RespondingtotheSubject
ThePersonal
View
Inasense,photographyisbuiltuponafoundationofprejudice,because
vi-
sion—thebasisofpicturetakingandpictureviewing
—
alwaysinvolvesinter-
pretation.Seeing
withabsoluteobjectivityisimpossibleforthehumaneye:The
experiences,emotions
andattitudesofthevieweraffectwhathesees.
Wheneveracameraiscarriedtoacertainplace,
aimedin
a
certaindirection
andtriggeredatacertaininstant,thephotographerisbeing
guided
by
hisown
personalsenseofwhatfragmentoftheworlddeservesrecording.The
visual
componentsofthesubject
hechooses—andthewayhesynthesizesthem
—
willbedeterminedbywhathethinksandfeels.Whoeverviewsthe
photograph
will,ofcourse,addhisowninterpretation
—
andtheimpactofanypictureisan
unpredictableblendoftheresponsesofbothphotographerandviewer.
Thisfactorofpersonalresponseisoftenunappreciatedorunderestimated
byboththosewhotake
picturesandbythosewhoviewthem.Whenphotogra-
phywasinvented,earlyinthe
19th
Century,
themechanicalfeatofrecording
imageswithlightsoastonishedthepublicthatthehumanelementwas
under-
standablyoverlooked.Itwasthoughtthatacameraindependentlyturnedouta
goodpictureeverytimeanexposurewasmade,andonereporterevende-
scribedthenewtechnique
asa
"self-operatingprocessofFineArt."Mostpeo-
ple,however,gavethedaguerreotypistsagrudgingmeasure
ofcredit
by
call-
ingthem"conductors"or"operators,"asiftheytookapicturethewaya
factoryworkermight throwaswitch.Eventoday,manyamateursresorttomore
orlesspassivebutton-pushing—andwithoutaqualm,theywilllineuptotake
identical"best-view"shotsofYosemiteFallsortheGrandCanyon.
Thereis,ofcourse,nobestview,becauseanysubjectcanelicitcountless
responses,allequallyvalid.Forexample,acollegefootballgamemayseem
thrilling
toa
sportsbuff,
yetbe
boring
to
hiswife.Analumnus,watchingthe
game,may
seehisteamasheroicandtheotheras
villainous.Anex-football
playermayspotdetailsintheexecutionofplaysthataremissedbyeveryone
else.Apaintermightbeoblivioustotheflowofthegamebutacutelyawareof
theflowofcolors.Andeachobservercouldwellhaveotherresponses,de-
pendingontheweather,howwellhesleptthenightbefore,and
so
on.
Anyofthese
responsescouldbeconveyed
photographically.Ifthesports
buffhappenedtobeaphotographer,hemightsuggesttheexcitementofthe
gamebyshootingsomemomentofpeakactionwithatelephotolens,orcatch-
inganexpressionofstrainonaplayer'sface.Hiswife,ontheotherhand,
mightcommunicatehercouldn't-care-less
responsebya
pictureofaspecta-
torstaringvacantly
atagamethatismadetoseemveryfarawaybytheuseof
awide-anglelens.Thealumnusmightexpressallegiancetohisteambyin-
cludingthecollegeflagormascotinthebackgroundofhispicture.Theex-
footballplayercouldemphasizethepreciseexecutionofdownfieldblocking
bymakingatimeexposurethattracedthe routesfollowed
bythe
linemen.