来之不易的《论摄影》

pzhizhi 发表于 2010-11-21 23:51:04

                                    

                     
                                    


                                       

苏姗桑塔格的《论摄影》。
记得很久以前转贴过一篇“苏姗大妈”关于这本书的一篇文字,但因为是全E文的看不懂。而这本中文版的论摄影,从发现到购买也已经经历了好几个月的时间了。起初看见时想买的却没有下手,第二次仍旧没有下手,想着还是上当当看看吧,但之后又搁置了。第三次我告诉自己,如果还在的话就果断买下吧,店主大概很喜欢我或者可以说舍不得这本书,放这么久居然还在书店里。佩服一下我的运气,然后15块拿下。

放了几天,还没有机会拜读,先拍照留念,与大家分享。



关键词(Tag): 柏拉图 桑塔格

小眼神儿

pzhizhi 发表于 2010-11-14 15:47:04

                 
                           

   
  小家伙儿的眼神特别有味道,就这样充满好奇的望着镜头,有趣并耐人寻味。
       

时隔一年多,博客重开,时下都流行织围脖了,我怀疑会没人会来看我的图片。
家里的胶片一直躺在衣橱里,很长一段时间中很少拿出来使用,有50的标准定焦镜头。镜身很小巧,胶片相机也很轻,放在一起非常轻盈使用起来很随性,我喜欢这种随心所欲的只有感觉。已经忘记什么时候拍下这张照片的,冲印加扫描以后呈现在眼前后着实让自己惊讶和感动了一把。胶片就是有这样子的魔力。很少用胶片,或者平时拍的很节俭,时隔几个月甚至一年去把拍完的胶片一次性冲印出来,于是很久以前,甚至都忘记是不是自己拍过的画面跳入眼中,就好像以前的自己在大树下事先埋下一个瓶子,里面装满了礼物,送给将来的自己的礼物。




 

关键词(Tag): 胶片 街拍 泰迪

手机同步害死人

pzhizhi 发表于 2009-07-26 22:42:00



        今天生日聚会,人很多,又唱歌又吃饭的,可惜某人不在。
孕妇同学和老公送了蛋糕,唱到最后走掉不少,吃饭的人寥寥无几,拍了点照片话了些钱,还算是高高兴兴平平安安的。

        回家玩手机,同步联系人,该死的同步,让我又爱又狠。好好的几百个人都给同没了一大半不是,郁闷之极。
完了想象也罢,我们也学学佛家随缘的习惯吧,该来的自会来,该走的留也留不住。删掉的人,是对自己重要的自然会主动来联系,不联系的多半也是接近陌生人的存在了,也罢也罢的。






关键词(Tag): 生日 聚会 手机 同步 该死

2009.07.15

pzhizhi 发表于 2009-07-15 13:02:40





            当别人告诉你,这件事情你做不到的时候,不是因为你做不到,
                                                       而是因为他们自己做不到,所以以为你也做不到!



                                                             ---------摘自 电影《当幸福来敲门:The Pursuit of Happyness》


          自己也杜撰一句的话,大概会是:
          当你认为一件事情你做不到的时候,并不是你真的就做不到,而可能是你不想去做到罢了。

          都是描述人行动力的话语,行动力低的朋友可以参考,
                               
                                                                                    其实生活的自由度可没有你想象的那么低的哦,
                               你可以做的事情比你想象中的应该是多得多,一切皆有可能吧。





2009.07.13

pzhizhi 发表于 2009-07-13 23:49:24


    顶替休年假的同事一周的工作,早上心情很差的自己因为妞同志的消息重回云端。
                                   下班以后庆祝自己的好心情,贵的梦龙,乐事薯片都吃上了,

                                                                               
啪嚓啪嚓的嚼着番茄味的薯片,原来快乐的生活就是这么简单。



                             歪酷重开,难得难得~~~~~~。









关键词(Tag): 乐事 蓝天 薯片 梦龙 猪流感

技术与想法....孰轻孰重? [转载]

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-12-08 17:11:57

 

最近常常遇到人家问我.
一张影像的呈现,是技术重要还是想法重要呢
?
尤其在摄影比赛时,全学会派的评审,选出漂漂亮亮的照片却不具内容性
...
引起大家一阵质疑,此时又如何去分别好与坏呢
?
回到摄影的本身,其实一直以来总是强调,摄影是一种主观,好与坏其实因人而异
~
但是当一幅很棒的作品展出,大家那种倒吸一口气与深深感动的氛围...其实是对一位摄影家最大的鼓励与回馈
!!
所以..."共鸣"...也是很重要的!!(今天跟某位学妹讨论的内容
)
那一张好的照片,共鸣感要如何去创造呢
??
前阵子突然想到这个问题,就仔细去思考了一下
..

就像写文章好了
..
一篇感人肺腑的文章,当然内容性是很重要的,但是如果写文章的人笔迹太丑
..
那我想能够感动的也很有限
~
试想...当某位小姐接到一封情书,上面的字迹潦草外加鬼划符...我想就算内容再惊天地泣鬼神
...
女生会感动的机会也颇为渺茫吧
!!!
但是当某人从小书法笔墨挥毫淋漓尽致...但是肚里笔墨不足只能拿酱油沾
~~
那就算笔迹再美,内容也会令人哭笑不得吧
~
那女生也很难被感动
...
所以,工整的笔墨加上流畅动人的文句,才能写出一篇动人的文章
...
两者皆有其重要性,当然一般人视觉上会先被优美的笔迹所吸引,之后才会经思考去阅读
..
这是人透过视觉撷取信息的方式,也造成一般人进入摄影领域大多是被美丽照片吸引的缘故
...
但华美的文字最终还是需要感动的内涵方能传颂千古....(最近常看诸葛亮的出师表...哈哈哈
!!)

那现在有人说啦~~进入高科技的时代,大家都用打字,谁在用手写字
...
好啦...所以大家都用计算机打字,每个字出来都一样,差别只在于选用的字型不同
..
但是如果是一个女生收到用计算机打字打印出来的情书,会感动的机会大概比散弹打鸟要小一点
....
用手写的情书当然感觉会不一样,如果又是文字与内容并茂...那感动就更大了
..
而且会写出一手好字与好文章的,就算用打字的,也会选出最合适的字型与文章内容搭配
..
这就像现在进入数字化的时代,相机工业的发达,技术门坎的降低
...
让大家人人都能拍照,却总是少了那么一点感动的味道
!!

那每个人是不是都应该要努力练字兼看很多书呢
?
那当然是不错的一个方式,但是一篇没有自身体会所写出来的文章
..
很容易"为赋新词强说愁"...华美的文句与文字,但是读者却很难体会所想表达的东西...(突然想到"色戒"...一群大学生的爱国?..一整个就很别扭
)
从生活里体验,将感动化为文字..影像...那样才能感动人
..
而一个成熟的摄影家..写作家
..
就是很容易将这些感动...小化大~细水化泉源~~~然后表现出来
~
(
所以有时看艺术家总是疯疯巅巅的...哈哈哈
)

好啦~那又有人说,可是我对某些作品硬是没有感觉,感觉它总是硬ㄠ
~
或是对某些美丽的照片,斥之以鼻~说它没有内涵
~
其实都是不必须的,青菜萝卜,各有所好
~
每个人总是会有自己独特欣赏的调性,那跟个性..背景..经验...喜好与环境有关
...
就像有人喜欢新诗..绝句..律诗...散文..小说...一样~

你能说一篇记叙文的价值会比一篇新诗低吗?
好像不太能比~~因为两者个价值本来就不一样..
我很理性..所以我写论说文,我很感性...所以我写新诗...
但理性的人就不能写新诗吗?
也不是,只是当文句不够成熟时,总会让人感觉有点不伦不类...

好啦~拉里拉杂写了一堆,重点到底是什么?
重点就是,技术与想法都很重要,但每个人最重要的..
是找出自己适合与喜欢的是什么..
并从生活中追寻感动,并将之转化成作品与人分享...
成熟不成熟,得奖不得奖并不重要...
仔细品味当下不是更加令人珍惜吗?

共勉之~

关键词(Tag): 摄影 技术 想法

[转载]英文原版《论摄影》

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-11-03 20:32:17





苏珊·桑塔格的论文集《
论摄影》中文版我已经看过几篇了,她对摄影剖析的深刻程度,我认为是无人能望其项背的,她就是伟大!

对于翻译过来的书籍,我总是有种不相信翻译的感觉,尤其对于学术思想性较强的书。我不是怀疑翻译者们的英语水平,而是因为翻译者自己如果不是从事某种学科的研究者或者对某种学科有较深的前理解者,很可能会把内容直译或者不能翻译出原著应有的思想观念和味道,这样就会和原著本意造成一定程度的偏差。所以我决定把苏珊·桑塔格的《论摄影》的英文版找来读一遍,因为桑塔格是用英文写作的,所以不存在转译问题,英文版是最直接和桑塔格思想接触的方式了。

英文版的《论摄影》我没有在书店买到,好像很难见到,我就在网上找了英文的文档。我分部分把它发上来,每天读一些,有兴趣的朋友我们一起来分享。

On Photography Susan Sontag
Preface
for Nicole Stephane
It all started with one essay
--about some of the problems, aesthetic and moral, posed by the omnipresence of photographed images; but the more I thought about what photographs are, the more complex and suggestive they became. So one generated another, and that one (to my bemusement) another, and so on--a progress of essays, about the meaning and career of photographs--until I'd gone far enough so that the argument sketched in the first essay, documented and digressed from in the succeeding essays, could be recapitulated and extended in a more theoretical way; and could stop.

The essays were first published (in a slightly different form) in The New York Review of Books, and probably would never have been written were it not for the encouragement given by its editors, my friends Robert Silvers and Barbara Epstein, to my obsession with photography. I am grateful to them, and to my friend Don Eric Levine, for much patient advice and unstinting help.


In Plato's Cave
Π Humankind lingers unregenerately in Plata's cave, still reveling, its age-old habit, in mere images of the truth. But being educated by photographs is not like being educated by older, more artisanal images. For one thing, there are a great many more images around, claiming our attention. The inventory started in 1839 and since then just about every­thing has been photographed, or so it seems. This very insatiability of the photographing eye changes the terms of confinement in the cave, our world In teaching us a new visual code, photographs alter and enlarge our notions of what is worth looking at and what we have a right to observe. They are a grammar and, even more importantly, an ethics of seeing. Finally, the most grandiose result of the photo­graphic enterprise is to give us the sense that we can hold the whole world in our heads--as an anthology of images.  

To collect photographs is to collect the world Movies and television programs light up walls, flicker, and go out; but with still photographs the image is also an object, light-weight, cheap to produce, easy to carry about, accumulate, store. In Godard's Les Carabiniers (1963), two sluggish Iumpen-peasants arc lured into joining the King's Army by the promise that they will be able to loot, rape, kill, or do whatever else they please to the enemy, and get rich. But the suitcase of booty that Michel-Ange and Ulysse triumphantly bring home, years later, to their wives turns out to contain only picture postcards, hundreds of them, of Monu­ments. Department Stores, Mammals, Wonders of Nature, Methods of Transport, Works of Art, and other classified treasures from around the globe. Godard's gag vividly paro­dies the equivocal magic of the photographic image. Photo­graphs are perhaps the most mysterious of all the objects that make up, and thicken, the environment we recognize as modern Photographs really arc experience captured, and the camera is the ideal arm of consciousness in its acquisitive mood.

To photograph is to appropriate the thing photographed. It means putting oneself into a certain relation to the world that feels like knowledge--and, therefore, like power. A now notorious first fall into alienation, habituating people to abstract the world into printed words, is supposed to have engendered that surplus of Faustian energy and psychic damage needed to build modern, inorganic societies. But print seems a less treacherous form of leaching out the world, of turning it into a mental object, than photographic images, which now provide most of the knowledge people have about the look of the past and the reach of the present What is written about a person or an event is frankly an interpretation, as are handmade visual statements, like paintings and drawings. Photographed images do not seem to be statements about the world so much as pieces of it, miniatures of reality that anyone can make or acquire.

Photographs, which fiddle with the scale of the world, themselves get reduced, blown up, cropped, retouched, doctored, tricked out. They age, plagued by the usual ills of paper objects; they disappear, they become valuable, and get bought and sold; they are reproduced. Photographs, which package the world, seem to invite packaging. They are stuck in albums, framed and set on tables, tacked on walls, projected as slides Newspapers and magazines feature them; cops alphabetize them; museums exhibit them; publishers compile them.

For many decades the book has been the most influential way of arranging (and usually miniaturizing) photographs, thereby guaranteeing them longevity, if not immortality-- photographs are fragile objects, easily torn or mislaid--and a wider public. The photograph in a book is, obviously, the image of an image But since it is, to begin with, a printed, smooth object, a photograph loses much less of its essential quality when reproduced in a book than a painting does. Still, the book is not a wholly satisfactory scheme for putting groups of photographs into general circulation. The se­quence in which the photographs are to be looked at is proposed by the order of pages, but nothing holds readers to the recommended order or indicates the amount of time to be spent on each photograph. Chris Marker's film, Si j'avais quatre dromadaires (1966), a brilliantly orchestrated meditation on photographs of all sorts and themes, suggests a subtler and more rigorous way of packaging (and enlarg­ing) still photographs Both the order and the exact time for looking at each photograph are imposed; and there is a gain in visual legibility and emotional impact. But photographs transcribed in a film cease to be collectable objects, as they still arc when served up in books.

Π Photographs furnish evidence. Something we hear about, but doubt, seems proven when we're shown a photograph of it. In one version of its utility, the camera record incrimi­nates. Starting with their use by the Paris police in the murderous roundup of Communards in June 1871, photo­graphs became a useful tool of modem states in the surveil­lance and control of their increasingly mobile populations In another version of its utility, the camera record justifies. A photograph passes for incontrovertible proof that a given thing happened. The picture may distort, but there is always a presumption that something exists, or did exist, which is like what's in the picture. Whatever the limitations (through amateurism) or pretensions (through artistry) of the individual photographer, a photograph--any photograph--seems to have a more innocent, and therefore more accurate, relation to visible reality than do other mimetic objects. Virtuosi of the noble image like Alfred Stieglitz and Paul Strand, composing mighty, unforgettable photographs decade after decade, still want, first of all, to show something "out there," just like the Polaroid owner for whom photo­graphs are a handy, fast form of note-taking, or the shutter-bug with a Brownie who takes snapshots as souvenirs of daily life.

While a painting or a prose description can never be other than a narrowly selective interpretation, a photograph can be treated as a narrowly selective transparency. But despite the presumption of veracity that gives all photographs au­thority, interest, seductiveness, the work that photographers do is no generic exception to the usually shady commerce between art and truth. Even when photographers are most concerned with mirroring reality, they are still haunted by tacit imperatives of taste and conscience. The immensely gifted members of the Farm Security Administration photo­graphic project of the late 1930s (among them Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, Ben Shahn, Russell Lee) would take dozens of frontal pictures of one of their sharecropper subjects until satisfied that they had gotten just the right look on film--the precise expression on the subject's face that supported their own notions about poverty, light, dig­nity, texture, exploitation, and geometry. In deciding how a picture should look, in preferring one exposure to another, photographers are always imposing standards on their sub­jects. Although there is a sense in which the camera does indeed capture reality, not just interpret it, photographs are as much an interpretation of the world as paintings and drawings are. Those occasions when the taking of photo­graphs is relatively undiscriminating, promiscuous, or self-effacing do not lessen the didacticism of the whole enter­prise. This very passivity--and ubiquity--of the photograph­ic record is photography's "message," its aggression.

Images which idealize (like most fashion and animal photography) are no less aggressive than work which makes a virtue of plainness (like class pictures, still lifes of the bleaker sort, and mug shots). There is an aggression implicit in every use of the camera. This is as evident in the 1840s and 1850s, photography's glorious first two decades, as in all the suc­ceeding decades, during which technology made possible an ever increasing spread of that mentality which looks at the world as a set of potential photographs. Even for such early masters as David Octavius Hill and Julia Margaret Cameron who used the camera as a means of getting painterly images, the point of taking photographs was a vast departure from the aims of painters. From its start, photography implied the capture of the largest possible number of subjects. Painting never had so imperial a scope. The subsequent industrializa­tion of camera technology only carried out a promise inher­ent in photography from its very beginning: to democratize all experiences by translating them into images.

That age when taking photographs required a cumber­some and expensive contraption--the toy of the clever, the wealthy, and the obsessed--seems remote indeed from the era of sleek pocket cameras that invite anyone to take pic­tures. The first cameras, made in France and England in the early 1840s, had only inventors and buffs to operate them. Since there were then no professional photographers, there could not be amateurs either, and taking photographs had no clear social use; it was a gratuitous, that is, an artistic activity, though with few pretensions to being an art. It was only with its industrialization that photography came into its own as art. As industrialization provided social uses for the operations of the photographer, so the reaction against these uses reinforced the self-consciousness of photography-as-art.

Π Recently, photography has become almost as widely prac­ticed an amusement as sex and dancing--which means that, like every mass art form, photography is not practiced by most people as an art. It is mainly a social rite, a defense against anxiety, and a tool of power.

Memorializing the achievements of individuals consid­ered as members of families (as well as of other groups) is the earliest popular use of photography. For at least a cen­tury, the wedding photograph has been as much a part of the ceremony as the prescribed verbal formulas. Cameras go with family life. According to a sociological study done in France, most households have a camera, but a household with children is twice as likely to have at least one camera as a household in which there are no children. Not to take pictures of one's children, particularly when they are small, is a sign of parental indifference, just as not turning up for one's graduation picture is a gesture of adolescent rebellion.

Through photographs, each family constructs a portrait-chronicle of itself--a portable kit of images that bears wit­ness to its connectedness. It hardly matters what activities are photographed so long as photographs get taken and are cherished. Photography becomes a rite of family life just when, in the industrializing countries of Europe and Amer­ica, the very institution of the family starts undergoing radical surgery. As that claustrophobic unit, the nuclear family, was being carved out of a much larger family aggregate, photography came along to memorialize, to restate symbolically, the imperiled continuity and vanishing extendedness of family life. Those ghostly traces, photographs, supply the token presence of the dispersed relatives. A family's photo­graph album is generally about the extended family--and, often, is all that remains of it.

As photographs give people an imaginary possession of a past that is unreal, they also help people to take possession of space in which they are insecure. Thus, photography develops in tandem with one of the most characteristic of modern activities: tourism. For the first time in history, large numbers of people regularly travel out of their habitual environments for short periods of time. It seems positively unnatural to travel for pleasure without taking a camera along. Photographs will offer indisputable evidence that the trip was made, that the program was carried out, that fun was had. Photographs document sequences of consumption carried on outside the view of family, friends, neighbors. But dependence on the camera, as the device that makes real what one is experiencing, doesn't fade when people travel more. Taking photographs fills the same need for the cos­mopolitans accumulating photograph-trophies of their boat trip up the Albert Nile or their fourteen days in China as it does for lower-middle-class vacationers taking snapshots of the Eiffel Tower or Niagara Falls.

A way of certifying experience, taking photographs is also a way of refusing it--by limiting experience to a search for the photogenic, by converting experience into an image, a souvenir. Travel becomes a strategy for accumulating photo­graphs. The very activity of taking pictures is soothing, and assuages general feelings of disorientation that are likely to be exacerbated by travel. Most tourists feel compelled to put the camera between themselves and whatever is remarkable that they encounter. Unsure of other responses, they take a picture. This gives shape to experience: stop, take a photo­graph, and move on. The method especially appeals to peo­ple handicapped by a ruthless work ethic--Germans, Japa­nese, and Americans. Using a camera appeases the anxiety which the work-driven feel about not working when they are on vacation and supposed to be having fun. They have something to do that is like a friendly imitation of work: they can take pictures.

People robbed of their past seem to make the most fer­vent picture takers, at home and abroad. Everyone who lives in an industrialized society is obliged gradually to give up the past, but in certain countries, such as the United States and Japan, the break with the past has been particularly trau­matic. In the early 1970s, the fable of the brash Ameri­can tourist of the 1950s and 1960s, rich with dollars and Babbittry, was replaced by the mystery of the group-minded Japanese tourist, newly released from his island prison by the miracle of overvalued yen, who is generally armed with two cameras, one on each hip.

Photography has become one of the principal devices for experiencing something, for giving an appearance of partici­pation. One full-page ad shows a small group of people standing pressed together, peering out of the photograph, all but one looking stunned, excited, upset. The one who wears a different expression holds a camera to his eye; he seems self-possessed, is almost smiling. While the others are pas­sive, clearly alarmed spectators, having a camera has trans­formed one person into something active, a voyeur: only he has mastered the situation. What do these people see? We don't know. And it doesn't matter. It is an Event: something worth seeing--and therefore worth photographing. The ad copy, white letters across the dark lower third of the photo-graph like news coming over a teletype machine, consists of just six words: "... Prague . . . Woodstock . . . Vietnam . . . Sapporo . . . Londonderry . . . LEICA." Crushed hopes, youth antics, colonial wars, and winter sports are alike--are equalized by the camera. Taking photographs has set up a chronic voyeuristic relation to the world which levels the meaning of all events.

A photograph is not just the result of an encounter be­tween an event and a photographer; picture-taking is an event in itself, and one with ever more peremptory rights-- to interfere with, to invade, or to ignore whatever is going on. Our very sense of situation is now articulated by the camera's interventions. The omnipresence of cameras per­suasively suggests that time consists of interesting events, events worth photographing. This, in turn, makes it easy to feel that any event, once underway, and whatever its moral character, should be allowed to complete itself--so that something else can be brought into the world, the photo­graph. After the event has ended, the picture will still exist, conferring on the event a kind of immortality (and impor­tance) it would never otherwise have enjoyed. While real people are out there killing themselves or other real people, the photographer stays behind his or her camera, creating a tiny element of another world: the image-world that bids to outlast us all.

Photographing is essentially an act of non-intervention. Part of the horror of such memorable coups of contempo­rary photojournalism as the pictures of a Vietnamese bonze reaching for the gasoline can, of a Bengali guerrilla in the act of bayoneting a trussed-up collaborator, comes from the awareness of how plausible it has become, in situations where the photographer has the choice between a photo­graph and a life, to choose the photograph. The person who intervenes cannot record; the person who is recording can­not intervene. Dziga Vertov's great film, Man with a Movie Camera (1929), gives the ideal image of the photographer as someone in perpetual movement, someone moving through a panorama of disparate events with such agility and speed that any intervention is out of the question. Hitch­cock's Rear Window (1954) gives the complementary image: the photographer played by James Stewart has an intensified relation to one event, through his camera, pre­cisely because he has a broken leg and is confined to a wheelchair; being temporarily immobilized prevents him from acting on what he sees, and makes it even more impor­tant to take pictures. Even if incompatible with intervention in a physical sense, using a camera is still a form of participa­tion. Although the camera is an observation station, the act of photographing is more than passive observing. Like sexual voyeurism, it is a way of at least tacitly, often explicitly, encouraging whatever is going on to keep on happening. To take a picture is to have an interest in things as they are, in the status quo remaining unchanged (at least for as long as it takes to get a "good" picture), to be in complicity with whatever makes a subject interesting, worth photographing --including, when that is the interest, another person's pain or misfortune.

Π "I always thought of photography as a naughty thing to do--that was one of my favorite things about it," Diane Arbus wrote, "and when I first did it I felt very perverse." Being a professional photographer can be thought of as naughty, to use Arbus's pop word, if the photographer seeks out subjects considered to be disreputable, taboo, marginal. But naughty subjects are harder to find these days. And what exactly is the perverse aspect of picture-taking? If profes­sional photographers often have sexual fantasies when they are behind the camera, perhaps the perversion lies in the fact that these fantasies are both plausible and so inappropri­ate. In Blowup (1966), Antonioni has the fashion photogra­pher hovering convulsively over Veruschka's body with his camera clicking. Naughtiness, indeed! In fact, using a cam­era is not a very good way of getting at someone sexually. Between photographer and subject, there has to be distance. The camera doesn't rape, or even possess, though it may presume, intrude, trespass, distort, exploit, and, at the far­thest reach of metaphor, assassinate--all activities that, un­like the sexual push and shove, can be conducted from a distance, and with some detachment.

There is a much stronger sexual fantasy in Michael Pow­ell's extraordinary movie Peeping Tom (1960), which is not about a Peeping Tom but about a psychopath who kills women with a weapon concealed in his camera, while photo­graphing them. Not once does he touch his subjects. He doesn't desire their bodies; he wants their presence in the form of filmed images--those showing them experiencing their own death--which he screens at home for his solitary pleasure. The movie assumes connections between impo­tence and aggression, professionalized looking and cruelty, which point to the central fantasy connected with the cam­era. The camera as phallus is, at most, a flimsy variant of the inescapable metaphor that everyone unselfconsciously employs. However hazy our awareness of this fantasy, it is named without subtlety whenever we talk about "loading" and "aiming" a camera, about "shooting" a film.

The old-fashioned camera was clumsier and harder to reload than a brown Bess musket. The modern camera is trying to be a ray gun. One ad reads:

The Yashica Electro-35 GT is the spaceage camera your family will love. Take beautiful pictures day or night. Automatically. Without any nonsense. Just aim, focus and shoot. The GT's computer brain and electronic shutter will do the rest.

Like a car, a camera is sold as a predatory weapon--one that's as automated as possible, ready to spring. Popular taste expects an easy, an invisible technology. Manufacturers reas­sure their customers that taking pictures demands no skill or expert knowledge, that the machine is all-knowing, and responds to the slightest pressure of the will. It's as simple as turning the ignition key or pulling the trigger.

Like guns and cars, cameras are fantasy-machines whose use is addictive. However, despite the extravagances of or­dinary language and advertising, they are not lethal. In the hyperbole that markets cars like guns, there is at least this much truth: except in wartime, cars kill more people than guns do. The camera/gun does not kill, so the ominous metaphor seems to be all bluff--like a man's fantasy of having a gun, knife, or tool between his legs. Still, there is something predatory in the act of taking a picture. To photograph people is to violate them, by seeing them as they never see themselves, by having knowledge of them they can never have; it turns people into objects that can be symbolically possessed. Just as the camera is a sublima­tion of the gun, to photograph someone is a sublimated murder--a soft murder, appropriate to a sad, frightened time.

Eventually, people might learn to act out more of their aggressions with cameras and fewer with guns, with the price being an even more image-choked world. One situa­tion where people are switching from bullets to film is the photographic safari that is replacing the gun safari in East Africa. The hunters have Hasselblads instead of Winches­ters; instead of looking through a telescopic sight to aim a rifle, they look through a viewfinder to frame a picture. In end-of-the-century London, Samuel Butler complained that "there is a photographer in every bush, going about like a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour." The photogra­pher is now charging real beasts, beleaguered and too rare to kill. Guns have metamorphosed into cameras in this ear­nest comedy, the ecology safari, because nature has ceased to be what it always had been--what people needed protec­tion from. Now nature--tamed, endangered, mortal-- needs to be protected from people. When we are afraid, we shoot. But when we are nostalgic, we take pictures.

It is a nostalgic time right now, and photographs actively promote nostalgia. Photography is an elegiac art, a twilight art. Most subjects photographed are, just by virtue of being photographed, touched with pathos. An ugly or grotesque subject may be moving because it has been dignified by the attention of the photographer. A beautiful subject can be the object of rueful feelings, because it has aged or decayed or no longer exists. All photographs are memento mori. To take a photograph is to participate in another person's (or thing's) mortality, vulnerability, mutability. Precisely by slic­ing out this moment and freezing it, all photographs testify to time's relentless melt.

Cameras began duplicating the world at that moment when the human landscape started to undergo a vertiginous rate of change: while an untold number of forms of biologi­cal and social life are being destroyed in a brief span of time, a device is available to record what is disappearing. The moody, intricately textured Paris of Atget and Brassai is mostly gone. Like the dead relatives and friends preserved in the family album, whose presence in photographs exor­cises some of the anxiety and remorse prompted by their disappearance, so the photographs of neighborhoods now torn down, rural places disfigured and made barren, supply our pocket relation to the past.

A photograph is both a pseudo-presence and a token of absence. Like a wood fire in a room, photographs--espe­cially those of people, of distant landscapes and faraway cities, of the vanished past--are incitements to reverie. The sense of the unattainable that can be evoked by photographs feeds directly into the erotic feelings of those for whom desirability is enhanced by distance. The lover's photograph hidden in a married woman's wallet, the poster photograph of a rock star tacked up over an adolescent's bed, the cam­paign-button image of a politician's face pinned on a voter's coat, the snapshots of a cabdriver's children clipped to the visor--all such talismanic uses of photographs express a feel­ing both sentimental and implicitly magical: they are at­tempts to contact or lay claim to another reality.(待续)


转载的,慢慢琢磨吧。

每天记录,6570

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-11-01 23:10:22



今天,从朋友开心网上的日记里看到这样一篇记录。
一位普通摄影师,从一个时间开始知道自己最后的日子中每天一张的记录着身边的生活,
直到死后他的朋友整理公布了这些照片。
都在这个网站里。
其实,拍照就是这么简单,
眼睛看,用相机记录,然后分享给大家看,仅此而已。
摄影的本质,只是记录。

有兴趣的朋友可以看看自己的生日那天拍的是哪张照片哦,可惜我那天的正好没有,看来还不是每天一张呢,
也许是那位粗心的朋友给漏掉了吧,哈哈。

希望我死后也可以留下这样的一份相册。

网址:
http://photooftheday.hughcrawford.com/





[转载]最纯粹的舞蹈&最专注的人——芭蕾摄影师王宁

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-10-28 21:18:11


















































转帖一位摄影师的作品。

拍得很美,真的,呵呵。

以前一直对这类艺术类人体摄影没什么感觉。

这组照片给我感触不少。

什么时候我也能拥有这样的能力,呵呵。

捕捉美的能力。




麦当劳高地

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-10-25 22:30:08

.


转拍杂志上的一幅作品,幽默风格,却寓意深刻。
关键词(Tag): 麦当劳 解放军 登陆 高地

最近是手机摄影。

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-10-19 00:33:02







秋日的午后,课堂里,很无聊,于是又拿自己的笔袋当模特………………

最近有些好上用手机来拍照,快捷,随便,口袋里掏出几下操作就可以开始拍照,并且不招摇。

扫街和随拍的最理想工具吧,怪不得很多名家业余时也多尝试这样新兴的拍照设备来。


家里有单反,但有时候这家伙让我感觉窒息,拿着他反而有一种负担和压力,好装备拍不出好片的压力。手机和DC就没有。
并且携带确实不够方便,所以,单反多是在家修养身心的,陪伴左右的暂时就是手机了。

参加一日一照的活动,感觉也不错,希望这次可以坚持的久一点。

今天开始,每天一照

pzhizhi 发表于 2008-10-16 23:07:39






好久好久好久久久久久~~~~~~。


没有来更新了。


玩了Picasa2有一段时间,发觉很好用,而且居然有直接往这里发博的功能,怎么可以浪费,于是乎,之之图片社重开。

在yupoo里面参加一日一照活动,顺便在这里也贴一份与大家共享吧。

以后会坚持每天上传一张,所以这里,应该没意外的话会天天更新。

最后,大家来我的yupoo参观,地址
pzhizhi.yupoo.com

关键词(Tag): yupoo 一日一照