Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]on 17/2/00 2:32 pm, christian becker at 8fps@gmx.de wrote: > John wrote: >> Eggleston is clearly, to me, engaged with both the medium and the real >> world. That's why I look at his photographs. They teach me something. >> That curve in the road, for example, teaches me that a curve in the road >> photographed like that is interesting. Haunting, even. Once you've seen > it, >> you're going to think twice about photographing a landscape in the way > you >> photographed it before (at least, I am). No further justification is >> needed. > > Well said, but wrong conclusion. To enjoy Eggleston's pictures is one > thing (and I like them), but to copy on them is boring, unnecessary, a waste > of > time and energy. Don't get tought, get YOUR own view. If their influence is > strong I'd say: avoid the 'masters', don't by their books, hide from their > pictures, concentrate on YOURS instead. Try to develop your own view - be > your own - ruthless - judge, regardless of whether someone else likes it or > not. FREE yourself! Get rid of all that has been done before! There are no > damn > rules in photography. I didn't say I'd copy it, I said I'd think twice about photographing it the way I did before. Very different things. Very different. Not to reevaluate your own vision in the light of others is the quickest way to a blind alley. - -- John Brownlow photos: http://www.pinkheadedbug.com music: http://www.jukebox.demon.co.uk