I had been floating around in Camden this afternoon, on a very hot day...![]()
I think I would have left him with what little bit of privacy he has left.
James,
When a lady's undies appeared at her ankles as she climbs the stairway of a London double Decker bus, that one refrains from photographing! This fellow, OTOH, is fair game. either he has diabetic coma of some sort or some other malady or heat stroke and needs an ambulance or else he was cognitive and responsible for himself and fair game. He gives up privacy when he plops himself down on a public street!
Asher
... This fellow, OTOH, is fair game. either he has diabetic coma of some sort or some other malady or heat stroke and needs an ambulance or else he was cognitive and responsible for himself and fair game. He gives up privacy when he plops himself down on a public street!
Asher
I disagree with you on this Asher. Yes, being on the street is giving up one's privacy to a certain degree but it doesn't mean that we should go ahead and exploit it. Suppose that he was indeed sick, does this make him fair game? And what about his dignity? Please don't start about the rights of photographers. just ask yourself the question. If you were that man lying on the street, would you object to your picture being published here or not? I know the answer already.
I'm not about to divulge all of what happened here, you guys can make up your own mind, and if your offended by it then i'm not about to change your mind. As well as being a 'street' photograph, it's also a 'documentary' one and the job is done if it's made you think about this guy like this or otherwise...
I've done my fair share of talking to drunks and homeless people in the street and they don't give a *hit about what they do or how they look, i'm not about to start inanely concerning myself now.
Asher is right, and his comment goes without saying IMO...As for exploiting, how am I doing that? I'm exploiting this guy's notable deed and feat, i'll give you that...
Btw, I wonder if you'd adopt the same 'privacy' related view to some of HCB's images, namely 'On the Banks of the Marne', Marseilles 1932 and The Coronation of King George, to mention a few...
All this privacy related, nonsense talk irks me...
Judging by certain reactions you've given in other threads, you seem to get irked by many things Paul. I suppose it will also irk you if I say that you should relax a bit more; this is the internet after all which is full of irritating people. I'll refrain from interacting with you from now on, as I only talk nonsense anyway...All this privacy related, nonsense talk irks me...
Judging by certain reactions you've given in other threads, you seem to get irked by many things Paul. I suppose it will also irk you if I say that you should relax a bit more; this is the internet after all which is full of irritating people. I'll refrain from interacting with you from now on, as I only talk nonsense anyway.
Hey James, I cannot believe what you've said about this image not saying anything! If anything, it says something about the human condition doesn't it?
Also, it's mostly homeless types of people you see looking like this but I doubt very much that this guy is homeless judging by his clothes...I also think there is a sense of humour in the guy's dress code, what with those glasses he's wearing, they make me laugh.
Anyway, for me it's another scene really worth documenting, for all of the above reasons...and because it's incongruous and out of order.
I never want to photograph people unless there is some contrast, symmetry, analogy or incongruity going on and I think this scene has a couple of those qualities.
Anyway, having said this I would like to hear you define to me why it doesn't say anything to you?
Asher, that is so well said. It was very useful you putting forward Diane Arbus's name. I find that having a huge and varied appreciation of all of what has gone before is like having a photographic mode d' emploi inside your mind...
Jim,
We can just pass by, but if we all did this, then, how would the streets be documented without bias?
Do we just take pictures of folk who are sober and behaving nicely?
Asher
Give it a conscience!
No but they should have some design and thought put into them otherwise they just become a compilation of facts and a list of items.
Cem,
That's an overreaction, as have been several of our social comments! I hope you'll rethink this and still comment on such socially complex issues that Paul might show. We have to encourage diversity or with so many different points of view, we'd have a lot of barriers put up! We also need to know where boundaries are from many perspectives. Think of it! Not commenting at all is actually failing to contribute what's needed to the matrix of fair intellectual reaction and emotional response, so we'd lose out! Your point of view, however it might be, is a valid component of community feelings....
Thanks for your understanding.No worries, Cem. We're all different and of different colours and that's what makes the world go round. I have sometimes wanted to stop it just so that I could get off for a bit...![]()
No worries, Cem. We're all different and of different colours and that's what makes the world go round. I have sometimes wanted to stop it just so that I could get off for a bit...![]()