Press Review
US press review
by Paul Melcher

Time Magazine : The opening spread of a haunting photo essay by Abolfazl Nesaei in the new issue of TIME International, documenting an Iranian mother and her daughter after a brutal acid attack.

Popular science. Amery Carlson. It's a photograph of a lightning storm taken off the coast of Ventura, California (what is officially the city of San Buenaventura)

Counterpunch: Incredible photo from Portugal showing Gareth McNamara surfing what is believed to be the largest wave ever surfed at a reported 90ft.photo by To Me

The new yorker :Mike Brodie says that he never really wanted to be an artist. But he’s travelled over fifty thousand miles by train, lived with an underground rock band in Philadelphia and with vegans in Portland, and photographed it all. His images—of trains with the earth flying by, of a tender sleeping embrace—are touching and terrifying, exciting and raw. This work will be released as Brodie’s first book, “A Period of Juvenile Prosperity,” by Twin Palms Publishers and TBW Books, on March 1st. He will also have two concurrent exhibits in March, one at Yossi Milo Gallery, in New York, and one at M + B, in Los Angeles, and a book signing on March 8th, at Dashwood Books, in New York.

NY Times : Photo by James Morton A domestic cat with a European rabbit. Domestic and feral cats are significant predators of a wide range of prey species, including rabbits.

The atlantic: A truck is covered in ice as firefighters work to extinguish a massive blaze at a vacant warehouse in Chicago, Illinois, on January 23, 2013. More than 200 firefighters battled the five-alarm fire as temperatures were in the single digits. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

NY Times : Amir Pourmand/Iranian Students' News Agency, via Associated Press Just before nooses were put on their necks, Alireza Mafiha, 23, laid his head on an executioner’s shoulder. Mohammad Ali Sarvari, 20, is second from right.

The Atlantic : A soldier of the French foreign legion wearing a skeleton mask stands next to an armored vehicle in a street in Niono, Mali, on January 20, 2013. French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said today that the goal of France's military action in Mali was to retake control of the entire country from Islamist militants who have seized the north. "The goal is the total reconquest of Mali. We will not leave any pockets" of resistance, Le Drian said on French television. (Issouf Sanogo/AFP)

GQ : Beyonce for the cover of GQ : PHOTOGRAPHS BY TERRY RICHARDSON

Vanity Fair : PHOTOGRAPH BY BRUCE WEBER Ben Affleck, Emma Stone, and Bradley Cooper at the cover shoot.

W Magazine : Q Tarentino for W Magazine . By Lynn Hirschberg Photographed by Marc Hom Styled by Patrick Mackie

Time.com : Jan. 20, 2013. Muslims return home on an overcrowded train after attending the Akheri Munajat (concluding prayers) at Airport Railway station in Dhaka, Bangladesh. photo by Abir Abdullah—EPA

Palm Beach Post : One month-old Jariyah Coleman rests in the arms of her father at St. Ann Place, while her sisters Jaziyah, 1, Jakhia, 2, and Janasia, 1, sit patiently in a stroller behind her. Her parents, Steven and Latoya Coleman, and their 6 children have been living with a relative since Steven was laid off six months ago. Steven just landed a job, and the family hopes to soon be in an apartment of their own. They ventured to St. Ann to receive assistance in purchasing birth certificates for their children, and while there they participated in the County's count of the homeless. (Damon Higgins/The Palm Beach Post)

Time .com : Berhrouz Mehri— AFP Jan. 29, 2013. An Iranian watches a performance during the annual Zoroastrian Sadeh festival in the western suburb of Tehran, Iran.
Time Magazine : The opening spread of a haunting photo essay by Abolfazl Nesaei in the new issue of TIME International, documenting an Iranian mother and her daughter after a brutal acid attack.
Who's a photographer ? This question gets asked a lot these days. It used to be easy to answer : a photographer was one who had his work published. Today, this no longer separates the “real” photographers from the snappers, the sunday photographers. Everyone gets published everywhere, all the time. If it's not on a website, its via twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, or a blog. Thus, being published is no longer the criteria.
Since everyone is a photographer these days, taking and publishing pictures with the ease of one button, the debate rages on more than ever. It has been made worse since mastering technique is no longer a requirement either. No need to know f stops, sensibility, lighting, depth of field. Not even photoshop ( thank you Instagram). It has never been easier to take pictures. And thats enflaming the pro community.
One of the major attribute of the disagreement is that it cannot be possible that one who had no formal training, including years in the field, could possibly be a great photographer. Like any trade, it should be years, if not decades before one should be able to master the art of taking pictures, great pictures. Problem is that more and more, common people take great pictures. Not only simple splendid images but also some that look great after an obscene amount of post production artifacts. And that just doesn't seem fair, at least according to the purists.
Those who have made a living from the trade do not accept dilettante. If you have not starved trying to pursue your art, you are not, no will you never be a photographer. Those who have just picked up their Iphones and lazily slapped an Instagram filter on a back lit view out of their apartment window think that everyone is a photographer, as long as they liked the image. It seems that there will never be an agreement.
Since there is no panel of experts to define who is a photographer, everyone is also a critic. In the extremely social environment we live in today, unfortunately for the pros, the decisions are made by the majority. If millions of people, whomever they are, decide that an image is a great image and that the person who took it is a photographer, there is no disputing it. The majority wins.
Henri Cartier Bresson is a photographer, you neighbor is not. Never will be. Well, maybe on Instagram. And Facebook. And Google plus. And maybe he has more followers than HCB.
Paul Melcher
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