10. Advice for Young Photographers
Finally, some advice from Brandt to young
photographers from which older photographers might also benefit:
“When young photographers come to show me their work, they often tell me
proudly that they follow all the fashionable rules. They never use electric lamps or flashlight; they never crop a
picture in the darkroom but print from an untrimmed negative; they snap a model
while walking about the room. I am not
interested in rules or conventions.
Photography is not a sport. If I
think a picture will look better brilliantly lit I use lights or even
flash. It is the result that counts no
matter how it was achieved.
I find darkroom work most important as I can finish the
composition of a picture only under the enlarger. I do not understand why this is supposed to interfere with the
truth. Photographers should follow
their own judgment and not the fads and distastes of others. Photography is still a very new medium and
everything is allowed and everything should be tried. And there are certainly no rules about the printing of a
picture. Before 1955 I liked my prints
dark and muddy. Now I prefer the very
contrasting black and white effect. It
looks crisper, more dramatic and very different from colour photographs.
It is essential for the photographer to know the effect of
his lenses. The lens is his eye and it
makes or ruins his pictures. A feeling
for composition is a great asset. I
think that it is very much a matter of instinct. It can perhaps be developed but I doubt it can be learned. To achieve his best work the young
photographer must discover what really excites him visually. He must discover his own world.”
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