Monday, 15 February 2016

Garry Winogrand - Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1957 (Review)

GARRY WINOGRAND



 Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1957. PHOTO: The estate of Garry Winogrand


Garry Winogrand, a man who defined street photography as an attitude as well as style, was born in January 1928 in the Bronx. In 1948 he enrolled at Columbia University to study painting, before taking a photojournalism course, where his passion for photography began. He was obsessive and prolific. He worked as a freelance photojournalist and advertising photographer in the 1950s and 1960s.Winogrand said ‘Photography is about finding out what can happen in the frame.’ He loved to capture moments. Winogrand’s style is, in a way, the most difficult style, because the world he depicts is often so different that you yourself wouldn’t stop to look at it.

This image is called Albuquerque, New Mexico by Garry Winogrand. There is some kind of mystery behind this picture which is brilliantly captured by the photographer. This picture depicts a small child standing in a drive way of a house labeled 208. Inside a driveway there is an abandoned tricycle. Behind the house there are beautiful mountains of New Mexico, Sandia Mountains. There are heavy clouds casting a shadow on the mountains. Next to the building near the bottom of the photo is a small bush. In the photo you can only see the garage, but there are no neighbors in sight, only the small child in the driveway, lifting its arms. Garry Winogrand seems to be in the right place at the right time for this picture and it is not just a matter of luck as Winogrand’s eyes were fully trained to see things differently.


When we first look at the picture, our eyes see the highlights in the picture i.e. a small child with a mysterious pose in a drive way and then we see the mid tones i.e. mountains in a picture then we look back at the highlights and a mysterious surrounding which creates the tension in a picture. Because of its composition this photograph leaves a viewer with a sense of wonder, mystery and perhaps a feeling of darkness. Winogrand succeeded to capture a once in a life time moment in this photograph. This was a modern building in the middle of nowhere, but it is now in the middle of surrounding city and neighbors aged with time. Winogrand loved paintings and his pictures definitely depict his sense about paintings. This picture is a true photograph. We can’t paint this photograph because it is actually a wonderful and mysterious moment captured by Garry Winogrand. 


-Kamran Yousaf

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