Northeastern Pennsylvania – Urban Landscapes

Philip A Dente writes that in his pictures of towns in Northeastern Pennsylvania he tries to “to demonstrate the feeling of a continual loss of the past through the disruptions of the present.”

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Pittston (C) 2008, Philip A Dente

Visually we see this in many images where we see through gaps or past obstructions giving a layering of planes and also in the softish light and muted colours that appeal to him. The pictures are his account of “an exciting journey …. in the context of vision and emotions.”

Philip is the latest photographer to be added to the Urban Landscape web site I run with Mike Seaborne, the full international eleven now being:

John DaviesPhilip A Dente , Lorena EndaraBee Flowers, Nicola Hulett,   Peter Marshall, Paul Anthony Melhado  Neal OshimaPaul RaphaelsonMike Seaborne and Luca Tommasi.

Although I feel it’s a strong team, new players are always welcome, but sometimes it takes us rather a long time to come to a decision.  One key problem is always to decide whether a particular body of work fits our concept of ‘urban landscape‘. It isn’t just a matter of pictures taken of cities or areas of cities -whether pretty or gritty, and there seem to be quite a few groups now on Flickr and elsewhere dedicated to one or other of these.

Nor is it straightforward architectural images. Last year in Brasilia I talked about this distinction – and you can read my thoughts in the excessively literally titled post
Architecture and Urban Landscape photography

You can also of course read  the page from which that post quotes on the urban landscapes site where there are some more picture examples, which also has a page of advice for contributors. As well as showing urban landscape projects we would also be interested in essays related to the area – but do read the advice before contacting us.

Of course as well as appropriateness, quality of work is also important and an even more subjective area, and not one that is easy to write about.  It’s something that perhaps comes across more obviously not in individual images but in a body of work, and is more about the visual thinking that this demonstrates than the technical aspects of making and presenting work or the ability to write a polished academic statement  (indeed many of the better photographers suffer from dyslexia.)

Mike Seaborne and I are the initial selectors of work, but if we have any doubts or are unable to agree, then we seek the advice of whichever of the others with work  already on the site seems most appropriate.

Light on the Lucie

For several years I received an free invitation to attend the annual Lucie Awards, US-based photography awards based on the Oscars and almost as ludicrous and self-congratulatory. I never went, mainly because a Travelcard can’t get you to New York. And as I wrote last year, Who Needs Oscars?

This year the sixth Lucie awards were presented on October 20, with the top award, for Lifetime Achievement going to the Italian photographer Gianni Berengo Gardin.

Gardin, born in 1930, started taking pictures in 1954 and has been awarded most of the major photography prizes, published around 200 books of photographs, had around 200 shows around the world (including at Arles and in Paris, New York…)  He has pictures in museums around the world, his work has been in leading books and shows but is almost totally unknown in the UK.  He’s a photographer very much in the mould of Henri Cartier-Bresson or Willy Ronis, but who remained working in that mode into the 2000s.

Y0u can read more about him at PhotoCentral (more pictures)  and at Photostream there is “half a review” of his 2005 retrospective book and half a discussion of why he is not better known here.

Should Magnum do fashion?

Alec Soth continues his campaign to turn the Magnum blog into a true ‘Web 2.0’ site interacting with its users rather than simply feeding them with some of Magnum’s truly fabulous eye-candy by posing the question ” Should Magnum do fashion?”

Of course Magnum photographers have done fashion in the past, and most particularly (as he points out) Magnum have  produced their Fashion Magazine series, with issues shot by a single photographer – previous issues have been by Martin Parr, Bruce Gilden and Soth himself.

The latest – just released – Magnum Fashion Magazine, shot by Lise Sarfati raises the issues more starkly for several reasons. Firstly because of her whole approach to documentary which has dealt more intensely with the people she has photographed than the other photographers, but most importantly because she has made use of those same people as models in her fashion pictures and shot in many of the same locations.

Of course there are those who argue that Magnum lost its true documentary heart some years ago, particularly with the inclusion of Martin Parr, whose approach caused some apoplexy among some more traditional documentary photographers at the time (and I think smoke was seen rising from at least one of my heroes.)

Until now it was always possible for those who had some sympathy with this view to apologise for Magnum and say that even if some of the work lacked the old spirit, at least Magnum was still supporting the serious work of photographers such as Lise Sarfati…

Had we looked at these pictures simply on the web or gallery wall would we have simply seen them as an extension of her earlier work? After all they are marked on Magnum as “Not for use in advertising or retail calendars“, so are they really so different from her other work?

Seen as a whole, I think they are, and I think they cheapen her work. Although taken individually most would fit into her approach, as a set of over 70 images the fashion fiction seems to me to take over, spreading a certain sameness and repetition.  I don’t know if it is the presence of stylists, the expectations of the “models” themselves or the pressure on the photographer to produce in a limited time-scale, but there seems to be a lack of intensity as well as a certain unwelcome gloss in these images.

I also wonder about the relationship between the documentary photographer and the people she is photographing, not just in this case but in general.  For me certainly, I’ve always felt that what I do is justified by the story that I tell; sometimes it may be of direct benefit to those who work with me,  or promote their cause or in some way enlarge people’s understanding or appreciation of the world.  Somehow I can’t fit selling frocks into that relationship.

So should Magnum do fashion? Well, Magnum photographers need to make a living and fashion is one of the safer and better paid ways to do that, so I’ve no problem with them doing a little on the side.  Even do a few weddings if they really have to. But I’d rather Magnum itself didn’t confuse it with their real work.

Police attack Photographers

I wasn’t feeling too well last Wednesday and didn’t feel up to going to Brighton to photograph the Shut ITT! demonstration there, a follow-up to Smash EDO’s ‘Carnival Against the Arms Trade‘ which I photographed last June. Had I made it his time there seems to have been a pretty good chance I would have ended the day with at least minor injuries from police action.

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Police use batons on demonstrators outside EDO in June 2008

In June the policing had got pretty heavy-handed, and apparently even more so after I had left early thinking the demonstration was more or less over, when for some unaccountable reason the protesters were actually let on to the factory site and there was considerable mayhem all round.

This time things were tougher still, and not just for the protesters but also for photographers. On his blog,  Jason Parkinson writes  about the police actions:  “I am sick to death of seeing my work colleagues getting hurt while trying to do their job” and talks about “a continuous pattern of abuse, ignorance, intimidation, harassment, surveillance and violence” directed at journalists, particularly photographers and videographers who need to be very much in the thick of things to get their pictures.

Two other photographers, Marc Vallée and Jonathan Warren have described how they were filmed and questioned before the start of the event, and told they were not allowed to photograph in the area where protesters were arriving.

Later, Vallée was assaulted by police (again!) and another photographer was bitten when a police dog was set on him, requiring medical attention. At least one photographer was pepper sprayed.

In my camera bag I carry a copy of the Guidelines for reporters, photographers and news crews for dealing with police at incidents published by the BPPA, CIoJ and NUJ in association with the Metropolitan Police, which on their reverse carry the Met’s guidelines for officers. As it states, these guidelines “have been agreed at senior levels by all parties.  Please use them in a spirit of mutual professional respect to resolve any problems.”

These guidelines were adopted by all police forces in Britain in April 2007. They lay down general principles that recognise the law, the duty of the media to report from the scene of incidents, and the police duty to help them in doing so where possible.

These guidelines are simply not being followed so far as the policing of protests is concerned. As Jason ends his blog post:  “There is no excuse to baton a photographer, no excuse to pepper spray a photographer and absolutely no excuse to use a dog as an offensive weapon against a photographer.” This isn’t my idea of “mutual professional respect.”

Gilles Perrin – on show in Paris

A few days ago I had an e-mail from  Gilles Perrin about his work in two shows in Paris,   Children of the world at the Commercial stock exchange, 2 rue Viarme 75001 Paris from October 29 to November 12, 2008, and Recent works: Africa, Asia…  at bâtiment des Douches, 5 rue Legouve, 75010 Paris October 17 to November 28, 2008.

I was very impressed by Perrin’s work from Tibet and Africa when I met Gilles and Nicole in Birmingham last year. You can see more of his work on at the art-Contemporain site, and in particular his work from Ireland, THE MEN OF THE SEA, which has text in English as well as French.

The web site is easier if you read a little French, but otherwise, chose A l’affiche then click the red triangle to the right of «Les hommes de la mer», Irlande, 2007/2008. On the page that appears are links (red triangles) to the portraits from Cork and also “diptyques et triptyques”  and on these pages you can click on the red rectangles to see the pictures larger.

You can also read (in French) a PDF file about his work from March to September this year in Conflans Sainte Honorine, a historic town in the northwest suburbs of Paris around 15 miles from the city centre, where the River Oise runs into the River Seine. I’m not sure what it says about the town that it is twinned with Ramsgate.

You can find pictures from other exhibitions by going through the expositions link.

Editing Your Work

After a few days away and rather longer being tied up with putting a show on the wall I’ve today got back to catching up with some of my e-mail and reading some of the blogs I like to take a regular look at, including Jörg Colberg‘s Conscientious, which often comes up with some interesting leads. One of these that he mentioned a few days back was about Editing Pictures. Unlike me, Colberg often says little or nothing about the sites he links to, and his only comment on the article on Simon Robert‘s Blog was that it was a “must-read post.”

So I read it, and found it to be a very useful but hardly surprising account of how Roberts went about editing the pictures for his book ‘Motherland‘. Basically its probably not a lot different from the way many others work. He starts by having all of his films contact printed.

Nowadays I tend to do that instead on the Epson V750 Pro, which lets me scan my negatives in their filing sheets, carefully laid on top of the glass without a holder. It takes a complete 120 film in the filing sheet from the several different formats I use or either 5 strips of 6 35mm negs, 7 strips of 5 35mm negs or 7 strips of 3 XPan negs at a time.

Fine for the XPan, as its a whole film, but a problem for normal 36 exposure films which I have already filed, usually with 6 strips of 6 negs and a short end with 1 or 2 frames. However scan times are so short with the V750 that it is easy to make a second scan with the remaining strips – it only takes a few seconds to re-unite the two in Photoshop.

I find it better to make my first selection on screen – and its something I’ve become very used to with working from digital. 35mm printed contacts are a little on the small side, even though the high-quality loupe I use gives a superb view. If you work with film, it really is worth spending money on a really good loupe, though I made do for years with a cheaper Nikon one that isn’t bad…

Scanning at 360 dpi gives a jpeg file (at good quality) of around 2,000Kb for each contact sheet and is probably the minimum resolution worth considering. Each 35mm frame is then around 540×360 pixels and thus nominally around postcard size at 1:1 on the screen.

For Roberts, working away from base, the ability to see physical contact sheets while he was carrying out the work was of course pretty vital. He shot just over 5000 6×7 frames on the project in a year – a relatively small number of images compared to those of us who work with 35mm or digital, and both the small number and larger size certainly make editing easier.

From the contact sheets he made a selection of 500 images to scan and print, making up a book with 12 images per page. He doesn’t indicate the size of the book shown in the post, but if it was A3 landscape, then these images were around 4×3 inches. Roberts scanned all 500 for this on an Imacon, which seems to me overkill – the V750 could do the job perfectly adequately and a great deal faster.  If you are work on medium format and scan as contact sheets you can simply ‘cut’ the images out from these and paste them into a new document to print out.  For 35mm you would need to make your contacts at 600 dpi or higher, as then printing at 200 dpi would give images around 4.5 x 3 inches. (The optimum dpi for printing on most printers is probably 250-360dpi, but 200 dpi does a very decent job.)

500 pictures – 1 in 10 of his take – was still far too many for a book, and the challenge was to get them down, in his case to 153, for publication. (Looking at his book, which I think I wrote about briefly at the time it was published, I would actually have preferred a tighter edit, and considerably more text.)

There are two very important points that he makes on the real editing process that takes place at this point. Firstly that it is something that needs time; rather than making final choices immediately you need to go back time after time and let your thoughts about the images mature. Personally I prefer to leave work for years rather than months or weeks to give time for my initial enthusiasms, often more tied up with the event of making the image rather than the image itself, to evaporate and be replaced by a more clear-headed appreciation of the work.

It’s also true that many photographers are poor editors of their own work, too emotionally attached to it to think objectively. And some photographers are simply poor editors; the two occupations call for differering if overlapping skills. Roberts was fortunate to be able to call on the services of others, and in particular his publisher, Chris Boot.

The feature also contains some interesting quotes from a couple of books, one in which a number of well-known photographers give a sentence or two about their approach to editing and a slightly longer quote about editing and Gene Smith from ‘On being a photographer‘ – in which Magnum photographer David Hurn talked to Bill Jay.

I wrote about their views on Smith some years ago. They concentrate on his Pittsburgh work, produced in part during the short period he was a member of Magnum. It was in many ways a difficult project, not least for Smith when all his cameras and negatives were stolen. The burglars were caught after the cameras were sold as one contained a film on which they had photographed each other, but the negatives were never recovered and Smith had to re-shoot.  In some ways the project was doomed from the start, Smith had aimed to create an in-depth project, but Magnum and writer Stefan Lorant wanted a quick shoot with around a hundred pictures to decorate Lorant’s text. What they saw as a week or two of shooting eventually ended up as several years of Smith’s work, completed with the aid of a grant after he had left Magnum. But here’s the comment I wrote back in January 2000:

David Hurn and Bill Jay dismiss the idea that Smith was a good editor of his work, suggesting that all his best work was edited by Life staffers. It’s at best a curious argument, not least because Smith generally edited his work considerably before letting the staffers near, and the overwhelming evidence appears to be that they were limited to trimming and shoe-horning his ideas into the magazine format. At its best it was a painful and high-energy dialectic that did deliver. Hurn & Jay’s prime evidence is the stilted prose of the Pittsburgh article, which, according to other sources, was not by Smith, but written to a deadline by two Magnum staff at a time Smith was largely beyond lucid thought.

Which perhaps leads to a third point about editing.  It’s best done on a clear head and not under the influence of whiskey and Benzedrine or whatever your particular poison. A glass of wine may help me, but not a bottle.

But ‘Dream Street‘ was hardly as Hurn and Jay suggest “a failure“, except that is for the finances of Magnum, which Smith almost single-handedly brought to ruin (and he left owing money he was never able to repay.)  Some consider it Smith’s finest work, but perhaps Magnum was never able to forget that debt.

Moscow Mule meets My London Diary

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The start of mixing the ‘My London Diary’ cocktail

I’ve never really understood vodka. Or cocktails. But I did enjoy an evening yesterday in the company of other bloggers at Smirnoff’s London HQ, and the special cocktail concocted for me there – and it was a pleasure to watch someone who so clearly enjoyed his job crushing the strawberries and root ginger, shaking and pouring, stirring and decorating… But the ‘My London Diary‘ cocktail was far too labour intensive ever to challenge the ‘Moscow Mule‘.

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Another completed cocktail

For my Polish friends (and James Bond) the true home of vodka was of course Poland, and on my visits the only way for my liver to survive was to refuse to drink it, although there are sometimes few alternatives on offer.

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Serious vodka-free photography with an international cast (Russia, USA, Czechoslovakia and Japan – with Germany and the United Kingdom out of frame) in Poland – more from Alcatraz

I went to Bielsko-Biala for the first FotoArtFestival there in 2005, showing work – “post-industrial landscapes” – which you can see some of on my  London’s Industrial Heritage site.

Bielsko-Biala and the people were so charming that I was delighted to return last year for a second time, this time giving a presentation on photographers who had worked on the streets of British cities. Which of course concluded with some of my own work from ‘My London Diary‘.

Although for copyright reasons I’m unable to post much of that and other presentations on line, you can get an idea of the place and the events there in my two illustrated diaries from the events in 2005 and 2007.

English Carnival


The Mermaids and the Poodle, Hayling Island Carnival, 2005.  Paul Baldesare

You are invited to the opening of English Carnival at the Shoreditch Gallery, The Juggler, 5 Hoxton Market*, London, N1 6HG on Thursday 2 Oct, 6.30-8.30pm

*Hoxton Market is just off Pitfield St (between Coronet St and Boot St), close to Old St tube.

The show runs from 29 Sept- 31 Oct 2008, weekdays 8-6 : Sat10-4 : closed Sun and is a part of Photomonth 2008,  the East London photography festival.

English Carnival shows the work of four documentary photographers who have each been inspired by the carnival tradition and carried out long-term projects on Carnival in this country. Although they have at often worked together, each has a distinctly different approach to the subject in their photography. All four photographers have shown work extensively and their pictures have been published widely in books and magazines.


Lyme Regis , Bob Watkins

Paul Baldesare and Bob Watkins have photographed traditional English carnivals since the early 1990s, and they received an Arts Council National Lottery Grant in 1997-8 to continue their project. A show of their work organised by Kent Arts toured a number of venues in the South East. Baldesare in colour and Watkins in black and white both show the highly idiosyncratic and sometimes esoteric side of the traditional carnivals that result in their peculiar fascination.


Notting Hill, 1996, Peter Marshall

Peter Marshall’s black and white prints from the 1990s are from ‘Notting Hill in Carnival’ , published in ‘Visual Anthropology Review’ in 1999 with an essay and comments on the pictures by George Mentore, who took part in Notting Hill in the 1970s.


Hayling Island,  Dave Trainer

David Trainer’s striking black and white portraits come from traditional English carnivals and fairs. His work has been included in shows in leading galleries, including the Tate Gallery’s ‘How We Are: Photographing Britain.’

You can see more of the work on these projects at the English Carnival website, and a selection will be on show at the Shoreditch Gallery.  Please do come if you can – I hope to meet some of you at the opening.

Minneapolis

This morning I’ve been following a little trail that actually started from and item on PDNPulse which they had picked up from the Minnesota Indpendent .

The MI story listed 42 members of the news media who were arrested or detained during the policing of the protests outside the Republican National Convention (RNC) there, and two further names had already been added in comments on their story when I visited the site.

It’s hard to know how many of them were photographers (or videographers) because in many cases only the name of the organisation they were working for is given, but certainly more than the 11 listed by PDN are described as such in the MI story – and the two extra names are also photographers. But all 44 were media workers – and most if not all will have had ID to make that clear.

And of course in these days it’s a fair bet that most of them were carrying and using cameras – like Seth Rowe mentioned below – even if they are not called  ‘photographers.’

Vlad Teichberg of the NY new media art group ‘Glass Bead Collective‘ and two colleagues were detained by Minneapolis police and searched; police confiscated their cameras, computers and notes for several days (perhaps surprisingly for a new media group they even had a camera with film in it, and  apparently the police examined this in daylight but couldn’t see the pictures) but was released without charge.

In a short video clip on MI, Teichberg makes the point that there are just so many cameras around now that we have passed the point where police can actually stop videos of them behaving badly appearing on sites like You-tube, and that their only sensible response now is to keep within the law. It’s a point the police have yet to grasp.

On the Minneapolis Sun, Seth Rowe, community editor of the St. Louis Park Sun-Sailor writes about how he talked to the police chief about the situation and then went there determined to follow police instructions – and found himself arrested for doing just that. He gives a lengthy eye-witness report of his treatment, which suggests that many of the arrests were made simply to boost the pay of the officers concerned.

Another account worth reading comes from AP photographer Matt Rourke and was posted on the MinnPost web site along with the last picture he took before his arrest. Rather curiously the police allowed him to hand his camera over to a colleague when he was arrested.

The story also mentions – though rather unsympathetically – some of the other media workers arrested, with links to a couple of popular videos of their arrests which you may have already seen. If not they are also worth a look.

Perpignan Winners

You will probably have heard the names of the winners of this year’s Visa d’Or at Perpignan. More interesting for me was Philip Blenkinsop, awarded the Visa d’Or News for his coverage of the coverage of the earthquake in China, not least because of the rather unusual presentation. Pouring rain meant that the awards ceremony was abandoned, and left everyone wondering what was going to happen. Festival director Jean-Francois Leroy combed the town, award in hand searching for Blenkinsop, called him out of a restaurant and made the presentation in the street outside in the centre of a surging crowd of photographers.

You can watch the event without getting wet in a video on the PDNPulse web site (you’ll have to sit through an ad to do so.)

As you can read in the Digital Journalist, Blenkinsop chucked in a job as a photographer for an Australian newspaper in 1989 at the age of 21 finding it too shallow, sold his car to buy a Leica, some lenses and a one-way ticket to Bangkok, determined to point his camera at what was real and become a photojournalist.

At first he struggled, as few people wanted to publish pictures as raw as his, but in 1993 he was awarded the Felix H Mann Prize and 3rd place in World Press Photo for his work on the suppression of the pro-democracy movement in Thailand. In 1997 he joined Agence VU (and is now with the Amsterdam-based Agency NOOR, launched at last year’s Visa Pour l’Image.) He has deservedly picked up a tremendous series of awards including two earlier Visa d’Or – the 2003 Visa d’Or Magazine for his coverage of the ‘Secret War In Laos’ and the 2005 Visa d’Or News for his work on the tsunami.

At least Brent Stirton won his Visa d’Or Features for his pictures of the slaughter of gorillas in the Congo and not the (uncredited) images he took of of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s twin babes (which apparently made Getty $14 million.) You can also watch a video of him on PDN. Stirton, a senior staff photographer for Getty Images is another highly awarded photographer, but somehow his work sometimes makes me feel a little uncomfortable, perhaps too highly coloured and polished. Sometimes it strikes me as too much technique and perhaps not enough feeling.