Category Archives: Photography

Image Chosen As Runner-Up

Driven Creativity Competition 2011

Love Your Job

Some great news; my image of a rain soaked businessman during a heavy downpour of rain with a sign displaying “Love Your Job” has been judged as the runner-up in the G-Tech Driven Creativity Competition 2011.

Congratulations to all the winners and runner-ups. A big thanks to G-Tech for sponsoring the competition and also everyone who voted for the image.

The image was shot on a Leica M9 using a Leica 35mm Summicron ASPH lens. The shot was the processed in Aperture and Nik Software’s Silver Efex Pro 2.

As mentioned in a previous post, the image will be exhibited at:

The Strand Gallery, London

Ofr Gallery, Paris

& Janine Bean Gallery, Berlin

London, Paris & Berlin Exhibition

Picture Makes Driven Creativity
Competition 2011 Shortlist

 
Love Your Job
I’m thrilled to say that this image has made the shortlist for the Driven Creativity shortlist and will be exhibited in London, Paris & Berlin. The winners are to be announced on September 23rd, so fingers crossed!

The pictures was taken on a Leica M9 with a 35mm Summicron ASPH lens and processed in Aperture and Nik Software’s Silver Efex Pro 2.

Many people voted for this shot to go through for judging and I wanted to say a big thank you to you all; very much appreciated!!

The Decisive Moment

Henri Cartier-Bresson

Here are two short films I came across; the first a short introduction and interview, and the second a look through the book, “The Decisive Moment”.

 

A Kingdom For A Finder!

A tourist takes a picture of her friend using the rear LCD screen of a camera at the Houses of Parliament. London. September 17, 2011. Photo: Edmond Terakopian

Yesterday, on a walk through a park, I saw a gentleman with a Nikon (could not see which, but a ‘prosumer grade’ one it was) with a fairly long zoom. He had the camera on live view, holding it in front of him like a mobile cam, while he tried to frame his subject. There are whole generations of consumers who do not know what a camera finder is for.

I am not one of them.

Way back a hundred years ago, most cameras, including press cameras, had finders that forced you to hold the camera before you on semi-extended arms … like a latter-day mobile camera. Even the null-series Leica started out with one of these ‘Newton finders’. Fortunately, before the launch in January 1925, it was replaced with the reverse Galilean finder we all know (and which, much transmogrified, is still a part of the M9 rangefinder). This made the camera capable of framing quickly and spontaneously, even with a mobile subject. The Leica Way. Without that finder, the camera would have fallen flat. Those early buyers did not give a damn about the advantages of perforated 35mm cine film. What captured them was a camera that could be used quickly and spontaneously, in the midst of the stream of life.

Those Edwardian press photogs could use Newton finders because (a) their standard lenses captured a lot, and if the target was somewhere on the plate, he could be cropped in; and (b) because their subject matter was static. You have seen the old newsreels. The Prime Minister / Président de Conseil / Ministerpräsident emerges from his residence, stops, faces the cameramen, puts on a statesmanlike half-smile, raises his cylinder hat – rattle rattle bang as shutter curtains the size of small bandannas sail majestically across half-plate glass negatives – the dignitary nods benevolently at the Gentlemen of the Press, and these scurry away. The optical direct finder, just as much as the small negative, created a new, different style of photography.

Mayday festivities in Stockholm. Leica M9, 25mm Biogon, zone focusing and 1/4000th. Photo: Lars Bergquist

With a rear display for ‘finder’, work is completely counter-intuitive, and hence slow. Even with a mirror reflex camera, SLR or TLR, you look at the matte screen, not at the subject. And with an electronic viewfinder, you look at a small TV. With for instance a Leica M, you do not look at the finder, but through it. You see reality, not an image of it. The finder does exist in your peripheral vision only. Therefore, cameras with optical finders are the instruments of choice for what one might call interactive photography, or even participating photography.

And now we seem to be back in 1910 again. I beg to be excused. I will never, under any circumstances, purchase a camera without a proper finder. Yes, I do own one. The letters on it say NOKIA.

By Lars Bergquist / Guest Contributor 

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