Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/11/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>As well you should be. A lovely formal portrait. >I must say, however, that the photographs, in this series, which put >the subject into an environment, preferably their own, carry >significantly more power for me. >The image of the elder gentleman at his kitchen table - sticks with >me - in a way that this one will not. >Just as I loved Irving Penn's bikers; yet, found deeper truths from >the work of Danny Lyon's and Bruce Davidson's treatment of the subject. >The true environmental portraits punctuate the subject's words with >an exclamation mark! The studio portraits tend to imply a period. >obviously a subjective 2 pesos some excellent advice. i think my real lesson from your comments is that it's easy for the photographer to get caught up in their own technique and miss the forest for the trees -- "sweet barking cheese, i lit that well!" or "dang! my sumicron is SHARP LIKE A FREAKING RAZOR!" rings like a bell in our minds and very often that technical success clouds our understanding of the image as a whole, it's success, and it's capabilities. thanks for pointing that out, kc