THE PHOTO
26 _ PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER _ DECEMBER 2015 NOVEMBER 2015 _ PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY _ 9
Don McCullin
If you hadn’t become a photographer, what would you have been?“That’s an impossible question to answer because way back in those days, I had no trade. I worked in a small darkroom in Mayfair copying line drawings, but that would have been the
death of me had my life not turned out the way it has. I’ve travelled continuously around the world, and to the most extraordinary events. When I was young, I wasn’t educated enough and I wasn’t aware like the way I became aware once
I started travelling. They say, ‘Travel broadens the mind’.”Have any photographers inspired you?“Previous great photographers like Eugene Smith, Stieglitz,
Steichen and Lartigue – a whole list of names. They’re men of the distant past, and they’re men who have shaped my love of photography in a classical way; not so much the way I’ve turned out to be in photographing war. But I’ve arrested that war stuff,
and in my own spare time, in between assignments for Sunday TimesI paid for. I went to places like Irian Jaya and parts of Africa. The prev ious g ia nts i n photog raphy helped to shape my li fe.”, I went and did landscape and foreign travel, which The
Which assignment was the most memorable of your career?“The most important one was the Tet Offensive in 1968 in Vietnam, because it was on such a major scale. The battle I was in went on for two solid weeks, during which I could see a really
powerful image in any direction I turned. It was as if somebody had laid it on for me totally, which is not true, of course.”You’ve said that you’ve had a love affair with photography?
“A love affair means total dedication. It was as if I was almost like a kind of alcoholic – it was the same attachment. Photography made me a totally dedicated martyr and follower; therefore I would never cut corners in my darkroom or in the field where
I was working in terrible places: in Beirut, terrible famines in Africa. I would wait, be patient and be very respectful and
To mark the 80th birthday of legendary photojournalist Don McCullin, his
autobiography retrospective photo book Unreasonable Behaviour Don McCullinand have
been updated and re-published. Just before this landmark birthday he spoke to us about
his career and current projects
Don McCullin CBE was born in London in October 1935. After one of his pictures was published in The Observerhe went on to build an outstanding newspaper in 1959
career as a photojournalist, mainly covering conflict, primarily for Sunday Times Magazinemoving on to shoot commercial, portrait, travel and landscape , before The
photos. Now shooting digitally, he lives in Somerset with his wife, Catherine, and youngest son, Max
Roger Askew / REX Shutterstock
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THE BUSINESS
74 _ PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY _ NOVEMBER 2015 NOVEMBER 2015 _ PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY _ 75
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