It’s one thing to match a baseball cap and a poster, but when we pulled into the station and another poster offered its services, that’s a trifecta and even though its hardly important, it is unusual…
All Photos © Matt Weber
Don’t worry, they’re not packing anything other than money. Probably unaware that the jobs they still have make them very lucky. The long day working, whether it be for peanuts or real coin, is still apt to leave one none to friendly towards my camera…
I understand, and wish that I could help them…
© Matt Weber
The funny thing about photography is that you can like a picture and be totally unable to articulate why. I usually have no shortage of verbiage when it comes to describing my thoughts. This image is……..Why should a person have to know or be able to say why something pleases them?
All Photos © Matt Weber
I know that photos like this one are open to criticism. I like this picture. One can hate the idea of photographing the poor and I understand their point of view. I had to decide whether or not this was OK a long time ago. I know that the odds are against the picture ever making a difference in the real world, so I won’t fool myself into thinking that I am doing any type of service, by exposing how tough life is to some people. There are plenty of things that people rationalize doing, each and very day. I photograph the city and ALL of its inhabitants. I have never taken a picture of homeless person reaching into a garbage can and that doesn’t mean I should get a medal. I just draw the line there and try and work with some compassion. I do throw all of that away at times when faced with what seems like a great shot. If later I discover that I have crossed the line of decency, then I can still take the negative and cut it up into pieces. I’ve only had to do that a few times and I’d love to keep the overzealous side of me under control, forever…
All Photos © Matt Weber
In the next few weeks this newsstand on my corner will be replaced by a new glass one. These new ones are mandatory and look very similar to the new bus shelters. Dave Beckerman just posted a version of the same newsstand on his website…
All Photos © Matt Weber
I’ve run out of images which I can crop square, so my tribute to Mike Peters is officially at an end…Bookmark his site and follow his “Dream” on Flickr…
I don’t know how many more images I can crop as a nod to Mike Peter’s work.
I like my rectangles…
All Photos © Matt Weber
Mike Peters has just wrapped up a digital presentation of his work called “The Dream” It will hopefully find a publisher soon. He hopes to print four narrow books and then put them into a slipcase. That would be fantastic! I have decided to crop my work from now on as a tribute to Mike, who lugs his Hasselblad around everywhere and makes me wish that I had one too. I remember what it feels like to compose an image with a larger camera and then attain critical focus. You just sense the potential of the image in a different way than with 35 mm. Of course I’m sort of kidding here, but another thing which Mike has, that I covet is…Four cars! I just want one…
All Photos © Matt Weber
The Amsterdam projects were among NYC’s first. I’m pretty sure Robert Moses had a hand in their coming about. Built in 1947 they were a partial answer to all the troops that had come home after the war and needed affordable housing. I think they may have been better off leaving the tenements alone, because the projects eventually became isolated neighborhoods within a neighborhood. To this day, you have people who barely leave the projects to shop and it creates a weird type of personality disorder. Just knowing that your entire existence is based on government handouts could make the people feel a bit depressed as the affluent flutter about the perimeter. Rich people walking their kids to private school, pass the projects full of welfare recipients and crack dealers, who glare back unhappily. I know that some people will use the cheap rent to launch a better life for themselves, but most will spend all their days in these experiments from the laboratory of Moses and his minions…
One last gripe about NYC’s housing projects…If they had just put in larger windows, these buildings wouldn’t resemble the virtual prisons which they are. A little more light could have made a difference…
All Photos © Matt Weber