Your favourite photographers or images

Barry - funnily enough - should I ever manage to finish the research and the write up of the Atatürk pictures I mentioned - one was taken in Sirkeci station in Istanbul. Which as I am sure you will know was the end point of the Orient Express. A journey undertaken by Agatha Christie - several times. On her way to meet her then husband who was an archeologist excavating Babylonian and Sumerian remains in - what is now Iraq. I think she went missing in Istanbul for a while? Well done on knowing what the correct plural of terminus is. This might seem like pedantry - and is - but even the BBC allow their commentators to talk about stadiums these days. Stadia, not stadiums. The barbarians are at the gates. cheers - I.
They are indeed Iain. Nothing wrong with a touch of pedantry now and then. I think dear old Agatha went missing on two or three occasions. Whether as a bit of self-publicity, or to sate secret urges, who knows? I hope your Ataturk series will be with us soon.
 
@Barry Giddens - 'Stunning Iain. The photos are good too!' ha ha. Yeah I know mate. I would like to point out in fairness to myself that particular picture was flagged up to me by my partner. It came from the official Facebook feed of the city - I don't do Facebook. I turned them into black and white because I thought they looked much better that way. She understands - and indeed tolerates - the fact I have a weakness for a well turned out Spanish equestrian lady. If that's your thing I could not recommend too highly attending the horse fair in Jerez de la Fontera. Ooft. In part I am happy for her to appreciate a well turned out bombero - fireman. Long term relationships - you only have to wear a chastity belt not a blind fold. Ha ha. Yours - I.

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@Barry Giddens - 'Stunning Iain. The photos are good too!' ha ha. Yeah I know mate. I would like to point out in fairness to myself that particular picture was flagged up to me by my partner. It came from the official Facebook feed of the city - I don't do Facebook. I turned them into black and white because I thought they looked much better that way. She understands - and indeed tolerates - the fact I have a weakness for a well turned out Spanish equestrian lady. If that's your thing I could not recommend too highly attending the horse fair in Jerez de la Fontera. Ooft. In part I am happy for her to appreciate a well turned out bombero - fireman. Long term relationships - you only have to wear a chastity belt not a blind fold. Ha ha. Yours - I.

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'I have a weakness for a well turned out Spanish equestrian lady'. That did make me laugh Iain. Quite a particular weakness. Actually, there's a club just off the Holloway Road that......oh no, perhaps I best put that in a pm.
 
@Digimonkey back at you :)
Shaving during WWII, unknown photographer.
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Just discovered Robert Frank. He's my new street photography hero.
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Evening H. - in my experience - street photography doesn't get much better than Frank. 'The Americans' is his definitive book for me. I can't remember where I was - MACBA in Barcelona perhaps? There was an exhibition from the book. It was amazing to see 'real' prints of the pics - it was jaw dropping to realise that someone could be that good at it. His stuff is playful, surreal - never mean - he doesn't take the piss out of his subjects - in the same way as earlier seeing the Magnum anniversary exhibition as a 20 year old fledgling professional photographer. They both completely changed my approach to the job. All Frank's pictures were printed with the rebates showing - I think that maybe this is where I picked up the habit with my own pictures. The only other contender for me - streetwise - would be W. Eugene Smith? Good call on resurrecting this thread - yours - I.

@Barry Giddens
 
H. - W. Eugene Smith -

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Amusingly - he nearly bankrupted the Magnum agency doing his 'Pittsburgh' project. Mostly because of the amount of time he took on it, the amount of film he shot but mainly the amount of Benzedrine he took doing it. Ha ha. A proper artist. I think Kerouac would have approved? Yours - I.

@Barry Giddens @Blademonkey
 
More Eugene Smith -

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From the Pittsburgh project. Deeply influential on Salgado anyone? Up until my work pictures went digital - about 2000 - we printed our own stuff. I used to have a nice side-line printing for other people. The top floor of our house was a darkroom. So - I know how to print black and white pictures - this one is astonishing, this would have taken hours to get it right. The burning in - the dark bits - are the simple part but I think the highlights have been - held back - still fairly simple - but it has also been treated with a dilute bleach solution - with a brush - to bring up the highlights. Salgado's printer - his wife - is a master at this technique. Smith did this himself - he was obsessional about the printing of his pictures. I think in part because he was speeding out of his tits at the time - please pardon my language. Bottom line - it's that good because - he saw the picture and would not let anyone else realise the vision. - it was taken with an old school Leica lens - you can't get them anymore unless you are prepared to sell your house. Carbon glass.

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Smith was a distinguished war photographer too,

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Him in his darkroom, printing the Pittsburgh project. Out of his face - I should imagine - looks like it. Artists are often flawed? Aren't we all in some way? It doesn't look like he put any weight on during it? No shit.

Yours - I.

@Helveticum @Blademonkey @Barry Giddens
 
More Eugene Smith -

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From the Pittsburgh project. Deeply influential on Salgado anyone? Up until my work pictures went digital - about 2000 - we printed our own stuff. I used to have a nice side-line printing for other people. The top floor of our house was a darkroom. So - I know how to print black and white pictures - this one is astonishing, this would have taken hours to get it right. The burning in - the dark bits - are the simple part but I think the highlights have been - held back - still fairly simple - but it has also been treated with a dilute bleach solution - with a brush - to bring up the highlights. Salgado's printer - his wife - is a master at this technique. Smith did this himself - he was obsessional about the printing of his pictures. I think in part because he was speeding out of his tits at the time - please pardon my language. Bottom line - it's that good because - he saw the picture and would not let anyone else realise the vision. - it was taken with an old school Leica lens - you can't get them anymore unless you are prepared to sell your house. Carbon glass.

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Smith was a distinguished war photographer too,

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Him in his darkroom, printing the Pittsburgh project. Out of his face - I should imagine - looks like it. Artists are often flawed? Aren't we all in some way? It doesn't look like he put any weight on during it? No shit.

Yours - I.

@Helveticum @Blademonkey @Barry Giddens
Some of the best art work in whatever medium was done under the influence of something or another... Flawed... Maybe,.... Even crazed but talented without a doubt. P.
 
P. - mentalist with a paint brush -

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I've seen this in real life - a detail in the Prado - that's a tiny part of the picture - astonishing - off his chump? I suppose it depends on how we interpret these things? Yours -`iw
Ha, yes Iain, off his chump as you say.
I don't know if this artist partook in any substance or this was from a "straight" mind but I suspect the use of some form of mind altering substance. :) P. if it unlocks door's in your mind and let's you see freely I can see no harm in it, musicians have done it for years and some of their best work was done when they was away with the fairy's :) P.
 
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