A Lot of Street Photography Is Just Bad and Exploitative

A Lot of Street Photography Is Just Bad and Exploitative

Street photography is a particularly tough genre to achieve success in: it takes a combination of a quick eye, good instincts, and a dose of bravery, and even then, a little luck certainly helps. Personally, I think that even with that taken into account, a lot of street photography is simply bad photography and exploitative of the subjects.

Before I jump into this, let me be clear that there are absolutely some street photographers whose work I adore and have nothing but the highest artistic respect for. There is the underappreciated work of Helen Levitt, which is a gorgeous, instantly nostalgic look at life in New York City in the middle of the 20th century with a particular penchant for humanizing its subjects. There is Elliott Erwitt's work, which often takes a refreshingly lighthearted approach to the genre.

Circus, Budapest, by André Kertész (public domain)

There is André Kertész, whose work is the sort that makes you stare at an image for minutes at a time. And of course, there is Henri Cartier-Bresson. Street photography is absolutely a genre that when done right, can produce stunning works of art that can teach us a ton about photography. Unfortunately, it often seems to go wrong, and those photographs still somehow get elevated.

Exploitative

Of all genres, street photography probably is (or has the most potential to be) exploitative. This is because it is one of the few genres in which the subject often does not give explicit (or even implicit) consent to having their photo taken or might not even know it is being taken. For example, photographing the homeless is almost never advisable. One could argue photojournalism falls into the same categorization, and it does on the surface, but the motivations for photojournalism are much different.

If you look at the work of the best street photographers, you will not find telephoto lenses. It is always a 35mm lens or something similar. Such a focal length does not allow the photographer to spy from afar. Rather, they have to be among those they are photographing as a part of their environment. This encourages the photographer to do a better job of empathizing with and humanizing their subjects. It generally forces them to interact with those whom they are photographing, and that can result in not only better photos, but less exploitative, more symbiotic, and more respectful interactions. Using such a focal length generally forces the photographer to make their presence known and to address the concerns of their subjects. And if we are going to use people for our art, isn't it only fair that they at least have a say in that? 

Reactive

This is the sort of street photography I hate the most. It is more an assault than it is photography. What I am talking about is the sort of photography where the photographer intentionally invades the subject's personal space in a brash way so as to provoke a reaction. I am talking about the Bruce Gildens of the world. You can see what I mean below:

Of course, if you intentionally surprise someone by jumping in their face with a camera and flash, you are going to get a reaction. What is that accomplishing, though? The photo you caught is not genuine. It is not the person in a state natural to them. It is not the person interacting with their surrounding environment. All you have captured is the person reacting to being harassed by you and your camera. What photographic value does that have? What artistic value? I know this sort of photography has some sort of audience, as it still gets views, but I personally hope that the test of time is unkind to it and relegates it to a footnote that says it was more about harassing people for pictures than any sort of skilled photography.

This builds off the previous point. Under American law, essentially, if you are in a public place, you have no reasonable expectation of privacy and are fair game to be photographed. This is often used as a fallback justification for people taking photographs in questionable situations. But you do not have to be a student of history to think of plenty of examples where legality did not coincide with morality. 

There are plenty of situations in which it is legal to photograph someone, but it is not necessarily right. Of course, every person has their own set of moral guidelines as well as a range of behavior they deem acceptable, but there are certainly situations in which I think the majority of people would agree that using a camera is not right. I personally don't like any sort of photography that makes unwitting people uncomfortable for the sake of the photographer's art, though I understand that in a genre like street photography, there will be situations where that happens inadvertently despite the best of intentions, and in that case, it really comes down to a photographer's ability to be empathetic, diffuse a situation, and show respect. Rather, I am talking about more blatant acts — things like photographing a car accident when you aren't a photojournalist or standing at the edge of a playground with a long telephoto lens. 

Lacking Empathy

This is probably what all my gripes with a lot of the genre come down to. Being empathetic means understanding that many people do not share our level of comfort with cameras, particularly in environments where their presence is not expected. It also means acting in a way that respects that level of comfort — or lack thereof. To ignore this in the pursuit of one's own creative endeavors is inherently selfish. Of course, what level of this is acceptable is an individual decision, but I think street photography often falls on the wrong side of the line. The truth is, I do believe that street photography is a really important genre, especially as it acts as a document of everyday life. But I also believe it needs to be done with respect for its subjects.

Conclusion

Yes, I spent this article on a moral high horse, and you are perfectly within your rights to tell me I have no right to sit there, lobbing moral judgments at an entire genre. It is just my opinion at the end of the day. What do you think?

Alex Cooke's picture

Alex Cooke is a Cleveland-based portrait, events, and landscape photographer. He holds an M.S. in Applied Mathematics and a doctorate in Music Composition. He is also an avid equestrian.

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73 Comments
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As qualified as you are on logical thinking, holeness and wholeness as well as beautifull tone, timber, colour and harmony, few dare to show ignorance. There is much beauty to capture and promote. The parasitic exploitative photographer builds nothing on harassment and revel in broken things. Thank you for the article and dont appilogize for high ground. It is where we all should be.

I believe the author is not getting Bruce Gilden's work who is a very unique author.

He is informed by a school of street photography represented by the likes of Lisette Model, Weegee, Diane Arbus or William Kelin: their work is not about beauty or condescending empathy but about crudeness of reality, a view that reflects upon the awakening after the "humanist dream" of classic documentary photographers after WWII.

Art is not only about painting flowers and pretty old ladies crossing the street it also is about the crude not nice things of life.

Bruce Gilden is the son of two drug addicts, his father was a gangster also. His mother went in and out of rehabilitation several times, he did some rehab also. For him his parents were both monsters and characters like in a play.

He has genuine interest and empathy with monstruous characters and drug addcits as himself.

I feel like this article is missing on a key component to the discussion. There has always been a call to the problem that society acts like the homeless isn't a thing. That it's hidden in the shadows and doesn't exist. The best of photography puts a face on homelessness. In many many photos it shows its a real thing and demands viewers (perhaps for only a split second) to acknowledge it. Some will just dismiss it, and some will think about it. But to act like it's nothing more than exploitative shows that people making this argument don't understand the value it brings. To document and get others to see it. It's not some sort of exploitative porn. And if that's all you see it as, maybe that says something about how you think and not questions the deeper issue. It's not someone exploitative, it's asking you to think about a much bigger problem. Perhaps the photographer didn't have the best intentions, but it's there now in front of your face. How does it make it you feel? How will you think about the issue the next time you notice it staring you in the face? Continue to pretend like it doesn't exist? Like it or not, photography is one of the only things out there actually making it real.

This guy wrote the rules to street photography. Watch out y’all.

Just a personal view, but to me all portrait work is ultimately boring, be it formal studio or candid street shots.

My father was an event photographer, and at these events people expected to be photographed and dressed accordingly. His perception of some street photographers who didn't ask persons for permission or photographers who would " wait out " persons who clearly expressed their desire not to be photographed, were participating in a Virtual Mugging.

I totally agree with what you say. Many times I put my camera down simply because I am not comfortable exploiting someone at a grim moment in they're life. I have also shot the photo attached about a criminal busted for selling drugs to a undercover police officer. At the end of the day I have to live with my choices, I live within my own laws. The other photo is a very happy couple enjoying the summer. www.gerryfrederickphotography.com

Sorry but one of those is journalism and the other is paparazzi.

Okay but while street photography may be exploitative, it's still something that documents our life and it's important especially in the times like current. Of course there are badly done pictures, photos with the greatest amount of photowork filters or just photo montage examples, but in general street photography may be a very good source to get the info of a modern life from.

It is funny how humans have all privacy right through laws made by him self while an animal in the nature is just part of environmental scenario. Exploitative is what we make with nature, with animals. We need to burn the whole planet just to drive cars and play Candy Crush on our cellphones. Come on dude, people does not need privacy protection of a street photographer in a public place. There is a lot of problems a little more important to worry about, even in photographic context.

I have a book of the great Pulitzer prize winning photographs over the years. Almost all are intrusive and capturing a moment of high emotion. Take that away and the photograph is not going to win the prize. It is what makes it great. Thinking about whether you should take a shot or not will invariably make you miss the moment.
For all of you that are criticizing street photography, take the kind of photos that make you happy. Enjoy being able to take your time and arrange the flowers in the vase ..... and back off.
Street photography can be great. Just as good as a commercial shot of a bottle of scotch or a fashion shot of a model wearing a dress that no one will wear next year.

Let Bruce Gilden's old ass run up on me with a camera like he did in that video I will slap the shit out of him.

Is it immoral to photograph execution? If not, what is immoral then?

That is a really good question. What is considered immoral today isn't considered immoral tomorrow. Is abortion immoral? If it's not then what is? One thing I do know is that immorality has no place in politics which is unfortunate.

Depends upon the context of why the photos are taken. It is a very real dilemma in conflict photography. I am a medical photographer who has photographed homeless and conflict from that perspective. I have established short-lived medical programs with my photographs. The question is always why is the photograph taken what is the purpose.

Articles such as this are extremely dangerous for inexperienced photographers because it casts doubt on the legitimacy of certain styles of photography akin to those of Bruce Gilden and Tatsuo Suzuki, otherwise known as snap photography.

Young photographers who do not know better will ignorantly take in these advice and conforming to it because failing to do so will result in them becoming the target of social stigma.

I recognise that this is an opinion piece and the author is well within his right to hate and wish for the demise of a certain styles.

So, if I may chime in with my opinion too, I would like to submit that I think there is a certain elegance and grace to snap photography. In fact I think that its beauty transcends merely what is illustrated on the photo. From a Zen perspective, the photos also reflect the photographer's intention to press the shutter at that moment in time but not to the point of being desirous. It is the photographer's portrait and there is a sense of flow and rhythm in the phototaking process akin to water in a stream manoeuvring around rocks.

Interesting thoughts, mostly true. Michael Ernest Sweet beat you to it though with his essay some years back called Street Photography Has No Clothes. Was quite controversial at the time but essentially made the same claim.

Thank you. I just read it. Excellent article.

get off your high horse. photography is about capturing a moment in time, we are taking photos of raw everyday life unstaged and not set up which is in some ways produce the most genuine photos of others. as for Bruce he went out and tried a new technique that gave us unbelievable photos that otherwise would never exist which weather they are polite or not tell a story of that day.
if you're out in public photos can be taken.

street photography is a mix of photojournalism and art, a wonderful mix.

Personally speaking, as a former French marine, and Foreign Legionnaire, if mister Gilden had jumped at me as in the video, he would have found his camera being torn from his hand and smashed into a hundred pieces on the floor. You invade my privacy this way, my space, I retaliate.

A tired, cliched critique of street photography from an inexperienced and somewhat clueless critic. Everyone shoots with his own artistic and ethical standards; we don’t need self-righteous jibberish like this. In the USA we have more problems with people shooting guns, not shooting cameras.

To the “author”, go out and see if you can shoot any decent street photos. Otherwise, don’t presume to tell other people how to do it.

Hm. Maybe you're kind of right, but your points are contradictory and it really seems you just don't have much of an appreciation or support of the genre.

You emphasize being in the scene with a close camera but also wanting a natural interaction. That's generally almost always not possible. If you're "in the scene" you influence the scene. Some of the most iconic photos wouldn't have happened if the camera was not in their face.

In my opinion, a long lens captures the truth without distortion or influence. It may seem like a "chicken" way to shoot, but I believe it's how you capture the most authentic genuine moments. I suppose it depends on the moment or event, but generally I feel being in the scene creates a false interaction with the subject(s). I believe it to be one of the great falsehoods/myths about photography.

I shoot with my "street" photography with a long lens usually because I want to capture the intimate moments that are happening. When I sometimes do get close and interact it essentially becomes a portrait session. I'm pretty sure I'm right about this.

90% of everything is trash, including internet articles like this one. Street photographers do not need rules or people telling them which lenses to use. The author would be better off going out into the street and showing us what he considers to be good street photography by his own work. That’s what I do:

skanter.smugmug.com