Twenty years before the term “socially engaged art” entered the lexicon, Wendy Ewald realized that, when she gave cameras to children, they created “more powerful and more intimate pictures than I could.”
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Twenty years before the term “socially engaged art” entered the lexicon, Wendy Ewald realized that, when she gave cameras to children, they created “more powerful and more intimate pictures than I could.”

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Great tutorial.
National Gallery of Art

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Mystical Marrakech | Street Photography with Zack Arias and the X-T1 •• Wonderful! Thanks, Zack! ••
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The photographer Garry Winogrand famously said, "I photograph to see what the world looks like in photographs." Despite frequent, approving citations of this aphorism, few creators and critics take it seriously.
Her neighbors remember her as “the bag lady,” but Vivian Maier was secretly a street photographer who would leave behind an artistic trove that captured the public’s imagination.
Joel Meyerowitz talk about Street photography

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Q. Have you ever really been able to define for yourself when it is that you press the shutter?
A. It’s a question of concentration. Concentrate, think, watch, look and, ah, like this, you are ready. But you never know the culminative point of something. So you’re shooting. You say, “Yes. Yes. Maybe. Yes.” But you shouldn’t overshoot. It’s like overeating, overdrinking. You have to eat, you have to drink. But over is too much. Because by the time you press, you arm the shutter once more, and maybe the picture was in between.
Very often, you don’t have to see a photographer’s work. Just by watching him in the street, you can see what kind of photographer he is. Discreet, tiptoes, fast or machine gun. Well, you don’t shoot partridges with a machine gun. You choose one partridge, then the other partridge. Maybe the others are gone by then. But I see people wrrrr, like this with a motor. It’s incredible, because they always shoot in the wrong moment.
Documentary. Henry Cartier-Bresson. The Decisive Moment (1973)
Documentary. The world according to Martin Parr.
Documentary. Henry Cartier-Bresson. "L'amour tout court"

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“To photograph people is to violate them, by seeing them as they never see themselves, by having knowledge of them that they can never have; it turns people into objects that can be symbolically possessed. Just as a camera is a sublimation of the gun, to photograph someone is a subliminal murder - a soft murder, appropriate to a sad, frightened time.”
Susan Sontag, On Photography
Art of The Photographer, by Mike Yamashita