Matt Powell Humanitarian Photography :: Blog

Dignified Portraits from Ethiopia- by Joey L.

9th June 2009

For some serious inspiration head over to the website of Joey L..   Navigate to Personal > Abyssinia,  & also check out his Holy Men gallery.  This is some of the best field portraiture I’ve ever seen.

joeyl

Over on his blog he discusses his approach in taking these pictures.  He calls them “dignified portraits”. In quotes here:

“I define the way I photograph people as a “dignified portrait,” and certainly used this style in Ethiopia. I feel in order to present something about someone in a photograph, it must be done very carefully and with great respect. I feel the advent of point and shoot cameras and the ease of sharing photography every where in the world (even though I admit this is how I got started and how I survive) can limit ones view of how important an image really can be. The tools and methods I use are not as important as the mindset, but I feel they do well in getting my direction across in presenting the subject.

Most of my images are contrived and posed. I think it is wrong to assume this direction as less realistic than a photojournalistic approach. I believe that ‘purist photojournalism’ is a very strong form of communication, and has its place in the world, but it is not my calling. Every single image not captured by an eye undergoes some kind of process, be it light reacting to the film which renders color and tonality or a digital signal being reassembled and compressed. If you take snapshots wishing them to not look contrived, then they are contrived to be snapshots. Every single image ever taken is contrived in some way or another. No process is purer than another, and no color is a truer color. (I have never seen the world in black and white either. )”

- by Joey L.

By the way- this photographer is only 20 years old, and most of his work is in commercial & advertising.