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Magnum Photographers: What Makes Them Click
Part One of Three
By Eileen Douglas


Editor’s Note
In “Magnum Photographers: What Makes Them Click,” journalist, author and filmmaker, Eileen Douglas has the first of three parts about why Magnum photographers shoot photos, who they are and where they come from, and why the camera and photography are central in their lives. Douglas bases her essays on the book, “Magnum Stories” published by Phaidon. The first in her series is Making a Statement, His and Her Vision of the World and a section on Social Justice. October’s essay will be about personal need, followed in November by how photography allows for creative freedom.
 

Magnum celebrates its 60th anniversary this year.

My celebration began early. More than a year ago, I found the book “Magnum Stories” at my nearby bookstore. I had no idea that this anniversary was coming. But I dragged the book, filled with images and thoughts from Magnum’s leading photographers, laid out alphabetically A to Z, to my office, sat it on my desk and worked my way through it —a few pages, a photographer at a time--- whenever I had a moment.

Delicious. I read “Magnum Stories” the way a chocoholic might parcel out a bonbon now and then, as a treat to savor.

It took me more than a year to finish.


The book is huge. The print is tiny. Often I needed a magnifying glass. But how worth it for the insights. For those who love to shoot, who pick up a camera for whatever reason, here is a work full of revelations. Time and again I found myself saying, “Yes, that’s so true,” grabbing a pencil to write out a pearl of photo-wisdom I wanted to be sure to remember.


And having done so, now, in this anniversary year, my tribute to Magnum at 60 is to share what they had to say.

Of course, there were wise words about photography itself.
Good photographs come from being surprised.

And nuggets of insight we might put into the category of “what photography does for the world.” Especially as the founders of Magnum saw it.

The purpose of photography is to bring testimony on our world to our contemporaries.
Revealing the subjects will lead to a better understanding of the world.

The heart of it, for me … what I found most striking, however, was the deeply personal. What picking up a camera and making one’s way through life taking pictures does for the photographer. Why shoot? Why click? Why do it in the first place? Why go through life with a camera in your hands? What is it that makes you choose -- no -- need to do this? And how does it feel when you do it well? What’s going on inside? In other words, ask not what photography does for the world, but what does it do for the photographer. What compels and fulfills when he or she picks up a camera and makes it a life’s work to capture images through a lens.

Some are adventurers who love to travel. Others never want to stray more than 100 miles from their home. Some want to disappear. Some want to shout to the world who they are. Some want to save the world. On a moral mission to right the world’s wrongs, they feel obliged to “be witness to society’s problems,” whether to shine a light on the division of wealth and power in the world, to empower people in the impoverished black area of the Mississippi delta, drawn to the injustice of life in South Africa under apartheid, or hunger in India.

Others want to have nothing to do with politics. They want only the freedom to pursue their own artistic vision, even if that is staring into the architecture of a flower. Some talk of there being logic to it. Others say that they run on intuition. Some have more than one reason, reasons which meld into one another. Whether known for their work on the Vietnam War, bullfighting in Pamplona, photojournalism, or fashion ... all find themselves…and their place in the world -- with a camera in their hand.

There’s the world. Here’s your eye. There’s the camera. Click. Who you are is what you see, and what you see is what you click. But the world is such a big world -- as many different reasons as they have ... photography is big enough for all to make a home in. To find the truth within it.

And you don’t need to be a Magnum photographer to savor those truths. As Magnum celebrates 60, we celebrate them. These Magnum photographers speak for all of us who love to shoot. Whatever they have to say is true for well beyond 60 years, and whatever their reason, one is likely to be yours, as well.


MAKING A STATEMENT, HIS OR HER VISION OF THE WORLD

GEORGE RODGER, one of Magnum’s co-founders, had many reasons for his work in photography. But he did not set out to be a photographer. An adventurer, traveler and author, he was enraged by the misrepresentation of line drawings made to accompany a story he sold, and vowed in the future to make his own pictures. To protect his vision, Rodger did it himself.



ABBAS, on the other hand, had a dream from childhood. “As a boy I had a heroic image of the journalist: you went to war, you covered historical events. I dreamed of covering the Vietnam War.” He admits he wants to make a statement. He wants, in his words, to get his point across. “My statements are in my books. It’s more like the work of a writer than a photojournalist. Now I don’t just make stories about what’s happening, I’m making stories about my way of seeing what’s happening. There’s a difference. I am interested in the world, sure, but also in my vision of the world.”

PETER MARLOW also carried with him the idea of the photographer-as-hero. I wanted, he says, to say something as a photographer. Moreover, he reveals, photography “gives me a way of being nosy, an excuse to be there -- to be where I want. You are very privileged as a photographer to be able to look at things and explore.”





PAUL FUSCO, too, is looking for the photographer’s voice to be heard. He believes in the photo essay because it “allows the photographer’s voice to sing.” He is interested in using the photo essay to communicate -- and to provoke. He says he is very careful of what “I choose to show you, so that I show you what I WANT YOU to feel and to understand.” Infuriated, for example, at police brutality, he admits, “A lot of my work yells. I want my pictures to do that -- not all of them, but I want people to be moved.” He wants, in other words, to be heard, his way.


INGE MORATH above all was a traveler. She had no desire to visit war zones. But when she finally started to shoot, she writes, “Finally I had found my language, knowing I could express the things I wanted to say, giving them form through my eyes.”

 

 

MARTIN PARR sees making pictures as a way to “express my view of the world. My experience of my daily life overlaps with my subject matter, and I’m trying to articulate in photographs how I experience the world.”

 



PAOLO PELLEGRIN admits, “I have a desire to take pictures to express things that I feel need to be said.” For example, the Kosovo War. He felt that conflict was a part of history. He had to be there. “Most of my career in photography, I’ve worked on stories about issues that I choose. These have often been about wounded places. I want the work I do to be a testimony of things that happen, a record of events.” He is, he also admits, now “more interested in photography’s potential to create a bridge to the viewer and to create a dialogue. I think photography can achieve that.”
The connection, that’s what’s important—that through this medium we can, perhaps, understand and touch each other.


And so we arrive at social justice.


SOCIAL JUSTICE

CORNELL CAPA said, “The goal, more than taking the photograph, was making a home for photography that champions human concerns.” Certainly that had been a goal Magnum photographs have achieved.

 

 

EUGENE RICHARDS (now a member of the agency VII) wanted to do social photography…when he started, in particular, to make people in the South understand the white power structure. “When I was young, photojournalism was about social change. I started photographing actively in the late 1960s when I began a little newspaper with some friends, a bunch of volunteer social workers in the South. We weren’t expecting to elicit change in a direct sense—we knew better than that—but we were commenting on the society we were living in.” They wanted to empower people in what was a very impoverished black area, the delta of the Mississippi in Arkansas.



IAN BERRY was drawn into the injustice of life in South Africa under apartheid. He felt it was an issue he had to pursue. Not just to take good pictures, but to get into situations that were in themselves interesting. “It’s not enough to make a beautiful photograph…but for what?” He can see no reason for just playing with photography when there are serious issues to deal with. Berry looks for the moment, the defining moment, that works as a shape AND has impact.
In the end, he feels, “there are two things that give you a real buzz.” There’s the photograph that you take on the street, where everything works and you’re delighted with the image. It may not be published, but you are happy. Then there’s the situation where you are involved in a news event, and you get a photograph that sums up the event totally and it gets published -- and makes a difference. He cites pictures he shot of an orphanage, about to close for lack of funds, which, because of his work, was flooded with donations.



WERNER BISCHOF focused on the face of human suffering. He was “haunted by the hundred thousand suffering people whose senses have been dulled by their daily fears and who need help.” Bischof cites India hungry from famine. Moved to lift his camera without inhibition at the sight of skeletal, near-death old women, dying of thirst and hunger, he writes, “The only reason I could convey this wretched misery is because I knew I must convey it to the world. This work means a lot to me,” he explains, “because it has to do with life.” With a sense of moral obligation, he argues, “We are the enlighteners, the stimulating force that opens the eyes of our fellow man.“



SUSAN MEISELAS felt obliged to see and show the troubles in El Salvador and Nicaragua. She admits she needs to be witness to society’s problems. She sees the camera as an excuse to be someplace you otherwise don’t belong, and cares about exploring both the power of the camera and her relationship to the people she photographs. “It gives me both a point of connection and a point of separation.”



WAYNE MILLER thought if he could make photographs in the black area of Chicago, “I might be able to get some insight into it, the world of the Negro—not as some sort of crusade on my part, but as a way of sharing how they thought, how they lived, how they felt, their viewpoint on the world around them. I felt that ignorance had made wars, and if I could use photography to help dispel ignorance, the future might be a little brighter. I had no idea what I was going to do; which way I was going to point my camera. I just had the desire to know the people that I saw and to try to express how they were feeling about their daily lives and their families. And my goal -- my unobtainable goal -- was to really get inside that other person’s mind. It’s just empathy, that’s what it boils down to.”
 

JOHN VINK is interested in the survival of identity. He makes photos of the poor and the powerless, and he doesn’t want to be where all the other photographers are. His work called him to people in remote cultures, often landless peasants on the margins of global society, cultures which are disappearing, in places he wants to go to shine a light … and where the photographs may be more of a record of what the world is losing … something not being addressed that he thinks should be. He decides what country he wants to work in, either because he’s really upset or very at ease there. “What it’s all about in the end, is that I want to give a voice, albeit only a tiny voice, to those who don’t have one. I’ve decided it’s my job to do what I can as a photographer to be their advocate. I can’t think of a way I would rather live my life.”


LARRY TOWELL indicates as a young man he might have chosen to be a human rights activist instead of a photographer. “Photography is an extension of who I am as a storyteller. I look at things that are personally of interest to me and I photograph them". Towell takes photos for history, not the news of the day, but to reflect on it. He, like many other Magnum photographers, may work on a subject for years, compelled to do it because he loves the work.

“There’s an energy I continue to get from engaging with human rights issues, so it becomes a focus in my work. All the projects I do are about people and issues that I care about.” Though he admits, “the other side of me is more domestic, and very quiet, where I’m figuring out what makes individuals who are close to me tick. I guess it is all a way of figuring out one’s place in the world.”

For some, figuring out their place in the world with a camera in their hands is very much a personal quest, and a moving one, at that. They want human contact, or to avoid it, or an escape, a ticket to a bigger world and a better life, or a better self.
We will look at those thoughts next month in Magnum Photographers: What Makes Them Click, Part Two.

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Eileen Douglas is a broadcast journalist-turned-independent documentary filmmaker. Former 1010 WINS New York anchor/reporter and correspondent for ABC TV's "Lifetime Magazine," she is the author of "Rachel and the Upside Down Heart," and co-producer of the films "My Grandfather's House" and "Luboml: My Heart Remembers." She can be reached at www.douglas-steinman.com.

 

 

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