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Thread: Contemporary portraiture

  1. #1

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    Contemporary portraiture

    What would be an inspiring example for contemporary LF portraiture?

  2. #2
    adelorenzo's Avatar
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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    Check out Greg Heisler's book 50 Portraits.

  3. #3

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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    I am unsure what you really mean by contemporary.
    If I wanted to look at good portraits in an attempt to learn what a good one looks like I would look at Arnold Newman and Yousef Karsh.

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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    What are you wanting to get out of it? Are you looking to survey the field? Do you want to do studio work? Environmental? Are you looking for ideas? Posing? Lighting? Someone to copy, as a learning device? Entertainment?

    And I'm wondering why you've specified "contemporary"? I haven't found a modern "famous" portraitist that I find compelling in the way that so many of the older ones were, and gave up looking to moderns for any inspiration at all. Many of them (like Heisler) seem intent on pumping out GQ magazine style pop-schlock that's more about the cleverness of the photographer than about the subject. For modern, the only stuff that really appeals to me is SOME fashion photography. That and the monthly portrait threads right here on this forum.
    Thanks, but I'd rather just watch:
    Large format: http://flickr.com/michaeldarnton
    Mostly 35mm: http://flickr.com/mdarnton
    You want digital, color, etc?: http://www.flickr.com/photos/stradofear

  5. #5
    Mark Sawyer's Avatar
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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    I'd just wander through the monthly portrait threads on this forum. You'll find excellent work in a wide variety of styles from classic to contemporary to undefinable.
    "I love my Verito lens, but I always have to sharpen everything in Photoshop..."

  6. #6
    Unwitting Thread Killer Ari's Avatar
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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    Quote Originally Posted by kminov View Post
    What would be an inspiring example for contemporary LF portraiture?
    Richard Avedon, to name one.
    Bare, unadorned, gets straight to the point.
    His fashion work is another story.

  7. #7

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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    With apologies to previous posters, most of the photographers they mention, such as Avedon, are dead, so they are hardly contemporary. For two living portrait photographers, in black and white, Nicholas Nixon, and in color, Rineke Dijkstra. That said, I'm not one to judge how much portraiture has changed between the classics already mentioned, and the current artists. Oh, and if you don't mind the heavy production values, someone like Annie Leibovitz, for a portrait photographer who creates a unique environment for each of her subjects.

  8. #8

    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    The earlier Leibovitz have less production, but of course they are Hasselblad's but not LF.

    Mary Ellen Mark, Sally Mann, Vanessa Winship still photograph, and with LF

  9. #9

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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    For about the last year I've been on a portrait book buying spree, trying to find something I could relate to. As so often happens with me (big HCB fan), HCB is the portraitist I most admire. In terms of direction-changing work, though, it was the Steichen exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago that made me totally rethink what I was doing, and the impetus for switching to large format from 35mm. That must count for something.

    Another photographer that I seem to keep coming back to over and over is Mike Disfarmer. That, I can hardly explain. If anyone can explain to me why I do that, I'm interested.
    Thanks, but I'd rather just watch:
    Large format: http://flickr.com/michaeldarnton
    Mostly 35mm: http://flickr.com/mdarnton
    You want digital, color, etc?: http://www.flickr.com/photos/stradofear

  10. #10

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    Re: Contemporary portraiture

    Quote Originally Posted by mdarnton View Post
    What are you wanting to get out of it? Are you looking to survey the field? Do you want to do studio work? Environmental? Are you looking for ideas? Posing? Lighting? Someone to copy, as a learning device? Entertainment?

    And I'm wondering why you've specified "contemporary"? I haven't found a modern "famous" portraitist that I find compelling in the way that so many of the older ones were, and gave up looking to moderns for any inspiration at all. Many of them (like Heisler) seem intent on pumping out GQ magazine style pop-schlock that's more about the cleverness of the photographer than about the subject. For modern, the only stuff that really appeals to me is SOME fashion photography. That and the monthly portrait threads right here on this forum.
    I am asking for contemporary portraiture exactly because this genre seems to be on pause lately, at least to me. The last great portrait photographer I encountered was Nadav Kander. So perhaps I'm just missing something.

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