Friday, 6 August 2010

Was John Szarkowski the most influential person in 20th-century photography? | Sean O'Hagan | Art and design | guardian.co.uk

Szarkowski insisted on the democracy of the image, whether it be a formally composed Ansel Adams landscape, a snatched shot that caught the frenetic cut-and-thrust of a modern city or a vernacular subject like a road sign or a parking lot. "A skillful photographer can photograph anything well," he once insisted.In his still-challenging book, The Photographer's Eye (1964), Szarkowski included snapshots alongside images by great photographers, and argued – brilliantly – that photography differed from any other art form because its history had been "less a journey than a growth". "Its movement has not been linear and consecutive but centrifugal," he suggested. "Photography, and our understanding of it, has spread from a centre; it has, by infusion, penetrated our consciousness. Like an organism, photography was born whole. It is in our progressive discovery of it that its history lies."
Was John Szarkowski the most influential person in 20th-century photography? | Sean O'Hagan | Art and design | guardian.co.uk
Blogged with the Flock Browser

0 comments: