Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Interesting analyses Mike. The first analysis sounds like vintage Szarkowski; the second a formalist description; the third, is psychoanalysis the right word? You lead us through the various ways of looking at a picture. NIce shot by the way. Mike Durling KD4KWB http://www.widomaker.com/~durling/ Mike Johnson wrote in part: . . . > On the Leica-Users Members Photos page there's a category called "M > Stuff" by > someone named "Bryant" (who I don't know and can't recall seeing on the > LUG). > Check out his photo called "Ice Cream Shop" at this URL: > > http://beta.content.communities.msn.com/isapi/fetch.dll?action=show_photo&ID _Community=Leicausers&ID_Topic=27&ID_Message=204 > > Granted, the subject matter borders on being sentimental, and/or > trivial. But only > borders. I think the picture rises above that. Let me describe a few of > the ways I > look at it--not that I would normally articulate this stuff; I'm just > trying to make it > plain in words why I think it's a great shot. > > First of all, it's casual and offhand. This is a quality I almost demand > in > photographs if they're to deserve my attention. I dislike > over-controlled, tight-ass, > rigid photographs. I like things that look relaxed to me, like they're > the record of a > glimpse--something that has a connection to what it's like to look > around at the > world, not something that looks like it's the result of an effort to > control things > and enforce an order on things that doesn't really exist. But I digress. > > I get a sense that it's a real place, not a generic place. Another > standard litmus test > that I automatically apply when I approach pictures. > > And another: it's not a "type" of shot. That is, I don't get the feeling > I've seen it > umpteen times before. > > It looks real, not fake or forced. I sometimes call this "authenticity," > although > that's just a tag. > > So there's this small dog. Look how well its smallness--and, perhaps, > the > vulnerability attendant on smallness in that situation--is set off. It's > virtually > surrounded by human presence, inside and outside: what looks like a very > > out-of-focus top of a head in the lower right; the wheel of a passing > car (and we > know what cars have the potential to do to little dogs); the leg of a > pedestrian > striding past; the bicycle entering or leaving the frame. In every case, > the human > presence is both emphatic, enigmatic, and slightly ominous--or at least > it must > seem so to a creature as small as the dog--and also completely > anonymous, which > enhances this feel. We don't see anybody--not in the car, not on the > bike, not the > pedestrians or the person inside. > > And it's all at least a little threatening, all that anonymous traffic. > The somewhat > darkish tonal palette (at least it is on my browser) reinforces that > too. And the > leash, of course, meaning the dog can't get away even if it might want > to. > > Then look at the dog--isn't that a great dog? It looks like it was drawn > by a kid > with a crayon. A few feathery lines and dark blobs! > > You can tell by its stance how alive it is. It's as expressive as > calligraphy. An odd > thing about photography--if you tried to draw that dog that way, it > would be > difficult to invest it with the sense that it is animated. I can't see > the dog's face at > all, but, remarkably, I get a sense of what its expression is! > > I digress again. > > Now look at the picture formally. Despite its highly offhand, grabshot > quality--lookit, <*click*>--it's actually very sophisticated in the way > it's > organized. Those strong verticals compartmentalizing the space (even > echoed in > the tiles to the right!), the layers from front to back (if it were > "pan-sharp," or > sharp from front to back, this layered sense--and the picture--would > have been > ruined). And all those wonderful half-circles impinging from the > edges--the > top-of-the-head (if that's what it is), the chair back, the bicycle tire > with the > half-round reflection of the crouching person superimposed over it, the > car > tires--all these circles looping in from the edges, echoing each other. > > Finally, the gesture of the feeding hand--this little, trapped dog, > isolated > amidst these rushing, anonymous strangers, those crowding circles, in > the midst > of those layers--and a hand--its owner's identity still anonymous, > hidden from our > view at least--reaching out with an offer of solace, a bit of food. A > connection being made. Someone who's stopped rushing for a moment to > notice. > > And of course a photographer noticing, too. > > Articulating all this probably sounds a bit forced, because of course > analysis IS > artificial--it's not done that way. You look, you see, you recognize, > you respond; > naturally the photographer didn't have time to puzzle all this out > before taking the > shot. But that doesn't mean he didn't "mean" it, either. He recognized > it. --When > he took the shot, and again afterwards, editing. > > It's obviously not significant subject matter. But a good photographer > might find > good photographs anywhere. > > There are other photographs by other photographers on the Leica-Users > page I'd like to comment about, but later. Suffice to say that this is > one photograph, at least, that offers me some of what I look for in > photographs. Naturally I don't have to analyze it to enjoy it. I find it > a pleasing, thoughtful, unpretentious, meaningful photograph. > > --Mike > >