Excellent topic.
Like many here I have strong views.
In summary and in simple terms: I don’t like exploitation, but equally I don’t like blanket rules which prescribe what I can and cannot photograph.
What and when I chose capture depends on my motivation; my purpose; and the message or story – and the sobering and irreversible fact that I am forever 100% responsible for any choice that I make. So, in these situations, before I release the shutter I do THINK, very seriously.
These are two Portraits of Homeless Men, from a series that I made in 1976, This was the first time I photographed people in desperate or difficult circumstances:
“Friends” – Sydney 1976
In this image I saw concrete elements: Friendship, Loyalty and also Pride; the strength of human character no matter what the circumstance. I believe the image accomplishes the conveyance of those elements to the Viewer.
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“Stage Door” – Sydney 1976
In this image I saw a more abstract battle between despair and hope at the ‘stage door’ – and the purpose of this image to stimulate the viewer’s thinking (and perhaps their action, too).
I have no second thoughts about any justification for making my images of the many hundreds of people in less fortunate condition or position than I find myself: because I believe honestly that I have neither exploited nor harmed those Subjects and possibly I have assisted them and/or their collegiate by my actions.
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By the way one of the most difficult series of images for me to make was Commissioned Portraits for a Family during a Funeral and Burial Service. That’s not common, but more common in some Cultures than some might know about.
These experiences have not ever been “a notch on my belt”: but rather the opportunities afforded to me or sort out by me, to make images of the array of the human condition and situation has provided me with a better understanding of it and hopefully a better participant in it.
WW
All Images © AJ Group Pty Ltd Aust 1996~2016 WMW 1965~1996