Stabroek News Sunday

Photograph­y isn’t dead after all, says Salgado

-

BANGKOK (Reuters) Having once forecast doom for photograph­y in the face of the smartphone, Sebastiao Salgado has changed his mind.

One of the most lauded documentar­y photograph­ers of recent decades, 73-yearold Salgado told Reuters: “I don’t think it is endangered. I thought so at some point, but I was wrong and I take that back. I think photograph­y, now more than ever, has a long future ahead.”

The Brazilian is still dismissive of the billions of smartphone­s which now take the overwhelmi­ng majority of the world’s pictures.

But he believes that documentar­y photograph­ers are cutting through that with memorable pictures that will survive.

“What people do with their telephones is not photograph­y, it’s images,” he said in Bangkok for an exhibition of his work.

“Photograph­y is a tangible thing, you grab it, you look at it. It is something akin to memory.”

Salagdo’s black and white, pin-sharp images have a grandeur that only enhances his often brutal subject matter of people caught in poverty and conflict or threatened environmen­ts.

Among his most famous photograph­s are those of swarming and muddy gold miners in Serra Pelada in Brazil.

Salgado shifted to digital photograph­y from film in 2008, but his prints are still created using the old gelatin silver process for the range and subtlety of its tones.

Industry estimates for the total number of photos that will be taken in 2017 range upwards from a trillion.

At least 85 per cent of those pictures will be taken on one of the world’s more than 2 billion smartphone­s with only some 10 per cent taken on a dedicated digital camera.

 ??  ?? Sebastiao Salgado
Sebastiao Salgado

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana