Notes on things intercultural, photography, the media, and other things that interest me
Wednesday, 30 January 2019
Wednesday, 23 January 2019
On Storytelling
For many years, the journalism I most warmed to was storytelling. A story is commonly understood to have a beginning, a middle, and an end. In other words, it is is a construct, it doesn't represent the way things are but how our brains are able to understand them, what makes sense to us. It is fiction — for fiction we understand, reality we don't; it is too complicated.
Recently, the German magazine Der Spiegel informed their readers that it had been misled. Claas Relotius, one of their most renowned reporters, who had been showered with journalism prizes, had for years invented stories. When a fellow reporter, Juan Moreno, became suspicious, he was initially not believed. Eventually, however, due to his persistence, the truth came out — and Der Spiegel had a credibility problem.
It's reaction was formidable. it laid open what it knew, invited critics to have their say — more transparency wan't really imaginable. Then, however, I came across this, as far as I'm concerned,extremely stupid sentence: "Die meisten Reporter arbeiten absolut sauber, das muss hier noch einmal betont werden. (Most reporters work absolutely correctly, it needs to be stressed here once again). Well, this cannot be known. Moreover, it is the standard answer when the system should not be put into question.
The system? ... For more, go here
Wednesday, 16 January 2019
Wednesday, 9 January 2019
Mistral: The Legendary Wind of Provence
It's been years since I've last been to
Provence but glancing through the pages of this exquisitely done tome
I feel immediately transported back in time. Not only because of what
the photos show but also because I know (for I see only what I know)
that they were taken in Southern France where I had spent some time
in my younger years.
How does one photograph the wind?
Photographer Rachel Cobb, writes Bill Buford in his excellent
introduction, „wasn't actually photographing the wind as such, but
its effects. She was looking for images so aerodynamically impacted
that we, like onlookers sheltered nearby, could feel the invisible
force, just as her subjects felt it. She wanted us to shiver and sink
our heads into our necks and hold ourselves in our own arms.“
I could indeed feel „the invisible
force, just as her subjects felt it“. And, I was once again
awe-struck that photographs can make visible what can't be seen.
Also, I could clearly sense that I'm not a wind-lover – there is
way too much foehn where I live.
I especially loved how Buford describes
Cobb's failed attempt to capture the moment when a hat was leaving
the head of a man or how she, „the photographer of discomfort“
(what a brilliant way to put it!), missed the mistral ruining a
wedding.
For the full review, go here
Wednesday, 2 January 2019
When my camera is in charge
Santa Cruz do Sul, December 2018
I'm not into the technical side of taking photographs, my interest is solely in framing and it doesn't cease to baffle me that my camera is regularly presenting me with pictures that show surprising colours as well as light arrangements I hadn't been aware of when pulling the trigger. I mean, the colours were sort of like that but just sort of. Differently put: My camera is more in charge than I am. And, I kinda like that. Sometimes.