Originally Posted by
Manfred M
George - I have tried to explain this to you before, but you seem to be unable or unwilling to understand that your view of portraiture is only one tiny part of that genre. These models have been trained to not show emotion, especially in much of the type of work that I do. Yes, there is room for a bit of a smile in some circumstances, so long as it helps to tell the visual story. This series is all about the form that the model and the scarf create in this environment.
Rather than believing what I write, I would suggest that you look at the work of some of the great portrait photographers, both past and present. Yousef Karsh, Richard Avedon, Irving Penn, Diane Arbus, Richard Winogrand, Horst P Horst, Vivian Mayer, Dorothea Lange, etc. have all had a very significant influence on the genre. For current photographers, look at the work of Andreas Bitesnich, Joey L, Joel Grimes, Benjamin Von Wong, Frank Doorhof and of course Annie Leibovitz.
At a high level, if the subject is a person or group of people, the shot is most likely a portrait. Once you understand that portraiture is a much wider genre than you seem to understand it is, perhaps then we can have a meaningful discussion.