Since then I have studied portraits and dictionaries on the subject and
found only 'likeness of a person' as a description. I heard that there
is a famous photo, from Karsh I believe, of Alfred Hitchcock which only
showed his shadow on the wall and no part of the actual person but was a
true likeness of Alfred.
What do you think?
On the other hand, there are judges who down score a nice
print cause he doesn't like backgrounds in focus, or the
painted scenes where the background image is too obvious.
Its irritating, but waddaya gonna do? I wouldn't worry,
either that judge won't be back, or that camera club will
not have very many members next year.
>I like to start this discussion, because we had a judge recently in a
>local camera club competition and he would disqualify every print not
>showing head and shoulders or showing any more than that.
>Since then I have studied portraits and dictionaries on the subject and
>found only 'likeness of a person' as a description. I heard that there is
>a famous photo, from Karsh I believe, of Alfred Hitchcock which only
>showed his shadow on the wall and no part of the actual person but was a
>true likeness of Alfred.
>What do you think?
Your definition is correct. A portrait is an image of a person. It can be
done in a head and shoulders shot.
Was that a condition of the competition? Was it in the rules?
--
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gi...@lava.net
What evil lurks in the hearts of men???
The SHADOW knows...
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When I do an actor's headshot, THAT'S a headshot. When I do someone's portrait,
I may get all or only a tiny part of their face in it, because when I shoot a
portrait, I'm trying to shoot something that captures what I think they're all
about.
I think that judge was silly.
Kerry
To portray is to describe, or quite literally to draw forth. As such,
when we speak of making a photographic portrait, we are taking about the
kind of image or images which graphically describe someone or something.
It therefore strike me as narrow-minded if someone would disqualify a
descriptive image as not being a portrait simply because it didn't
conform to any stereotype of a head and shoulders shot. A portrait could
just as easily include the entire body of a person. Indeed, in the sense
of describing a person, a portait could quite easily include something
about them beyond their physical body, like where they live, as in the
portraits of people in the livingrooms of their home.
On a larger scale, a portrait might be more than just an individual
person -- a family portrait for example. And even larger -- such as a
photo essay of "portrait of a community".
And what is a landscape image other than a portrait of the land.
And on, and on.
But to think of a portrait as just a head and shoulders shot is simply the
reflection of a petty minded individual who's own image making probably
lacks creative latitude and otherwise gets stifled in cliches.
C.J.
--
C.J. Morgan
ch...@torfree.net
shouldn't a portrait tell you: who they are, what they do, what they think,
how they feel...etc
Ralph W. Lambrecht <lamb...@btinternet.com> wrote in message
news:38220C...@btinternet.com...
> I like to start this discussion, because we had a judge recently in a
> local camera club competition and he would disqualify every print not
> showing head and shoulders or showing any more than that.
The words "anal-retentive" come to mind! I think a portrait is any
photograph where a person is the main subject. It need not even be of
their face... I'd say anything which includes a recognizable
distinguishing feature would constitute a portrait.