sharon
(sharon)
#1
something to arrest. This is photography of the lens and shutter actively
combined, colliding and colluding with the world in motion. The frame
cuts into space and the shutter cuts into time, turning the photographic
act into an event in itself.^4
Cartier-Bresson’s compact Leica camera, so vital to the development
of mobile reportage, took 35 mm stock made standard by the film indus-
try. Indeed, the Leica was in part designed to enable cinematographers
to make exposure tests on short lengths of ciné film, without having to
thread up a bulky movie camera. So while photography may have begat
cinema, cinema begat the ‘decisive moment’. This is true in more than
a technical sense. Stillness became definitive of photography only in
the shadow of the cinema. Specialists like Muybridge and Marey had
pursued instantaneous photography since the 1870 s, but thewidespread
desire for the precise freezing of action took hold in the era of ‘moving
pictures’, which had themselves taken hold in the era of modern metro-
politan motion. Likewise, the term ‘snapshot’ dates back to the 1860 s,
when the instantaneous photo became possible, but it was not until the
1920 s that the snapshot was professionalized via reportage and democra-
tized via amateurism. It was then that it came to be understood as the
very essence of photography, for a while at least. It was almost as if
cinema, in colonizing the popular understanding of time, implied that
life itself was made up of distinct slices and that still photography had
the potential to seize and extract them.^5
Cartier-Bresson’s most celebrated photographs are of everyday
situations made eventful only by his precise framing and timing. The
subject matter is often insignificant until it is photographed – the jump-
ing over a puddle, the fleeting gesture of a face, bodies moving through
space flattened suddenly and beautifully into two dimensions. He was
present at a great number of historical events, but he was indirect, shoot-
ing bystanders rather than the main attraction, the diffused effects rather
than the cause. Best when conjured out of next to nothing,hisdecisive
moments avoided competition with history’s decisive moments. The
exception is the photograph titled ‘A Gestapo informer recognized by
a woman she had denounced, deportation camp, Dessau, Germany, 1945 ’.
Here the image is a decisive event, but it is alsoofan event, a momentary 27