McCullin’s photography is described as exceptionally powerful and technically sound. He uses relatively simple equipment, never a flash and rarely has a need for cropping or manipulation; he is instinctively a great photographer. He always does his own printing and mainly in black and white with heightened contrast to enhance impact, to make those images really stay with the viewer as they do with him.
McCullin worked intensively as a war photographer, to the detriment of his first marriage until the early eighties when issues over opposing ethos lead to his dismissal.
Turning to work such as advertising to pay for travel,
McCullin explored parts of India and Africa, writing books such as ‘Don
McCullin in Africa’. Whilst in England, McCullin spent time photographing
homeless people for a story about derelicts, those pushed aside by society.
Cold and with a sense of discomfort, McCullin describes the excitement of
potentially encountering an amazing scene; as with his war photography, he was
looking for the truth and often found it in the gaze of his subject looking
directly at him. He once said that as he worked he ‘looked into people's eyes
and they would look back and there would be something like a meeting of guilt’.
It is this that gives depth and compassion to his images.
McCullin believes that seeing, really seeing has nothing to do with photography; photography is just about showing the truth of that. The most important thing in his eyes is your emotional approach and the emotional commitment to where you are and what you are doing; to him, the technical side is secondary.
McCullin believes that seeing, really seeing has nothing to do with photography; photography is just about showing the truth of that. The most important thing in his eyes is your emotional approach and the emotional commitment to where you are and what you are doing; to him, the technical side is secondary.
Often asked, ‘Do you hide behind the
camera?’ McCullin considers this a ridiculous question; hiding behind the
camera would be tantamount to hiding your own emotions. McCullin’s ethos is to be there,
feel it, live it, look at what’s in front of you; I am inspired by McCullin’s
work but I what truly inspires me is the ethos of committing emotionally to a situation, in a bid to capture so much
more than visual impact.
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