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Comments Made by ubique
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Showing 371 - 380 of ~3801
Image Comment
The Bumpy Road for African Woman
06/17/2015 03:49:46 PM
The Bumpy Road for African Woman
by kasaba

Comment:
I'm biased because I live here and have seen these desperately sad signs many times. But my bias aside, this is still a terrific photograph of the crushing weight of dismal reality that descends on African women, whether they like it or not. Most people won't get this part, but you have suggested the burden borne upon the head, and that's brilliant. I prefer to think that you intended it, so there. Beautiful, awful (literally) photograph that rises far above the formulaic rubbish that seems to have characterised this challenge. 10 and a shared Blue Thumb for you, and Ndiyabulela Enkosi.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Noir
06/17/2015 11:06:37 AM
Noir
by odriew

Comment:
Thank Goodness for you. I was voting in deep and increasing despair, and going down for the last time until you came along and threw this lifeline. Blue Thumb (shared), 10 and thank you.
Photographer found comment helpful.
between 8 and 6
06/17/2015 11:06:25 AM
between 8 and 6
by Abra

Comment:
This is unexpected, and wonderfully so. Mad hair. But this is also a wonderful demonstration of how to overcome a deathly dull challenge topic with imagination and flair. I hope all the people who punted will look at this and learn something. Faint hope, I suppose. Red Thumb for you, and a 10 and my thank you for this interesting photograph.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Checking the north bound buses
06/17/2015 11:06:15 AM
Checking the north bound buses
by markwiley

Comment:
Love this. Sparkling sharp photography, and I do not refer to focus. It's a shared Yellow Thumb for you, plus a 9 and a thank you.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Mercer & Prince
06/17/2015 11:06:03 AM
Mercer & Prince
by Barroness

Comment:
Bewitchingly lovely. I'd have been thrilled beyond measure to have taken this photograph. It's so perfectly, elegantly balanced between complexity and simplicity. It's wonderful. It's a shared Yellow Thumb for you, and a 9 and my thank you for elevating this challenge with some imagination and art.
Photographer found comment helpful.
remember me 1132649
06/17/2015 01:21:50 AM
remember me 1132649
by tnun

Comment:
I'd never looked at this challenge and now I'm sorry for that! Yours is far better. It's more believable. About equal on the vignette. Be careful out there, amid tooth and tusk.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Hosta
06/12/2015 10:36:41 AM
Hosta2nd Place
by tnun

Comment:
Originally posted by skewsme:

Big congrats, Georgia.

Crikey, we don't go there ... the vagina monologues. Now I'm reconsidering my 'pretty but undemanding' wisecrack. Pardon the pun.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Hosta
06/12/2015 03:02:58 AM
Hosta2nd Place
by tnun

Comment:
How unsurprising it is that of all the many thrilling, interesting, durable, singular and emotional photographs you have submitted over those years, your greatest success would come with this one; pretty but undemanding. I know you won't be offended by that and will accept my congratulations in the 'wry grin' spirit in which I offer them. Don't do this again, all right? We can't afford to lose a treasured new member of the one-ribbon club.
Photographer found comment helpful.
marchers
06/04/2015 10:44:03 AM
marchers
by 2mccs

Comment:
This is my top pick, so let̢۪s get that out of the way first: it̢۪s the cursed Order of the Blue Thumb for you, plus a 10.


WTF?
Why my top pick? It̢۪s a negligent photograph as far as conventional craftsmanship goes. Blurry, indistinct, distant, and taken after the marchers have passed so we don̢۪t even know who or what they are. That̢۪s enough to warrant curt dismissal of the picture by many viewers and especially (alas) by most photographers who are disadvantaged by their very fixed, and limiting, idea of what makes a good photograph.

Exquisite Negligence
But the negligence in this photograph is not only deliberate; it’s also beautifully judged, both in conception and execution. Negligent, low-fidelity photographs are fairly easy to do badly (see some of my own crap), and exquisitely difficult to do well. And this one is done far better than ‘well’. It’s quite sublime.

Transcendental
This photograph is not itself a parade of course, but nor is it merely a picture of a parade. It̢۪s neither, and yet it̢۪s both, and more. It̢۪s an elegy to both the parade (and all it stands for as a human celebration) and the meaning of a photograph (and all that stands for as a human icon). Not the actual thing, nor a particularly satisfying record of the thing, and yet it addresses and transcends both.

Documentary v Recollection
Here’s the difference. Obviously this is not the kind of parade picture you’d expect to see in next day’s local newspaper. What it is is the picture you see in your memory, long after the event. It doesn’t depict the parade; it depicts the feeling and the memory of watching a parade go by. So it’s really a recollection â€Â¦ of parades and celebrations, of small town life, of certain indelible prosaic markers in your own history (the period car, the ordinary people with names no longer recalled, even the self-important small dog present at every local event). It captures and recalls some of the fragments that shape memory, and the uncertainty of memory too.

A picture can’t do these things – can’t transport every viewer to a different place and a different personal moment – if it is explicit. Thus this is a wonderfully apt use of a carefully judged absence of fidelity. It would be diminished, and rendered unconvincing, if it were a conventional high-fidelity documentary photograph. The photograph would no longer have that rare quality that distinguishes it – the ability to be equally relevant and evocative to every viewer, pretty much regardless of personal history and experience.

Skill Disguised
You have also sneaked in some clever technical skill, behind your mask of apparent negligence. One in particular is the composition, which makes beautiful use via perspective of leading lines that pass obliquely through the picture into nothing, just as do the marchers themselves.

Whatever Next?
On an intellectual level the picture is ripe with allegory, where the marchers represent the march of human life itself, and of civilisations with their brief shining moment in the sun, banners waving and drums beating, and then their inevitable passing.

Enough
But now I go too far with this fanciful allegory stuff! Enough is to recognize and appreciate the difference between a parade, a picture of a parade, and an object that celebrates the meaning of both. And that̢۪s what this is. Thank you.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Cunningham at work
06/04/2015 05:38:03 AM
Cunningham at work
by mariuca

Comment:
Crikey! I thought he was ... well, gone. So happy to see that he isn't at all, and still firing delight at the world. Thank you.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Pages:   ... ... [381]
Showing 371 - 380 of ~3801


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