JordanRick
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Ritchin Chapter 7
I really enjoyed chapter seven of Ritchin’s After Photography. Photography has the power to bring social predicaments into view. Unlike writing, which only allows for situations to be described, photography shows people what is happening. With photography becoming so much more accessible, the documentation of social situations is becoming more prominent. Ritchin discusses the “Nuclear Nightmare” photographic essay by Robert Knoth and Antoinette de Jong, where they documented the physical and mental effects of humans as a result of a nuclear reaction. While yes the images achieved a large audience, are situations such as this honorable or exploitive? To me documentary and social photography always posts this question.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Chapter 6
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Chapter 4
While reading chapter four I became really frustrated with the proposal of having links that go off of a photograph. To me the experience should be between the viewer and the image, it should not go beyond that. The photographer constructs a final image and that is what matters. It shouldn’t matter what filter they used or how long the exposure was. What the relationship with the final is to me what matters the most. There should also be no icon in the corner of an image. I believe that it would be, at times, disastrous. Depending on the image it could really concern a viewer and cause them to question the entire image. If it is a photo of a war scene and it has that icon, it would most likely strike up controversy and concern questioning the truthfulness of the image. I honestly think it is horrible idea.
While reading these chapters I found myself to be very concentrated on his style of writing. I find it distracting and a little frustrating. He will be serious and focused and then he tries to make a joke in the middle and it throws me and then I get side tracked on how much I hate his writing.

