Frightened and Sick
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5:30 a.m.
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http://images.artnet.com/artwork_images_118598_186074_weugene-smith.jpg
Winnowing Grain
http://imagecache.allposters.com/images/pic/LIFPOD/5922998~Grain-Flying-in-Air-During-Winnowing-by-Women-in-Famous-Spanish-Village-Posters.jpg
http://imagecache.allposters.com/images/pic/LIFPOD/5922998~Grain-Flying-in-Air-During-Winnowing-by-Women-in-Famous-Spanish-Village-Posters.jpg
Having Done His Best
http://toonz.ca/bose/wiki/images/thumb/c/ca/Smith_country_doctor_surgery_lgKenJacob.jpg/646px-Smith_country_doctor_surgery_lgKenJacob.jpg
http://toonz.ca/bose/wiki/images/thumb/c/ca/Smith_country_doctor_surgery_lgKenJacob.jpg/646px-Smith_country_doctor_surgery_lgKenJacob.jpg
After Midnight
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http://www.geocities.com/minoltaphotographyw/smith_country_doctor_exhausted__602.jpg
Wounded, dying infant found by American soldier in Saipan Mountains. http://www.icp.org/atf/cf/%7BA0B4EE7B-5A90-46AB-AF37-7115A2D48F94%7D/wesmith_landing.jpg
American photographer, Paul Strand once said, “It is one thing to photograph people. It is another to make others care about them by revealing the core of their humanness.” One man stands out above all the rest for his ability to effectively bring out the “core of humanness” of his subjects in his photographs. His name was William Eugene Smith. In my research of the man, I looked at his life and his most famous works, and analyzed the emotion of his subjects to try and get a feel for their character. W. Eugene Smith succeeded at documenting the human condition through his brilliant and often shocking photographs. While he was starting his work, there was a standard of photography that most artists adhered to. Few dared to venture outside of the typical picture taking occupation, which consisted of posing subjects and snapping shots of smiling faces. Smith, however, chose to work differently. He refused to conform to the norm of candy-coated pictures and posed settings that his professors and colleagues tried to force upon him. What he saw through his lens was real life, and with the quick snap of the shutter, he captured it. When he took pictures, he did not falsely beautify his subjects, nor did he wait until he could snap a flattering shot. Their emotion is authentic, and their character is genuine. He took them untouched, regardless of their beauty, their brutality, their mystery, or their rawness. Smith also pioneered the art of taking photographs in series. He is regarded as the master of the photographic essay, and his brutal images of World War II, his peculiar portraits of the “country doctor”, and numerous other controversial photographs illustrate why. His work is unaltered, and he has influenced the photography of many photojournalists. W. Eugene Smith’s life’s work was to portray life sincerely one moment at a time, and he did it masterfully.
Smith became interested in photography at a young age, but he liked to work independent of critique and discipline. As a result, he was often at odds with his professors and early employers. He left Notre Dame University to go to New York and pursue a career with Life magazine. While in New York, he did freelance work for many different publications until World War II started, and he became a war correspondent for Life magazine.
World War II helped jump-start Smith’s career as a photojournalist. Until he was injured in 1945, he published hundreds of brutal and controversial war images for Life. He put himself in harm’s way, so that he could relay a factual representation of the war to his viewers. After the war, Smith continued to work as a photojournalist for Life.
Three of his most famous photographic essays are entitled Country Doctor, Spanish Village, and Nurse Midwife. Country Doctor follows Dr. Ernest Guy Ceriani, who is the only doctor in the little town of Kremmling, Colorado. In a series of photographs, Smith documents Dr. Ceriani’s every waking moment, on and off of work. The emotion on the face of Ceriani in many of the pictures is incredibly dramatic and telling. In Spanish Village, Smith documents the poverty of the small village of Deleitosa, Spain. It is far away from civilization, and villager’s way of life has advanced little since medieval times. In Nurse Midwife, Smith follows a woman named Maude Callen in Pineville, South Carolina, as she attends to the sick and pregnant mothers.
W. Eugene Smith’s work was unprecedented, and it set a high standard for photojournalists in the future. His photographs capture the essence of the human condition in all its glory and hardship, joy and suffering. The character and emotion of his subjects is deep and moving. It truly is documentation at its finest. Smith was fanatically dedicated to his mission as a photographer. “His passion for truth invariably places the integrity of the picture far above such matters as monetary gain or personal safety”. As a result of this dedication, Smith is a figure universally admired as an artist.
Prompts
1.Was there any part of my presentation that was unclear or should have been expended upon? What would you have liked to know more about?
2.In your opinion, by examining the photographs I provided, do you believe that W. Eugene Smith succeeded at honestly portraying truth in his work? Are his photographs accurate portrayals of “the human condition?”
3.Choose your favorite of the photographs shown. Tell why it is your favorite. What emotions do you feel from this photograph? What can you tell about the character of the subject?
Smith became interested in photography at a young age, but he liked to work independent of critique and discipline. As a result, he was often at odds with his professors and early employers. He left Notre Dame University to go to New York and pursue a career with Life magazine. While in New York, he did freelance work for many different publications until World War II started, and he became a war correspondent for Life magazine.
World War II helped jump-start Smith’s career as a photojournalist. Until he was injured in 1945, he published hundreds of brutal and controversial war images for Life. He put himself in harm’s way, so that he could relay a factual representation of the war to his viewers. After the war, Smith continued to work as a photojournalist for Life.
Three of his most famous photographic essays are entitled Country Doctor, Spanish Village, and Nurse Midwife. Country Doctor follows Dr. Ernest Guy Ceriani, who is the only doctor in the little town of Kremmling, Colorado. In a series of photographs, Smith documents Dr. Ceriani’s every waking moment, on and off of work. The emotion on the face of Ceriani in many of the pictures is incredibly dramatic and telling. In Spanish Village, Smith documents the poverty of the small village of Deleitosa, Spain. It is far away from civilization, and villager’s way of life has advanced little since medieval times. In Nurse Midwife, Smith follows a woman named Maude Callen in Pineville, South Carolina, as she attends to the sick and pregnant mothers.
W. Eugene Smith’s work was unprecedented, and it set a high standard for photojournalists in the future. His photographs capture the essence of the human condition in all its glory and hardship, joy and suffering. The character and emotion of his subjects is deep and moving. It truly is documentation at its finest. Smith was fanatically dedicated to his mission as a photographer. “His passion for truth invariably places the integrity of the picture far above such matters as monetary gain or personal safety”. As a result of this dedication, Smith is a figure universally admired as an artist.
Prompts
1.Was there any part of my presentation that was unclear or should have been expended upon? What would you have liked to know more about?
2.In your opinion, by examining the photographs I provided, do you believe that W. Eugene Smith succeeded at honestly portraying truth in his work? Are his photographs accurate portrayals of “the human condition?”
3.Choose your favorite of the photographs shown. Tell why it is your favorite. What emotions do you feel from this photograph? What can you tell about the character of the subject?
4.Write a narrative about the subject(s) of one of Smith’s photographs.