“I don’t like distance, I like to make what I do very personal and I like to get as close as I can in war so that I can show people the extreme misery of it and the futility of it – you might say I plunged my hand right into the blood”.
Not much reading to be done with this book to be fair, there's a page or two of writing about McCullin, then a few pages of quotes from him about how he works, and his experiences of war. It's quite insightful, even though I've seen him speak in person about his work, this felt way more personal. The plates are good quality and there's a useful timeline of his life/events, as well as selected bibliography. Worth a read/look if you're interested in war photography.
I bought this following my visit to the Liverpool Tate Exhibition. It is entitled for that, not strictly what I am reviewing, as Tate Liverpool book not on Good Reads. The exhibition is always going to be more impressive and that’s the only reason I’ve gave 4. What an instinct McCullin had, for recording images from crucial, and unjust times in wield history. Civil war seems to be his specialty. Outstanding images, with good text to direct.
At first blush, one might think of a conflict photographer as simply recording the scenes in front of him. This book, of around 350 images, show that Don McCullin has a personal & recognizable style that he brings to his subjects regardless of the circumstances – whether it’s a landscape or a firefight. That he has the presence of mind to craft such images often under such trying circumstances is nothing short of remarkable. His photographs are unforgettable.
McCullin’s images show plenty of evidence of darkroom craft. I suspect much of his style & aesthetic emerges from the development tray. This is in no way a criticism. Like Ansel Adams, it appears that the negative is the score and the print is the performance.
This collection from Aperture is large-format, beautifully printed, and is as likely as much of a definitive collection as an ordinary mortal can afford, short of the £995.00, Don McCullin: Irreconcilable Truths boxed set edition. I would be remiss to omit mention of the essays by Susan Sontag and Harold Evans but, truth to be told, these photographs speak handsomely for themselves.
Questo volume è un omaggio alla carriera di don McCullin, uno dei migliori fotografi di guerra degli ultimi decenni. McCullin ha iniziato da perfetto autodidatta, proprio come tanti altri illustri fotoreporter, come lo stesso Capa. In queste pagine risalta la sua capacità di spaziare dal campo di battaglia, al reportage urbano, passando per i paesaggi campestri per giungere fino alla ricerca etnografica. La cifra unificante del lavoro di McCullin è il suo incredibile talento per la composizione, che riesce ad equilibrare anche nelle situazioni più estreme, insieme ad una costante attenzione alla persona umana, sempre inquadrata con grande rispetto. La sua tecnica preferita è il B&N, che stampa personalmente, con una preferenza per i toni scuri, il low-key. Un volume stupendo, degno della biblioteca di ogni appassionato di fotografia, disponibile anche in lingua italiana nell'edizione Contrasto Due.
Simply astounding, soul destroying images. I can't view McCullin's work in large doses... with most images of violence or extreme despair, viewers become numb with prolonged exposure, but not so with his work. You feel the power in every single one, and eventually it becomes unbearable. A truly amazing, pioneering photographer.
I saw an exhibition of his work at the Barbican in London some years back, but a lot of these photos I had not seen before. He is slightly colour-blind so all his photographs are in black-and-white. His work is superb, being non judgemental – just documenting - which makes it all the more powerful. Some of his work reminds me of Lee Miller’s fantastic photographs taken after WWII.
Unsettling, upseting, unbeleivable and uplifting ... an amazing collection by a truely gifted man. The only dissapointment was the lack of background description ... one line wasn't enough.