Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/06/20

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Subject: [Leica] How would you respond?
From: robertbaron1 at gmail.com (Robert Baron)
Date: Sat, 20 Jun 2015 19:05:09 -0500
References: <512EFB50-257B-4E8A-B931-578A2DBD5925@gmail.com>

"I thought you would like to know some idiot is sending out libelous and
slanderous emails over your signature. You'd better alert your lawyer
because I've alerted mine."

On Sat, Jun 20, 2015 at 6:47 PM, Kyle Cassidy On The LUG <
leicaslacker at gmail.com> wrote:

> From the "Most outrageous letter to a photographer from a museum ever?"
> files.
>
> Documentary photographer Chris Arnade (
> http://www.businessinsider.com/chris-arnade-photos-of-bronx-addicts-2013-12)
> found out today that one of his photographs is being included (without his
> consent) in the exhibit ??Altered Images: 150 Years of Posed and
> Manipulated Documentary Photography? at the Bronx Documentary Center. They
> let him know by sending him this email which I?m pretty sure is quite
> possibly the most outrageous unsolicited letter ever sent to an artist from
> a museum (this all Via Chris Arnade?s tumblr, arnade.tumblr.com) -- how
> would you react?
>
>
>
> Chris
>
> Apologies for the late email, we are putting together a show on short
> notice and just finalizing the lineup.
>
> On Saturday we will open up our Altered Images exhibition, which examines
> posed, faked or manipulated documentary photography. A number of people had
> suggested we include your work of substance abusers and sex workers.  We
> have reviewed your work.  You qualify on a number of levels and will be
> included.
>
> You admit to paying your subjects, which violates one of the most closely
> held tenets of documentary photography. Paying to photograph any person,
> particularly one dependent upon drugs, and even driving them to buy drugs,
> as you say you have done, is a clear breach of ethics and standards.
>
> I see that you say claim, in interviews, an exemption from journalistic
> and documentary standards by saying you are not a journalist.  Yet you
> publish your photos in the Guardian, one of the world?s most prestigious
> media outlets.  Ethical guidelines apply.
>
> A key guideline of the National Press Photographers Assn reads: ?Treat all
> subjects with respect and dignity. Give special consideration to vulnerable
> subjects.?
>
> Your photos of sex workers, some addicted to drugs, some with mental
> health issues and/or severely emotionally abused, exposing their breasts or
> bent naked over a bed, are a breach of this standard.  The fact that you
> also publish these photos on Flickr, to be gawked at by thousands, raises
> further ethical issues too numerous to address here.
>
> Briefly, people who are paid by you, under the influence of drugs or
> mentally impaired (and in many cases have little understanding of The
> Guardian or Flickr), clearly do not have the ability to give informed
> consent to their photos being used as you have done.
>
> We will include a caption under your photo outlining these ethical
> breaches.  If you so choose, you can send us up to two paragraphs in
> response and we will give it equal weight next to our caption.
>
> I?m ccing our lawyer, Don Dunn, in case you have any legal issues you
> choose to raise.
>
>
> Sent from my iPhone plz excuse the typoss keyb0ard is reaLly small.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Leica Users Group.
> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information


Replies: Reply from photo at frozenlight.eu (Nathan Wajsman) ([Leica] How would you respond?)
Reply from tedgrant at shaw.ca (Ted Grant) ([Leica] How would you respond?)
Reply from tmanley at gmail.com (Tina Manley) ([Leica] How would you respond?)
In reply to: Message from leicaslacker at gmail.com (Kyle Cassidy On The LUG) ([Leica] How would you respond?)