China sweat shop
michswiss
Registered Users, Retired Mod Posts: 2,235 Major grins
In response to "Through the baracades". I've posted this image previously in late 2010 or early 2011. It's been reworked back to colour. I'll share some backstory later.
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No seriously, I like that you shot through the shutters and I think it works well in color. the one woman staring directly at the camera adds to the shot as well.
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It works well in color (maybe not enough contrast for b&w)
Now I'm curious as to the context and back story. I think this is a healthy debate about how we view images and apply context to them and whether this is consistent with the photographer's intentions or not.
The virtue of the camera is not the power it has to transform the photographer into an artist, but the impulse it gives him to keep on looking. - Brook Atkinson- 1951
This is on the street that I've been shooting for close to five years now. Hefei Lu in Shanghai. People know me, I know them. Even if we don't converse much. The shop sells PJ's, JimJams, day sleeping wear. They sew them in the evenings.
The shot was taken in the dead of winter with the front shutters drawn. I'd parked myself outside, peeking through the screen while taking shots of an open shop next door. The subjects and I kept making visual contact. Again, we knew each other, made faces and laughed a lot.
So I got this shot. I like the shot. It still makes me laugh. The people in the shot like it because they also know the context. But for many it presents a much more dire circumstance than the actual situation.
The shot itself is complete. It's only ambiguous in so much as there are chapters missing in the story.
... and of course, you gave it a "loaded" title. We all know how we're supposed to feel about sweat shops, don't we?
But of course, the image itself, if we ignore the title, is ambiguous without being misleading. Like a good novel or short story, we can see what the characters are doing, but must supply our own internal motivations for them. Is the person in focus lonely, bored, happy, sad? Does she enjoy her work, or is she secretly stitching "help I am being held prisoner..." into the fabric she's working with?
Excellently ambiguous. I like.
"He not busy being born is busy dying." Bob Dylan
"The more ambiguous the photograph is, the better it is..." Leonard Freed
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