PhotographyandTime
TheSidelongGlimpse
Inthe1950sagroupofreportorialpho-
tographersturnedawayfromthepreci-
sionofthedecisive-momentpicture.
Ratherthansearchoutmeaningsfrom
climactic,now-or-nevermoments,they
switchedtheirattentiontoanotherkind
of
awarenessoftime.Theytook
to
photographingthoserandommoments
whennothingmuchseemstobehap-
pening—life'snon-events.Insteadof
thedelicatelypoisedcompositionsof
Cartier-Bressonandhisfollowers,their
imagesoftenappearprecariouslyoff
balance.Sometimesthesephotogra-
pherstiltthehorizonline,cutoffpeo-
ple'sfacesandfeetwiththepicture
frame,
ortheysplittheirsubjectsinhalf
withastopsignoratreetrunk.
Theresults
haveahaphazard,seem-
inglyunplannedlook,asifglimpsedout
ofthecornerofthephotographer's
eye.
Asoftenasnotthereissomethingjar-
ring,evenirritating,aboutsuch
a
pho-
tograph.Ambiguousandoffbalance,it
disturbstheviewer—whichiswhatthe
photographerintended.
Thiselusive,glimpsedqualityinpho-
tographyfirstcaughtthepublic
eye
in
1959,withtheappearanceofRobert
Frank'sbookTheAmericans.Acollec-
tionofseeminglychanceglancesatlife
intheUnitedStates—likethebarscene
ontheoppositepage
—
Frank'sbook
establishedanewconceptoftheright
momenttotakeapicture.The"deci-
sivemoment,"tohimandtheothernew
realists,
doesnot
fairlyrepresent
the
realworld.Theperfectpatternsthat
mergeatsucha
peak
moment,they
be-
lieve,arenot anormalpartofseeing.
Andtotrytocontainthosepatternsin
aphotographistodeprivea pictureof
itshonesty."Idon'twantthatinpho-
tography,"Frank
contends."Theworld
movesveryrapidly,andnotnecessarily
inperfectimages."