FujiLove
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You do know he also shoots landscapes in colour...
http://cpn.canon-europe.com/content/Don_McCullin.do
Yes - here's one of my favourites:
http://i.imgur.com/iezdYtd.jpg
You do know he also shoots landscapes in colour...
http://cpn.canon-europe.com/content/Don_McCullin.do
Haha!!!![]()
nah, he was being amusing, you were just being rude.Not gonna have a go at Byker for patronising you as well? Or did you know that too.
I'm still surprised he sold out and did that for Canon... still... you gotta earn a living, so good on him.
LOL... those images are mindbendingly awful.
[edit].. I mean the ones Fujilove posted.... can't quote it for some reason.
Well, no he didn't say that, at least not in the article you linked..because the Don says so.. and he's the Don... OK?
Err, last time I saw one they were trying to teach an Austrian Body-Builder to.....No one today believes we've managed to train Russian meerkats to act. Or do they?
In the Renaissance, artists were aspiring to 'photo-realism' in their 'art' And look where Holbein's Anne of Cleves portrait got us?!
When the first photographic processes started making that sort of 'photo-realism' possible.. popular artists appear to have abandoned the ambition and sought sanctuary in the abstract...
No image making medium is 'Trustworthy', its a matter of our faith in the image maker, and the process.. Henry VIII trusted Holbein to create a 'faithful' reproduction of Anne's form.... and was disappointed in the reality of it! The photo's of the Cottingly Faeries were 100% genuine, and a 'faithful' representation of the subject seen by the girls that took them.. it was merely the subjects that weren't 'genuine' fairies.... but like Harry 8, people see what they expect to see or want to see...
Not long ago I was accused of fraud, admitting to 'touching up' photo's I used for technical illustration.. well, they aren't 100% genuine to start with; I've used selective focus and shallow DoF to draw the viewers attention on the bit of an engine they need to stick a spanner on... so I have no problem cloning out a spark-plug lead that's dstractingy, and irrelevant to the 'subject' .. I could have drawn an exploded diagram, I suppose, with a freshly sharpened HB pencil and Drafting board.... but then the viewer would have trouble translating that to the actual engine they see in-front of them and need to stick a spanner into compared, to a 'photo' .
So where is the 'fraud' ergo the deliberate attempt to mislead or deceive, more, profit from that deception?
IF there is a fraud, it is in that seventy years of popular photography, and popular publication of photographs, combined with some obsession within it, to achieve that 'faithful reproduction', in the face of the obvious failings the medium has to realise it; has 'conned' perhaps five generations of the popular population into placing greater faith in 'photography' to deliver that degree of 'photo-realism' than it is probably due, while constrained by the intricate and often complicated nature of silver-halide processes that make such manipulations more difficult, time consuming and costly to achieve.
You could completely invert Don McCullin's argument and use it to suggest that the ease with which digital has made complex manipulation, rather than undermine the 'trustworthiness' of photography, has corrected the balance highlighting how UN-Trustworthy photography has always been.... so that no longer do people believe 'The Camera Never Lies'.

if I wanted an image to be bleak, I'd pp it accordingly whether or not I shot it on film or digital. (and for the avoidance of doubt pp can be done in the dark room, at the computer or indeed both) Comments like this really do not help his argument imo as it implies that a digital camera somehow forces you to produce an attractive image ... sadly to me it just seems to be the bitter ramblings of an aging man.
I'll still be going to his exhibition though http://www.hauserwirth.com/exhibitions/2603/don-mccullin-conflict-y-people-y-landscape/view/ he is a great story teller with his images.
Robert Capa was faking these photos 79 years ago when Don McCullin was still suckling at his mother's teat. It couldn't be fully trusted back then and still can't now. I'm sure nobody believes everything they read, so a healthy dose of skepticism applies to emotive pictures too. I was listening to an interview with Capa and he said; “The prize picture is born in the imagination of the editors and the public who sees them.” That's straight away an invitation to fake and stage.
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Which image did Capa fake? Are we discussing Death of a Militiaman as I don't believe the image was faked, just possibly the story behind it. There's talk that Capa and Taro got soldiers to run up and down the hill, effectively posing, some mentioning pretending to be shot during the siesta which both sides observed. There's been no suggestion that the soldier in the image didn't die, just the circumstances around it, which might be why Capa kept quite quiet on the subject.
Staged and manipulated in post are completely different. There's no physical manipulation here, the image is exactly as it was taken. It was then misrepresented after the fact when different claims were made about it.http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...roof-iconic-Falling-Soldier-image-staged.html
If he was doing it almost 80 years ago then the whole thing started as a lie, it just takes less time to do it now and fewer chemicals.
Staged and manipulated in post are completely different. There's no physical manipulation here, the image is exactly as it was taken. It was then misrepresented after the fact when different claims were made about it.
It was just as easy to stage a photo then as it is now?They are doing the exact same thing, to deceive the person looking at it. The fakery has been there from the very start, it's just easier to do now.
I think it DOES force most people. ...and yes, Paul, the title of the thread is tongue in cheek. I clearly don't think digital is crap, as I use it all the time. I'm surprised at your confusion actually. I do think we've got a problem however, which is why I created the thread.
All these people in this thread going on about how easy it is to do the same in the darkroom clearly haven't actually been in one. It's NOT easy in the darkroom at all. It's perfectly possible, but it is NOT easy. In fact, it's hard.. dead hard. Sure you can burn a sky in a bit etc, but that's not exactly spinning lies is it, and even then, that takes skill too when you do it for real and more importantly, it's pretty obvious it's been done. In the computer... it's easy. VERY easy in some cases, and that's the problem. The temptation to make one's images "better" is strong. So strong in fact, that almost every image you see has been changed far more than in any other time in photography's history, and nowhere is that more true than the amateur arena.
We've normalised the process. From over-processed amateur images, to pre-set filters in Instagram, to downright manipulated images in the press. This counterargument that "Images have always been manipulated" is erroneous and misleading: Yes, it's always been possible, but it required great skill. Basically, you could look at images in people's albums, or in local newspapers and believe what you saw. Now you can't. People don't have albums now except the ones on Facebook and Instagram, and almost everything in them will be digitally altered - often heavily. With news images more and more often being crowd sourced from social media, we're getting into a fairly dangerous situation regarding the integrity of images. When breaking news happens and journalists go on a feeding frenzy on Twitter, you reckon they're going to check for manipulation in the race to get the news out first?
Digital manipulation is now so easy and utterly skill-less thanks to plug-ins and applications like Topaz, Nik Effects et al, that anyone can do it now. That's the sad thing really. All these amateur images where people comment "Cool processing"... what do they mean? Someone's moved some sliders around... well **** me... yeah, dead cool. It's a good job actual retouching and composite work still requires skill, otherwise we literally would be seeing a lot worse than we are currently doing.
All these people in this thread going on about how easy it is to do the same in the darkroom clearly haven't actually been in one. It's NOT easy in the darkroom at all. It's perfectly possible, but it is NOT easy. In fact, it's hard.. dead hard. Sure you can burn a sky in a bit etc, but that's not exactly spinning lies is it, and even then, that takes skill too when you do it for real and more importantly, it's pretty obvious it's been done. In the computer... it's easy. VERY easy in some cases, and that's the problem. The temptation to make one's images "better" is strong. So strong in fact, that almost every image you see has been changed far more than in any other time in photography's history, and nowhere is that more true than the amateur arena.
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I've been in plenty of darkrooms over the years and had one of my own.I think it DOES force most people. ...and yes, Paul, the title of the thread is tongue in cheek. I clearly don't think digital is crap, as I use it all the time. I'm surprised at your confusion actually. I do think we've got a problem however, which is why I created the thread.
All these people in this thread going on about how easy it is to do the same in the darkroom clearly haven't actually been in one. It's NOT easy in the darkroom at all. It's perfectly possible, but it is NOT easy. In fact, it's hard.. dead hard. Sure you can burn a sky in a bit etc, but that's not exactly spinning lies is it, and even then, that takes skill too when you do it for real and more importantly, it's pretty obvious it's been done. In the computer... it's easy. VERY easy in some cases, and that's the problem. The temptation to make one's images "better" is strong. So strong in fact, that almost every image you see has been changed far more than in any other time in photography's history, and nowhere is that more true than the amateur arena.
We've normalised the process. From over-processed amateur images, to pre-set filters in Instagram, to downright manipulated images in the press. This counterargument that "Images have always been manipulated" is erroneous and misleading: Yes, it's always been possible, but it required great skill. Basically, you could look at images in people's albums, or in local newspapers and believe what you saw. Now you can't. People don't have albums now except the ones on Facebook and Instagram, and almost everything in them will be digitally altered - often heavily. With news images more and more often being crowd sourced from social media, we're getting into a fairly dangerous situation regarding the integrity of images. When breaking news happens and journalists go on a feeding frenzy on Twitter, you reckon they're going to check for manipulation in the race to get the news out first?
Digital manipulation is now so easy and utterly skill-less thanks to plug-ins and applications like Topaz, Nik Effects et al, that anyone can do it now. That's the sad thing really. All these amateur images where people comment "Cool processing"... what do they mean? Someone's moved some sliders around... well **** me... yeah, dead cool. It's a good job actual retouching and composite work still requires skill, otherwise we literally would be seeing a lot worse than we are currently doing.
Thing is its not easy to do it well on computer either
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...roof-iconic-Falling-Soldier-image-staged.html
If he was doing it almost 80 years ago then the whole thing started as a lie, it just takes less time to do it now and fewer chemicals.
Staged and manipulated in post are completely different. There's no physical manipulation here, the image is exactly as it was taken. It was then misrepresented after the fact when different claims were made about it.
I think it DOES force most people. ...and yes, Paul, the title of the thread is tongue in cheek. I clearly don't think digital is crap, as I use it all the time. I'm surprised at your confusion actually. I do think we've got a problem however, which is why I created the thread.
All these people in this thread going on about how easy it is to do the same in the darkroom clearly haven't actually been in one. It's NOT easy in the darkroom at all. It's perfectly possible, but it is NOT easy. In fact, it's hard.. dead hard. Sure you can burn a sky in a bit etc, but that's not exactly spinning lies is it, and even then, that takes skill too when you do it for real and more importantly, it's pretty obvious it's been done. In the computer... it's easy. VERY easy in some cases, and that's the problem. The temptation to make one's images "better" is strong. So strong in fact, that almost every image you see has been changed far more than in any other time in photography's history, and nowhere is that more true than the amateur arena.
We've normalised the process. From over-processed amateur images, to pre-set filters in Instagram, to downright manipulated images in the press. This counterargument that "Images have always been manipulated" is erroneous and misleading: Yes, it's always been possible, but it required great skill. Basically, you could look at images in people's albums, or in local newspapers and believe what you saw. Now you can't. People don't have albums now except the ones on Facebook and Instagram, and almost everything in them will be digitally altered - often heavily. With news images more and more often being crowd sourced from social media, we're getting into a fairly dangerous situation regarding the integrity of images. When breaking news happens and journalists go on a feeding frenzy on Twitter, you reckon they're going to check for manipulation in the race to get the news out first?
Digital manipulation is now so easy and utterly skill-less thanks to plug-ins and applications like Topaz, Nik Effects et al, that anyone can do it now. That's the sad thing really. All these amateur images where people comment "Cool processing"... what do they mean? Someone's moved some sliders around... well **** me... yeah, dead cool. It's a good job actual retouching and composite work still requires skill, otherwise we literally would be seeing a lot worse than we are currently doing.
As said - it's thought the location was different and the soldiers were posing, but the death wasn't staged or faked, capa did captured the death of a soldier, just not in the way it was told. h
Its all here on Wiki, probably sums it up best.So one of the soilders actually died while the staged shots were being taken ? or do you mean that the death was renacted for the camera ?
I've read about this before, there doesnt seem to be that much evidence supporting its authenticity and an awful lot discrediting it.Its all here on Wiki, probably sums it up best.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Falling_Soldier
Even now, no one really knows what exactly this photo shows.
So one of the soilders actually died while the staged shots were being taken ? or do you mean that the death was renacted for the camera ?
I really don't see how it forces people, however if you mean that most people using digital want to produce attractive images, then I'd agree. But we can just as easily portray any scene we wish how we like (and I suspect therein lies part of the problem).I think it DOES force most people.
Confusion comes naturally to me...and yes, Paul, the title of the thread is tongue in cheek. I clearly don't think digital is crap, as I use it all the time. I'm surprised at your confusion actually.
In terms of factual reporting then I agree.I do think we've got a problem however, which is why I created the thread.
Doing pp work on a computer is easier than doing it in a dark room. No argument from me there. I'll be honest I don't miss the dark room one jot, the smells, headaches and occasionally the mess too! Good pp isn't overly easy to do on a computer though - emphasis on good btw - sure it's easier than in a dark room, but it isn't easy certainly retouching etc. isn't.All these people in this thread going on about how easy it is to do the same in the darkroom clearly haven't actually been in one. It's NOT easy in the darkroom at all. It's perfectly possible, but it is NOT easy. In fact, it's hard.. dead hard. Sure you can burn a sky in a bit etc, but that's not exactly spinning lies is it, and even then, that takes skill too when you do it for real and more importantly, it's pretty obvious it's been done. In the computer... it's easy. VERY easy in some cases, and that's the problem. The temptation to make one's images "better" is strong. So strong in fact, that almost every image you see has been changed far more than in any other time in photography's history, and nowhere is that more true than the amateur arena.
We've normalised the process. From over-processed amateur images, to pre-set filters in Instagram, to downright manipulated images in the press. This counterargument that "Images have always been manipulated" is erroneous and misleading: Yes, it's always been possible, but it required great skill. Basically, you could look at images in people's albums, or in local newspapers and believe what you saw. Now you can't. People don't have albums now except the ones on Facebook and Instagram, and almost everything in them will be digitally altered - often heavily. With news images more and more often being crowd sourced from social media, we're getting into a fairly dangerous situation regarding the integrity of images. When breaking news happens and journalists go on a feeding frenzy on Twitter, you reckon they're going to check for manipulation in the race to get the news out first?
Digital manipulation is now so easy and utterly skill-less thanks to plug-ins and applications like Topaz, Nik Effects et al, that anyone can do it now. That's the sad thing really. All these amateur images where people comment "Cool processing"... what do they mean? Someone's moved some sliders around... well **** me... yeah, dead cool. It's a good job actual retouching and composite work still requires skill, otherwise we literally would be seeing a lot worse than we are currently doing.
If all goes to plan I should be going this weekend, if not it will be in January.Cool let me know how it is - it's on my list. I posted about it here: https://www.talkphotography.co.uk/threads/don-mccullin-exhibition.608352/ but not made it there yet
I really don't see how it forces people,
however if you mean that most people using digital want to produce attractive images, then I'd agree. But we can just as easily portray any scene we wish how we like (and I suspect therein lies part of the problem).
As for the race to get images first from crowd sourcing, the likelihood is that they will be as snapped with whichever mobile device they are using - now whether or not they have gone through some form of filter on the phone/Instagram or whatever may be a moot point. I would have thought they are likely to reflect the events as they are happening due purely to the short timescales involved - I could be wrong though. I'd still rather see genuine good photo journalism though.
The thing is with products like Topaz and Nik effects is they support the need now for instant gratification, many people don't want to develop the skills to achieve "stunning" results, they just want to click a button and by magic it's done.
The genie though is out of the bottle as far as digital images and processing are concerned, wistful thinking about past times won't put it back in either.
You have a point. Substantial image manipulation may not be new, but it's certainly far easier than darkroom-type tricks. On the other hand, nobody really believes that 'the camera never lies' any more and the worst abuses soon get found out.
However, because it used to be so much harder in the past, manipulated images carried a lot more weight and danger, and the generally blurry nature of old black & white pictures concealed a multitude of sins. Eg, Nazi propaganda.
I can't help thinking attempts to turn the clock back and establish some kind of 'Kosha standard' by news agencies and competition organisers is peeing in the wind. Horse, stable door, bolted, etc. Times have changed, and we adapt. I'm not sure the Reuters initiative, that is commercially driven at heart, is actually practical nowadays.
And Don McCullin, the man, shaped and battered by his extraordinary experiences, is far more interesting than any of his post-war pictures, IMHO. And he was a child of his time, exploiting new technology and media opportunities of the day, just as others do now. Things have moved on, not always for better, but trying to turn the clock back never works.
Just because digital images CAN be manipulated doesn't mean they MUST be. Surely you must agree,
I certainly do! I think it's a bit sad when someone asks how a shot could be improved and the replies concentrate on how the poster should darken parts, increase saturation here and there, clone out wires/houses/people etc..
I really don't see how it forces people
I see where you are coming from and to a large extent would agree, but that would not, or should not, apply to DM.Because when a beginner starts, they see all the best images (as they see best.. meaning Flickr, and social forums) are heavily processed, so they feel the only way they can compete is through doing the same. It's an arms race. No beginner will dare to think, "No... I'm not doing that" because at that level, the feedback they're likely to get will be advising them that they should.
Simple as that really.
Peer pressure I guess drives it, most people want to be told their work is nice and there is nothing wrong with that as such. Sometimes an images purpose is simply to be nice or attractive.You have to wonder what drives the tastes that dictate what "attractive" looks like, and why it's so different between the amateur sphere and the professional and creative spheres. To me, it's pretty simple to understand. The amateur arena is only really bothered what an image looks like, whereas the other areas place much more importance upon the purpose of the image. Amateur images don't have any purpose other than to please through being nice to look at.
Risk - yes. But this is a consequence of so many news establishments getting rid of their photographers so not sure this can be levelled at digital imagery per se, albeit crowd sourcing most likely wouldn't happen if it were not for digital images....One thing is certain though.. the time scales means that any robust checks as to whether the images are even what they purport to be will not happen. It certainly adds a great deal of risk to the equation.
And often does.Again, all part of the problem. Dumbing down skillsets, yet raising expectations. That can only end badly.
Agreed but we should also not be unduly constrained by the past either.Not alone, no, but there are always lessons to learn from the past. In fact, I'm amazed that is one lesson we're all too keen to forget. I'm not just talking about Photography either. No one listens to the truly wise any more, and instead only choose to hear what seems to suit their own short term needs. It seems endemic across all walks of life unfortunately.
Agreed but we should also not be unduly constrained by the past either.
David,
I almost completely agree with what you are saying here. Rather than type out my thoughts in full again, I'm adding a link to a blog post I wrote a few months ago which looks at the issue from a slightly different perspective.
http://wp.me/p2BFlt-ni
Thing is its not easy to do it well on computer either - its easy in either medium to make an obvious fake , but its difficult (but possible) to make a convincing fake - so what's different ?
<snip>
This not about new technology. I'm not sure how he exploited new technology with a 35mm camera to be honest. He has integrity. News images still require that. It hasn't changed. Technology may have, but surely the values of being reflexive, objective and ethical in journalism haven't... or are you suggesting that along with this new technology we need to revise our ethical ideals.. relax them somehow and accept that news images are no longer to be relied upon? What then? No images at all, seeing as they're all useless as objective reporting? No... the ethics of journalism have no need to change because the image gathering technology has. Just because digital images CAN be manipulated doesn't mean they MUST be. Surely you must agree,