DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHY


An estimated 30,000 people, including storyteller Mike Mann above, turned out for the Hiawatha Light Rail opening in Minneapolis, Minn.; United States, on June 26, 2004.
'Documentary photography' usually refers to a type of professional photojournalism, but it may also be an amateur or student pursuit. The photographer attempts to produce truthful, objective, and usually candid photography of a particular subject, most often pictures of people. The Pictures usually depict a certain perspective of the Photographer.
Usually such photographs are meant for publication, but are sometimes only for exhibition in an art gallery or other public forum. Sometimes an organization or company will commission documentary photography of its activities, but the pictures will only be for its private archives.

Contents
Press photographers
Posing people for an accurate record
Amateur photographers
Well-known documentary photographers
U.S. documentary photographers
European documentary photographers
References
External links

Press photographers


Photojournalists who adhere to generally accepted ethical practices such as those proposed by organizations like the National Press Photographers Association generally strive to make documentary photos instead of posed photos because of the innate power of the candid, unguarded moment in depicting genuine news events. The challenge for that type of photographer is to make pictures of sensitive scenes and moments without changing them by the presence of a camera. You might do this in school.

Posing people for an accurate record


If the aim is simply to document something - costume for instance - then sometimes posing people is the best way to make the required clear documentary picture. For instance, the posed "straight up" style of picture pioneered by ''iD'' magazine - these were of punks and New Wave youth found on English streets and simply asked to stand against any nearby blank wall. The resulting pictures - the subjects facing the camera and seen from "top to toe" - are a vivid historical documentary photography archive, and have established the posed "straight up" as a valid style of documentary picture-making.
One photographer who was exceptional in his efforts to pose and photograph invividuals in their natural environment is found with the works of Milton Rogovin.

Amateur photographers


Sometimes amateurs unintentionally make documentary pictures that are later found to be of great historical value, since they are good images of subjects that have since disappeared forever and which no-one else bothered to record. The work of Jacques Henri Lartigue would be one notable example.

Well-known documentary photographers


U.S. documentary photographers


Jacob Riis

Lewis Hine

Berenice Abbott

Walker Evans

Dorothea Lange

Mary Ellen Mark

W. Eugene Smith


European documentary photographers


Henri Cartier-Bresson

Bill Brandt

August Sander

Eugene Atget

Gertrude Blom
For more notable photographers, see: List of photographers.

References


General references:

★ "A New History of Photography" Könemann Verlagsgesellschaft/Michel Frizot 1998

★ "DOWN THE LINE; LIGHT RAIL'S FIRST DAY; Getting off on the right track"; ''Star Tribune'', June 27, 2004.

External links



Famous Photos that Changed the World from 1900s to the 21st Century

Pointe Coupee at the Millennium Photo Documentary Project

Photojournale - Photo Documentary and Photo stories from Around the World

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