A question that I'm curious about: is candid street photography consdered 'wrong' because it doesn't have consent from the subject(s)? Shooting candids seems to me to capture the essence of street photography, since as soon as you engage someone you're doing portraiture and the street scene is no longer represented accurately. Your model then starts playing to the camera and responding to your input instead of being themselves.
It's not wrong per say... Rhodese's image, as he described it sounded quite charming actually. Not portraying anyone in a particular light, but more importantly, not pandering to stereotypes in a derogatory way... old people made to look sad and pathetic, when in reality they may not be any such thing.. homeless people looking like victims... shots of "youths" made to look like their chavs and cast in a negative light... all the usual stereotypes. The photographers who shoot this pap are without a doubt exploiting people because they're only concerned about the photograph. If they were genuinely bothered about the issues they pretend to be concerned about why don't they put their cameras to good use and produce brilliant documentary or ethnography? Nope... let's go for the gritty street shot... yeah... let's get that on 500PX... that will increase my popularity. That just bugs me.
I just think that if you're going to publish images of the public, you should be able to defend it with a reason that makes the work morally viable. If you can't actually do that, then by default, it's morally questionable. QED. If you can live with that, fine, but but so long as you know you're just exploiting someone.
Not you Toni.... just speaking generally there....
Why does street photography have to be candid? Who said that because you are in plain sight and known to the subject that it's then a portrait?
This is not a portrait.
That's street photography. Yes, it was not on a street... but it's still street photography. The essence of which is simply photographing people in the environment, either with, or without their consent, or knowledge. Neither of the two subject are looking to camera, but I'm fairly certain they would have been aware of Mr Winogrand, if not before the shot, certainly straight after it. Has their privacy been breached? Yep... was it worth it? Absolutely. I'll not patronise you by explaining the image's purpose, and hence reason it is easily defendable. It should be pretty damned self-explanatory.
T
hese people are well aware they are being photographed. Still street photography... definitely not a portrait. So sorry.. but I can't accept your argument that you have to sneak around with a long lens, and all street should be totally candid, as it's clearly not the case,
Right at the other end of the moral spectrum, you have crap like
this.
Yeah... homeless man... let's grab a shot with the Hipstamatic and put it on Flickr.... ****ing prick. You also get other ****ing pricks leaving comments like...
"
SUPERB.....nice click....some times you find inspiration where you never expect it to be and this shot did inspire me in a way........you have a great photostream....."
What an absolute wa**er.