Journal Reflection – Positions and Practice,Week 5

During coursework this week, we explored issues of power and responsibility as photographers. I am very clear on my own morals, ethics and responsibilities as a photographer, however, I found it difficult to come to terms with power. This is a concept I was initially very uncomfortable with as I had never considered myself as powerful in my role as a photographer or as having power over others in this capacity. 

Upon reflection I came to understand through Henri Cartier-Bresson’s concept of the decisive moment, that the moment of decision, choosing when to take a photograph, was actually an act of power. This led me to consider how as photographers we should reflect upon why we choose a particular subject to portray, or a particular moment in time to capture, and what we will include in the frame. Conversely, what we exclude or leave out – the photographs never taken – are equally significant. What is present or absent in an image is a conscious decision made by the photographer that will not only create meaning but will speak of the photographer’s relationship to the subject matter.

Our tutor, Jesse Alexander, emphasised that it is vital for us as photographers to understand the relationship between subject, image, viewer and photographer, and that it is our moral and ethical responsibility to make that relationship as fair as we believe is reasonably possible. In discussions on the forum, we looked at how photographs can be misused, and debated our responsibility as photographers in this context. It made me extremely aware of the need to be careful about who I am willing to work with and just how much ownership of my work I am prepared to give away.

I think its also extremely important to be aware of the kind of contracts involved and define both who the contract serves and protects.  We always have a moral and ethical responsibility that is implicit in our work as photographers by virtue of the relationship that exists between the photographer, the subject and the viewer. For me this triangular ‘model’ is a good starting point from which to make ethical judgments about my own photographic practice or that of another, and to enable me to assess the balance of power in each situation. We need to always be aware of the power of an image and therefore be discerning and sensitive in the way we work.

In peer debates privacy and dignity were raised as being important to ethical photography, and this is very pertinent to me as somebody with an interest in both street and social documentary photography. I had in fact been considering working on a project around social issues in the urban environment, in particular homelessness.  I am acutely aware of the vulnerabilities in these circumstances and how essential it is to protect what little privacy and dignity such people have. 

The conflict for me is between feeling I have a responsibility to tell the story while constantly questioning myself around the moral aspects of photographing such vulnerable subjects. I believe it is essential to be sensitive towards the subject, to be very clear on personal integrity, and to work collaboratively where possible.  I particularly feel that collaborative work is not only ethical but also empowering for all involved and is particularly important in portraiture, photojournalism and social documentary photography.

I am currently focusing on urban architecture and some street photography, so in this context it’s very important for me to understand the law,  particularly in respect of private buildings and photographing people.  My first responsibility is always to make sure I know the law and to work within those boundaries while also maintaining my rights as a photographer. The second very important aspect for me is to consider the subjects that I am photographing and to make sure that I am photographing with sensitivity, respect and compassion. 

Colour Co-ordination – Street Photography, Bristol ©Juanita McKenzie

Power and Responsibility

Just as photography can have a positive social and political impact, so too there is equal potential for it to be used in negative ways.  Issues around power, responsibility and ethics are extremely important areas for photographers to consider. 

 “Photographs really are experience captured, and the camera is the ideal arm of consciousness in its acquisitive mood. To photograph is to appropriate the thing photographed. It means putting oneself into a certain relation to the world that feels like knowledge — and, therefore, like power.” – Susan Sontag, On Photography, 1977, pg 3-4

Both commercial and documentary photography are fields that are frequently criticised for the objectification of the subject and the misuse of the way in which the subject is portrayed and, indeed, the sense of ownership that is attributed to both the image and the subject by the photographer or by the commercial institutions that gather and commission images. However, these are issues that are not solely confined to these specific fields and need to be considered in all areas of photography. 

As photographers we need to consider very carefully why we are choosing to take a photograph of a particular subject and why we choose to take it at a particular moment in time.  The moment of decision and the selection of a particular moment in time to capture, is in itself an act of power.  The concept of the decisive moment was first proposed by Henri Cartier-Bresson in 1952 and has since been largely misunderstood by photographers and photojournalists as being a technique to be employed in the pursuit of the perfect image rather than a reference to the sensitivity that is required by the photographer in deciding when to take an image. 

His work, widely published in magazines and in a series of superb books, only rarely reported newsworthy events. It provided, rather, a broad description of a place, its people and culture, and the texture of its everyday life. And it helped create the image of the photojournalist as an alert and sympathetic, but also knowing and detached, observer — an image that dovetailed neatly with the notion of the “decisive moment” and in the process limited its meaning. Under the rubric of photojournalism, the decisive moment is not only a pictorial climax that yields a satisfying photograph but also a narrative climax that reveals a truth about the subject.” – Peter Galassi, Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Early Work, Peter Galassi, pg 9

We also always need to remember that without context an image can be misused or misrepresented, therefore, as photographers we need to consider very carefully how an image can be interpreted, or misrepresented outside of the original context and meaning.  We have to take responsibility for how the subject is portrayed and how the image could be used, manipulated or interpreted. 

An example of this is photojournalist Jeff Mitchell’s image of refugees crossing from Croatia to Slovenia in October 2015 which was used controversially by the UK Independent Party during the 2016 referendum campaign to leave the European Union. This is discussed in greater detail in an interview published in The Guardian newspaper which can be viewed here.


Refugees cross from Croatia into Slovenia in October 2015 (c) Jeff Mitchell/Getty Images https://goo.gl/gtrmU6

This is not to enter into political discussion or to debate this particular incident, nor is it a criticism of Jeff Mitchell who I do not believe anticipated such a use of his image. Rather, this is to emphasise that as photographers we have to consider very carefully where we sell our work and just how much ownership of it we are prepared to give away. We always have a moral and ethical responsibility that is implicit in our work which means we need to be aware of the nature of any contracts we enter into, whilst also being aware of the power of the image and the way it could be used.

References: Galassi, P. (1987). Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Early Work. New York: The Museum of Modern Art. Sontag, S. (1977). On Photography. London: Penguin Books The Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/jun/22/jeff-mitchells-best-shot-the-column-of-marching-refugees-used-in-ukips-brexit-campaign