limitations of each one,  after I can
grasp the principles that govern shape and form and texture and color,
after
I learn about lightmeters and learn how to use them, after I master the
tonal
range and the zone system.  Finally, I must first study some history,  about
Daguerreotypes and calotypes etc. about Brady and Stieglitz, Eisenstaedt and
Margaret Bourke White and Henry Cartier Bresson before I will feel confident
and competent enough to do a paper on Richards or Salgado.
Dante
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