It's a good discussion - I agree with
@Merlin5 / Lee - that (a) Tony Ray Jones is wonderful and (b) that there are street photos that meet any number of "good" criteria, and as far as critique goes we can look at these, discuss them, and learn from them. Critique in any area of the arts is immensely beneficial and I find it sad that it's no longer part of what goes on here. My greatest learning in music, prose, and photography has always come from critiques by better protagonists, and those critiques - and the associated learning - has seen me improve no end.
But I still maintain that a photo
doesn't have to have those elements to be good. Yes, these things may be the foundations of "good" photography and yes they may make a photo stronger, but they are not essential. An image can be good, great, indeed iconic, without them. As stated earlier, many of my favourite photos have camera shake, or aren't in focus, or have blown highlights, or the darks contain no detail, or arms and heads are cut off, or there's a colour cast to the picture, or the horizon isn't level, or the framing of the subject is poor,.. or indeed a score of other things All of these things ought to negate a photo from being considered "good" but if there is a story there, then (for me - YMMV) that story surpasses all else, and what ought to be a poor photograph, technically, can be (again
to me), great.
And, of course, the opposite can be true. A photograph that meets all of the criteria by which the experts could judge its merit and which could score top marks in all areas may leave me cold and uninterested.
Anyway, yes, we can learn from feedback. Critiques by masters that point out the important stuff is gold-dust. But let's hope those masters haven't been blinded to what really matters.
Derek