LONDON PHOTOGRAPHY
January 1936
Making
Every Picture Tell a Story
Romances
of the Past are Brought to Light in this Novel Idea
A contest in which photographs of still life become the subjects
for stories is one of the interesting ideas which Stein, the Paris
photographer, has been trying.
“As
one walks along,” he explains, “one frequently sees old and discarded
objects abandoned in the street. Frequently these
can be used as subjects for interesting photographs in which the
subject itself becomes unimportant and in which the composition,
the play of light and shade become primeval.” For this reason Monsieur
Stein began to take photographs of these objects; broken umbrellas
cast into the gutter, weather-beaten
signs long since abandoned to their fate, sometimes even old tramps
lying along the riverside, also broken and cast aside by life. Only when he already had
quite a collection of these pictures did the idea come to him that
they might be used as material
for stories. All of these objects had a history. An umbrella lying
in the gutter with water running over it once protected someone from
the rain. Whom? And how did it come to be broken? Had there been
a family quarrel and had the umbrella been made to suffer for it?
By
Studio Stein (Paris)
Questions
such as these suggested to Stein the idea for his contest. An editor
took it up and tried it. Publishing a photograph, he asked his
readers to try to fit a story to the picture, to imagine how the
object came
to be in its present situation and why it had been cast aside.
For the photographer, however, there remained the problem of choosing
the subjects. One can find them in any street, in any dump and
along the banks of the Seine - anywhere, in fact, where
disused objects are likely to be found. The choice is largely
one of subject. Anything is suitable which does not carry with it its
own obvious story.
The broken-up remains of a lamp-post, for example, might have been
broken in an accident, or it might, more prosaically, have been replaced
with a newer and better type. A group of old second-hand objects in
some dealer’s shop might have most varied histories.
The art of the photographer in these pictures becomes closely
akin to that of the photographic reporter. His business is less to
tell or to suggest a story than to state the fact of the conditions
he saw. The story of what he saw ought, however, to be told with art.
He should try to remember that the photograph is an illustration and
try to bring out by choice of angles and lighting the maximum of quality
which the subject affords. |