Contemporary Russians

Posted on Lensculture a couple of weeks ago are a set of images by 43 contemporary Russian photographers, or rather photographers from Russia, the Ukraine and Belarus. The feature has one image each selected by Lensculture’s Jim Casper from what he thought were the 43 most interesting of those whose work he saw at a week-long conference about contemporary Russian photography.

The conference, at which Jim and the other international reviewers looked at the work of 185 photographers in what must have been a very busy schedule – he looked at the work of 62 photographers in 20 minute portfolio reviews seems to be only the tip of the iceberg so far as photography there is concerned, as there were over 2400 who applied to take part, roughly 13 for every place available.

Of course it isn’t possible to say anything much about the photographers involved on the basis of a single image, but there are certainly some that made me want to see more – and Lensculture promises to let me do so in the future for some of them.

The Submerged

I was hoping to write a proper review of Michelle Sank’s book and show ‘The Submerged‘, at Hotshoe Gallery until 29 September, but I just haven’t had the time to give it the attention it deserves.

The work came out of a three month residency at Aberystwyth, and by coincidence around 18 months ago I wrote in this blog:

Somehow Aberystwyth seems to me to be the last place a photographer would go for an interesting story…”

Then I was writing about a project by Chloe Dewe Mathews, Hasidic Jews on Holiday, which did provide a clue to a couple of Sank’s pictures in Submerged.  In that post I also provided a link to photolibrarywales, and another search on there, this time for Aberystwyth provided more clues.

Both show and book present Sank’s pictures without captions or any relevant text, other than a few details which Liz Wells is unable to avoid in her essay. Many of the pictures do seem to me to be rather like visual cryptic crossword clues, and for me that often gets rather in the way of seeing them as pictures.

The work on photolibrary Wales is by Keith Morris, and there are perhaps half a dozen of his pictures from the first thousand or so that I paged through, 96 at a time, that had a certain resonance with some of Sank’s pictures (as well as a portrait of Sank herself.)

The show is well printed, the book a very handsome volume with a number of fine images, but I think the sequencing on Sank’s web site shows the project better; the book at times seems simplistic (the final image the end of the pier) and at others perverse. The brighter and purer colours on the web also suit some of the images better (and makes sense of Well’s reference to a row of bright red garages which they are definitely not in the book), although the work on the page and the wall perhaps better expresses the Welsh rain and gloom.

As I mentioned in my previous piece, my last visit to the town was as a young child, on a village coach outing:

It wasn’t quite like the outing in one of Dylan Thomas’s short stories, but there were some similarities.  We did eventually get there, after quite a few stops on the way, and about all I can remember about the place was that it seemed cold, windy, wet and grey.

Having seen Sank’s vision I’m not sure if I would want to spend a holiday there, even if I did live in Birmingham.

Versus – Peruvian Collective

Ten or so years ago I decided to write a series of articles on photography around the world, partly simply to get away from what I thought was an over-emphasis on photography in the USA in the histories and other accounts of photography, but also out of a genuine interest in work that was being produced in various countries, particularly those that appeared to have been little affected by what I saw as a kind of curatorial virus that seemed to my mind to have enfeebled photography over the past 20 or so years in much of Europe and the USA.

Rather than simply pick on countries randomly as I came on interesting work on the web, or rather as well as doing that, I decided to try and make a more systematic survey, and decided to start with photography in Central and South America. Since I was being systematic I decided to approach the countries of the region in alphabetical order, and thus started to find out all I could about photography in Argentina.

Although I was only writing relatively brief features, I also adopted a fairly systematic approach, or at least as far as possible. I began each country feature with what I could find about the early history of photography there, from its beginnings up to around the start of the twentieth century. Usually I wrote about interesting work by photographers from elsewhere who had visited the country, and  I tried to find and write about the photographers who had become accepted as the country’s most interesting in the twentieth century but were no longer living or working. In a final section I looked at contemporary photographers, making my own judgements on work that I could find on the web or in my library.

Occasionally I came across so much material that I needed to write several features on a country, and progress through the continent was slow. Of course I wasn’t trying to write a definitive work about each country, these were just introductory pieces, but much of the material they contained was little known outside the countries themselves – and in some cases even within it.

Alphabetically I got as far as Mexico, where I wrote four articles, including two on Manuel Alvarez Bravo, so I still had a few countries to cover. One of them was Peru, although I had written a lengthy six part feature on Peru’s greatest photographer, Martin Chambi (1891) which had also brought in the work of some other Peruvian photographers. Some day when have more time I’ll perhaps go back and bring some of these old pieces up to date and re-publish them, but for the moment they are no longer available on line.

All of which is a very long preamble to a web site I came across the other day, of a collective of three photographers who call themselves Versus, and there is interesting work there and elsewhere from all of them.

The web site doesn’t seem to have any information about them, although there is a group statement about their approach.  Gihan Tubbeh is a 26 year old Peruvian, and there is more about her on the 1000 words blog.

Musuk Nolte is roughly the same age and you can see some of his pictures on his VII Visonaires page, along with a picture of him and a link to his blog – im Spanish but there is very little text on it – mainly just titles and his pictures, and you can use Google translate.

Renzo Giraldo‘s web site has an English version with a picture of him and some information as well as his work as a photojournalist and personal projects. He was born in 1976 and so is the oldest of the three at around 35.

East Of The City

A brand new web site finished around a cup of coffee ago, East of the City is the site for a show of photographs by Paul Baldesare, Mike Seaborne and me (Peter Marshall) which, fingers crossed, opens on Oct 1 at the Shoreditch Gallery, in the Juggler in Hoxton Market.

The Juggler is a café in a small square called Hoxton Market hidden between Pitfield St and the rather larger Hoxton Square, in an area that now has quite a few galleries including some very well-known ones. (Unfortunately there are signs around to ‘Hoxton Market’ which point in a different direction, to a street market held in Hoxton St.) The Shoreditch Gallery has been running longer than most in the area, starting when artists could still afford studios in what was then a run down area where the former furniture trade had disappeared.

© 2011, Paul Baldesare

Paul Baldesare has gone back over the past year or so to another area of East London that has changed dramatically over  recent years. Perhaps Columbia Market was never quite as poverty-stricken as parts of Brick Lane, and certainly with all its flowers never as drab at that could be, but the accents you hear there now are certainly rather different. From an East End market it has changed with “a new affluent Londoner and tourists” thronging there on a Sunday morning.

© Mike Seaborne

Mike Seaborne is showing pictures from his ‘London Facades’, a series of shop fronts in inner city Shoreditch, Hoxton and Hackney on which he started working in 2004.  You can see more about this project and some of his other work on the Urban Landscapes web site which he and I set up around 2002.

© 1982, Peter Marshall

My own work in the show is from the book ‘Before The Olympics‘ which I’ve mentioned quite a few times here before.  Like most Londoners I knew the Lea valley existed, and had even seen the river from the District line or the Eastern Region main line shortly before the train stopped at Stratford, but until the early 198os I’d not actually stopped to look at it.

I’d come into the centre of London one day to buy a new lens for my Leica, the 90mm f2.8 and wanted to try it out.  I’d heard a few days earlier that commercial traffic on the Lea Navigation was shortly coming to an end, so decided to go and see if I could find anything to photograph. There wasn’t a great deal – I found a couple of laden barges moored by a wharf, rather more empty and abandoned looking ones. I don’t think I actually took many pictures on the 90mm either, but I did discover the edges of a fascinating area – and returned on later occasions over the years to explore and photograph it.

At the time there were few sources of information. Even maps and street plans were not too helpful, marking some paths that were guarded by locked gates and barbed wire while not showing others that I could walk along – though many were badly overgrown. I could find no books that mentioned the area – and of course there was no such thing as a web page.  There were times when it felt almost like exploring and unknown continent, and for a while I carried a pair of secateurs in my camera bag to cut my way through  brambles and small branches blocking my way and my view.

Interesting though the area and some of these photographs I took on my occasional visits over the next twenty or so years were, they were given a new value with the news of the London Olympic bid.  Gradually I began to see more photographers on some of my visits to the area (though it was still unusual to see anyone in the remoter regions) and also I began to photograph some of the local resistance to the plans.

I still return to the accessible parts around the site occasionally, though I’ve been too busy to do so for a few months, but I will be there again shortly. A large part of the area is now behind the security fence and only visible from a few vantage points.

London Street Photography – Our Favourite Pictures

As a way of introducing ourself to the audience in the panel discussion on street photography, the three of us (myself, Mike Seaborne and Polly Braden) were asked in advance by chairman Stephen McLaren each to choose our two favourite pictures from the show at the Museum of London and to start the event by talking about them for five minutes.  Here are my views about what they said, as well as what I meant to say but quite likely didn’t quite.

Mike Seaborne, one of the curators of the show, chose one very well-known work, a photography by John Thompson from his work with sociologist Adolphe Smith published in monthly parts as Street Life in London in 1876-7. You can see a fine selection of them on the Spitalfields Life site,  which also has an entire article about the picture chosen by Mike, of Hookey Alf of Whitechapel, accompanied by the interpretation by Smith and some recent discussion. Certainly this is a photograph I admire and work that I’ve written and talked about in the past.

His other choice was an anonymous picture of a woman walking in Hyde Park, which he compared to the images by Lartigue of well-dressed women strolling in the Bois de Boulogne. Although there was a superficial resemblance, I couldn’t really agree in this case with his argument which seemed to be that Lartigue’s pictures are seen as more important because he later became a well-known photographer. I’m not a great fan of Lartigue, but his pictures – such as the woman with two dogs here – show so much more flair and style than the mildly interesting image we were looking at. I have rather more sympathy with the general point Mike was making but perhaps this is not a particularly good example.

Polly Braden‘s choices were a rather nice pictorial image made in 1930 by Hans Casparius (which I can’t find on line) of two women seen from a moderate distance caught by light passing on a Westminster street corner. It was an image that in its use of light reminded me of some of her work, as well as some of my first pictures of London in the 1970s. The women seem to be simply passing, but somehow the lighting creates a relationship between them.

Her second was well-known to me, one of the relatively few images made by Margaret Monck, who was a part of the documentary movement of the 1930s and who I wrote about elsewhere some years ago, along with her mentor, Edith Tudor-Hart (the sister of the oldest living photographer in this show, Wolf Suschitzky, who as well as being a fine photographer was also the most effective of Soviet spies in the UK, recruiting  Bertie Broda who worked on the Manhattan atomic bomb project, passing the US atomic secrets to her and so to Russia – as well as Philby and others.)

The picture chosen, taken in Westminster shows a wealthy woman stopping to put a coin into the hat held by the seated figure of a disabled ex-serviceman at the edge of the pavement. Although Monck ‘dressed down’ to take her Leica on expeditions to the poorer wastes of London, I can’t look at this picture without perhaps unfairly mirroring her similarly dressed to the woman in it, holding her Leica to her face and attracting the attention of the man on the steps in the background of the picture. I wonder too if she had been walking together with this woman and had set up this image rather than simply coming across the event on the street. Not that this alters the fact it is a finely seen and composed picture, then man’s walking stick leaning against the wall at left, and a man who appears to have no cares in the world, a flaneur in flannels and sports jacket approaching from the bottom of the stairs. But perhaps the most intriguing feature are the two large landscape paintings at the left of the image.  Were these perhaps put there by the beggar to attract the attention (and largesse) of passers by, or in some way to avoid prosecution for begging under the Vagracy Act? Like many photographs it is often the unexplained details that intrigue.

I had been the first to speak and my first choice was Outside Claridges Hotel, Mayfair, 1967 by Jerome Liebling. Probably my favourite image in the show, it also seems to me to represent the very heart of street photography.  As I said at this point, the four of us on the platform would probably have very different views of what street photography was (it was a topic our chair had warned us to avoid) but I felt we might agree that it’s golden age was in New York around the Second World War.  Liebling, who died this July age 87, studied photography with Walter Rosenblum and was a member of the New York Photo League in the late 1940s working in the city with many of the other great street photographers of the time – including Helen Levitt, Sid Grossman, Morris Engel, Ruth Orkin, Lou Stoumen and Dan Weiner.

Liebling has caught a moment of confrontation between the two main figures in the image, evidenced by their gaze and body language. It isn’t clear exactly what is happening, with a small crowd (including I think another photographer) and a policeman gathered to watch, but it is a picture very much about class differences and class uniforms, with the added twist that the doorman holding the door of the car is – like all doormen – in reality a low-paid employee dressed in a uniform that is a kind of parody of the upper class dress of a previous era.

At about the time this image was made, another photographer from the New York school had come to this country and settled here. I’ve recently been helping John Benton-Harris working on some of his pictures of the English for a show in Poland next month and a book, from a series he calls ‘Mad Hatters’ and into which this image would rather nicely fall.

John too is a link to the second image I chose to talk about, by Tony Ray-Jones, who like him studied (although in New York rather than New Haven where Tony was then) with the great designer Alexey Brodovitch. Others of his students included Richard Avedon (who hosted many of the classes in his studio) Diane Arbus, Lisette Model and arguably the greatest master of street photography, Garry Winogrand.

When Ray-Jones returned to England, he began working on a book on the English, and although the picture in the Museum’s show is perhaps not one of his best it is in some respects typical, a very recognisable example of one of the ways that he made pictures. When I first saw it on the museum wall, I was very doubtful about its caption, ‘Notting Hill, c 1967’. Although obviously taken at some kind of street event – you can see the reflection of small crowd in the large window behind the figures, it didn’t look like Notting Hill, and certainly it wasn’t the carnival, very small in those early years and attracting an almost entirely West Indian audience.

The poster for the social photographers ‘Milvain Studios’ also worried me, as Milvain is a village in Northumberland, and although the name might not be connected it did seem more likely that this was perhaps Newcastle or somewhere around there rather than London. The captions on Ray-Jones’s photographs are notoriously inaccurate, as most were added after his early death in 1982 by his widow and photographers who had worked with him – including Benton-Harris who printed much of his work and who loaned the print to the museum for the show. Many of those in the posthumous ‘A Day Out’ published the year after his death are incorrectly captioned.

Although Ray-Jones took a number of fine pictures in London, with my favourite being a gloriously surreal street corner in  Brook St, with one man emerging from a hole in the pavement and two others engaged on the ends of a short length of tubing, one on his knees on the pavement and another holding some kind of device on its other end up in the air, apparently the Museum of London has none of his prints.  You can see a good selection of several hundred of them – though not including the ‘Notting Hill’ image – at the Science & Society Picture library* – and can buy reasonably priced good quality inkjet prints for £15 each. I own several of them, as well as one rarer example actually printed by the photographer. The inkjets are better prints.

The print in the show reminded me a little of some  of his better-known images but one that somehow didn’t quite make it. I wasn’t surprised when curator Mike Seaborne told me it had been taken in Durham, and the actual site has been identified thanks to some real detective work by a police officer who visited the show and was able to identify the uniform of the policeman as being from that city, and more than that sent Mike the link to a Street View image of the shop at right, still much the same, though Milvain Studios and their advert are long gone. Ray-Jones went to Durham for the miner’s Gala, and Benton-Harris also has some fine images from the same event.

I hadn’t known it was taken in Durham, and hadn’t chosen it because it broke one of the rules established by the curators by being taken outside London. (There were a few others taken a little  outside the London boundary in the surrounding counties such as Surrey.) In fact it broke a second of their rules also, as it was taken at an organised event, if not the one they had assumed. Perhaps if the show as hoped travels abroad it could be replaced by one of his better London images which truly fit their criteria and I’m sure Bradford would oblige. The best prints of Ray-Jones’s work by a long chalk are those made on bromide paper  from scans for his show there are few years ago, and I imagine the inkjets on sale come from the same scans.

But apart from being a not bad photo, it was also for me a link to a photographer who played an important role in bringing street photography as we knew it to Britain. It was at Ray-Jones’s prompting (aided by John Benton-Harris) that editors Bill Jay and later Peter Turner published the work of many American photographers in the magazine Creative Camera that really changed our view of photography here, and photographers influenced by him – including Martin Parr – gave British photography a new impetus and direction.

I didn’t get to say quite all that in the five or so minutes I had to talk about the two pictures on Wednesday night, and certainly what I did say would not make quite so much sense, talking off the cuff (although I did notes on paper.) I’m happier with the extra time to reflect that comes from writing – or with giving a lecture, though a discussion like we had was perhaps more entertaining.

© 2008 Peter Marshall
Rather fewer May Queens in 2008 than when Tony Ray Jones photographed this event 40 years earlier

* Where some of the pictures are still incorrectly captioned. That large group of May Queens for example is at Hayes, Kent and not Sittingbourne. It was an image that prompted me in the early years of this century to begin my own extensive work on May Queens. I took the picture above working on behalf of that year’s London May Queen in the centre of this group.

Perpignan

The professional week at Visa Pour l’Image in Perpignan has just drawn to its close and for yet another year I’ve not made it there, or to any of the other major festivals.  I’m not quite sure why I’ve never really got into the habit, perhaps because I don’t much like the kind of networking that these things are very much about, but probably more that I just don’t like travelling. Lack of money also comes into it. If there was a similar event in London, I’d probably make it, and I have managed to drag myself across to Paris a few times, largely I think because its another city I love.

But al least if I don’t get to the meetings or to see the exhibitions I can look at the web site, and I’ve spent some time doing so for Visa Pour l’Image. It’s very much a festival of serious photojournalism and after a while the images can get rather depressing, no matter how good the photography, so it was a pleasure to come across the work of Peter Dench, with his often light-heated look at the English. You can see more of this on his own web site.

Congratulations also to the winner of this year’s Canon Female Photojournalist AwardIlvy Njiokiktjien (The Netherlands), which will enable her to continue work on her project on Afrikaner teenagers in post-Apartheid South Africa for a showing at Visa Pour L’Image 2012.  You can read about her project on the Canon site and there is a link to an interview. I did wonder slightly if text on the site saying she had already photographed a  “nine-day period of training sessions led by a racist leader” was likely to make relations between her and the people she is intending to photograph more difficult. But perhaps they only read Afrikaans.

Perpignan has one big advantage over most photo festivals in that it is an open competition and any professional photographer one can send in an entry – the simple rules are given on the web site.  Unlike some other events, there is no entry fee. Of course you do need to have the right kind of work, and at least 50 images on a single story. The web page states: “Please note that we are an international festival of photojournalism focusing on news and current affairs. Please, NO art photography or series of portraits.”  Entries for 2012 open in January and the deadline is 30 March 2012.

Gomorrah Girl

This year’s winner of Blurb’s ‘Photography Book Now, an annual prize for self-published books is Italian photographer Valerio Spada for his Gomorrah Girl, a photographic exploration of the murder of 14 year-old Annalisa Durante in 2004, a young adolescent girl involved in “the land of Camorrah”, (the Naples Mafia.) You can of course read more about it on Blurb’s site, and there is a feature about the prize on Time, and the ‘lightbox’ there shows more of what looks like a truly amazing book, along with some images of this years other PBN prizewinning books.

Perhaps the first thing that struck me – apart from the quality of the work – was that this book was not and could not have been produced on Blurb. This is an open competition – for which Blurb deserves praise – and any self-published book by professionals or amateurs can be entered. But Spada’s book has a complexity which adds interest that goes beyond what is possible with Blurb. The book combines and binds together Spada’s own documentary pictures interleaved with a smaller book of pictures he was allowed to take of police photographs from their investigations of the case.  I’ve not been particularly impressed by all of the earlier winning books in the various categories of this prize, now in its fourth year, but this looks a very worthy winner. Perhaps it means that word has now really got round that the $25,000 prize (courtesy of HP Indigo Digital Press) is really worth winning.

Although I’ve now completed six books on Blurb (and helped friends in the production of a number of others) I’ve not entered any of them for PBN, largely because I’ve not thought any of them was the right type of book to have a chance in the competition, either for the overall prize or any of the categories. Many books that are worth publishing are never going to win prizes.

My latest book, now eagerly awaited from the printers, has seen me struggling with several of the limitations of Blurb’s free publishing software, BookSmart.  In particular, printing double page spreads is very much a gamble, and the only solution I can find is to take an educated guess on the amount of overlap of the two halves needed and send it for printing, then wait the week or two until your book comes back, make adjustments and repeat until you are happy and the book can then be released.  Blurb’s help suggests you avoid important detail in the region of the gutter, but I think all of the detail in my pictures is important! The forums have some more common-sense approaches (although as always there are people, always American, who see no problem and I suspect have no important detail anywhere in their pictures) but no real solution.  Depending on exactly where the image is in the book and the type of binding you seem to need to allow around 1/8″ to 1/4″ of overlap.

I’ve never much liked having images that run across the gutter, but my latest book – for a show opening shortly – the pictures are panoramic images of gardens, and some have a aspect ratios that really need to use the 20×8″ of a double-page 10×8″ spread.  Others are close to square, where I’ve used a fairly extreme vertical angle of view as well as horizontal, and fit a single page without problems. But more about this in a week or two when the show should open.

A Rare Opportunity

You can read my opinions on photography with some regularity on this site, although I’ve been rather busy in the last few days with a  couple of shows coming up, and producing a catalogue for one, and, when I get around to it a web site for the second. A more normal service will I hope be re-introduced here and on My London Diary (where August has yet to begin) shortly.

But tomorrow there is a fairly rare opportunity to actually hear me talking, in an event at the Museum of London, where with a few others I’m on a panel discussing the future of street photography and related issues.  On the panel with me are the curator of the museum’s attendance-breaking London Street Photography show, an old friend of mine, Mike Seaborne, and one of the other photographers with work in the show, Polly Braden, while photographer Stephen McClaren will try to keep some order. The discussion starts at 7pm and you can still book on-line.

Unless pressed I don’t intend to talk about my own picture in the show, not least because I don’t think it really is an example of street photography, although it was indeed taken on a London street, and was one of the images used on the poster for the show. But I have taken plenty of other pictures that are street photography but were not chosen. Of course the fact that it – and many other images in the show are not really street doesn’t mean they are not good pictures, but rather questions the criteria used in curating the show.

© 1991, Peter Marshall
Whitechapel 1991- a documentary image but is it ‘street photography’?
© 1987, Peter Marshall
But Portobello Road, Notting Hill, April 1987 certainly is

I wrote earlier this year about the opening of the show in London Street Photography, a piece that included one of my images that was a small attempt at a comment on the future of street photography.

© 2011, Peter Marshall
Smartphones  Set Free – perhaps the future of street photography?

The discussion lasts – including the time for questions – an hour, after which there is a further opportunity to see the show, which closes this Sunday, September 4. I’m not at all sure what the talking will be like, but I have been asked to supply five of my own pictures for a presentation as well as nominating two pictures from the book that I would like to say something about.

Although in some ways I found the show disappointing, as an event in promoting photography I think it has been a great success – and of course I was very pleased to be chosen to be in it and the book London Street Photography published by Dewi Lewis Publishing, ISBN 978-1-907893-09-4, together with it. But when asked to talk about two pictures from it, I found it hard to find pictures that I really wanted to talk about, as although there were some great photographers included, the pictures were seldom particularly good examples of their work. There were also some aspects of it I found hard to swallow, including the disregard for the moral rights shown in projecting some images taken on medium format cropped to 35mm format in the slide show. A museum should really not treat photography like this.

Despite such reservations (and I have others), this was a show that came at exactly the right moment, when street photography was high on the popular agenda, with shows in Derby and of course the first London Street Photography Festival which has just concluded, although there is still a chance to see a show of the much-hyped work of Vivian Meir at Photofusion in Brixton, where it continues until 16 September 2011.

Although the publicity for the show talks about “her unique style of candid street photography” unfortunately the images on show – including some that I liked very much – confirmed her as a fine but derivative photographer. I walked around the show last week with a photographer friend and we were saying things like “not a bad Lisette Model” or “sub-sub Arbus” in front of almost every image.  Most things she did do well, but I found it impossible to see any unique personal vision in the work. We all produce works that are based on those of others, but the aim needs to be to try and stand on their shoulders rather than march behind them. Of course there are many good photographers, people whose work adorns the history of photography, but very, very few who really advance it.

No Copyright on Ideas?

Many years ago when I first started writing and taking pictures I remember being firmly told “there is no copyright in ideas“. The FAQ on the US Copyright Office site states it clearly: “Copyright does not protect facts, ideas, systems, or methods of operation, although it may protect the way these things are expressed.”

Of course it isn’t always clear quite where the boundary between idea and expression lies, particularly in photography, and some court decisions in the past have perhaps clouded the water. So it was good to see the judge dismiss the case that photographer Janine Gordon had brought against Ryan McGinley so clearly; the New York Times quotes from his written judgement that her idea of copyright would result in claiming copyright in “virtually any figure with outstretched arms, any interracial kiss, or any nude female torso” and that it had “no basis in statute, case law or common sense.”

You can read a slightly longer report on ARTINFO, which also links to an earlier feature there which includes a slide show comparing several images by the two photographers which I think clearly demonstrates the ridiculous nature of the claim.

Ryan McGinley is a photographer I’ve written about on several occasions, here and elsewhere. In Ryan McGinley’s Lost Summer I suggested that he “seems to have got lost, perhaps seduced by becoming too well-known.” But his project that I was writing about was based on the “the kinds of amateur photography that appeared in nudist magazines during the 60s and early 70s” and that seems to me the true source of exactly the kind of things that Gordon was complaining about.  Surely something has to be original for you to claim copyright on it. But that might rule out the entire oeuvre of many photographers!

Facing Bruce Gilden

I’m not a great fan of Bruce Gilden, although I do still have a review copy of his ‘Facing New York‘ which Cornerhouse brought out here in 1992. But then I’ve never sold my review copies (plenty of reviewers made more money from doing so than writing reviews)  though I have put some in the bin.

I think I did review it at the time, and it was a work I disliked but I recognised the power of his pictures, although in some respects the book seemed and still seems over-repetitive. They work made me uncomfortable, it seemed too much like being rude to people. Though if you are a New Yorker you are surely used to people being rude to you.

I mention the interview* with him in Vice by Jonnie Craig published a week or two back mainly because I rather like the paragraph at the start about street photography which ends with a definition of what it used to be:

“picture-taking informed by unchecked insanity, spontaneous joy, downtrodden souls, criminal behavior, spewing fire hydrants, and all the other varieties of filth and glory that can be documented by simply walking down an unfamiliar sidewalk.

I think it’s the “unchecked insanity” and “spontaneous joy” that mostly appeal to me, and as Craig states, it is a far cry from the kind of thing that many people who like to call themselves street photographers are now producing.

It’s a fairly short read and I think gives a very clear impression of Gilden and comes with a few of his previously unpublished pictures. You can of course see more of his work on his Magnum pages, and I think he is generally a rather better photographer than ‘Facing New York’ made me think. Or at least there are many pictures that I like in his other work.

Vice seems to attract a particularly poor line in comments, but one of them says “Go look at Kurata Seiji’s book, Flash Up.” I googled a little, but only came up with the cover, which I looked and and thought of Daido Moriyama.  And then Wikipedia tells me that he “practised under Daidō Moriyama in an independent photography workshop in 1976“, as well as that he was born in 1945, perhaps a vintage year for photographers. But the only other pictures I could find were some colour pictures that, at least out of context, could be seen as fairly generic travel work.  So although it also apparently gets a recommendation from Messrs Parr and Badger, I can’t really tell you if ‘Flash Up‘ is worth a look.

*Thanks to American Suburb X to posting a link to this on Facebook.