Documentary and Narrative Photography

Defining Documentary Photography:

Documentary Photography can be defined as representing a static moment of time which may have relevance to history or historical events circulating around everyday life to document a certain topic, event or purpose. The Photographer is set aside to capture a truthful, and realistic representation of a particular subject, more commonly of people.

From the beginning, people have found ways of experimenting with storytelling as a type of art, in order to express and illustrate our daily lives and events. This can be suggestive of uses of stained glass windows in churches and tapestries, illustrated manuscripts, and even paintings depicting historical and biblical stories.  Neither art nor advertising, documentary drew on the idea of information as a creative education about actuality, life itself. As contemporary and modernized art became a more developing thing, documentary photography gave the idea a new life and social function: a way of publishing reality. Documentary aimed to show, in an informal way, the everyday lives of ordinary people and the photographer’s goal was to bring the attention of an audience to the subject of his or her work, and in many cases, to pave the way for social change.

Documentary Photography
Steven DuPont: Cuba Workshop Dec 6th – 11th, 2015. ‘Havana Particular’. Steven adds the quote: “It doesn’t happen everyday. Seize the opportunity while you can”.

Documentary has been described as a form, a genre, a tradition, a style, a movement and a practice, but it is very problematic to try to offer a single definition of the term as it could be said that every photograph is in one sense of another a ‘document’, since it is always a record of something – a document of an occurrence of light and shadows recorded in time and space.

Documentary photographers across the globe have managed to change the way society acts towards world events, crisis’s and the sociology of mankind.

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The Migrant Mother, taken by Dorothea Lange in 1936
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President Ronald Reagan as he makes his most iconic speech “Tear down this wall” in 1987. The Berlin wall was taken down in 1989 with the help of Reagan’s speech.

 

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