ROBERT OSBORN Photography Documentary: Portrait of a Portrait Photographer

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  • čas přidán 21. 02. 2022
  • Fine art portrait photography in the Baroque style of Robert Osborn.
    .
    Scott Johnson - Executive Producer & Cinematographer
    Ethan Confer - Street People Video
    .
    #photographer #photography #portraitphotography

Komentáře • 39

  • @jasonblake5576
    @jasonblake5576 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Soul Food, best thing I’ve seen for a LONG time.

  • @andreak4280
    @andreak4280 Před 2 měsíci

    these images and back stories are outstanding!!! WOW!! 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼
    truly loved watching this … 🙏🏼 TY !!

  • @keithbarrett4630
    @keithbarrett4630 Před 5 měsíci

    Artist, Photographer and Humanitarian - Showing the viewer what the rest are afraid to see with their own reality.

  • @kyledarrenhanson
    @kyledarrenhanson Před rokem +6

    Amazing and inspirational! Would love to see more content like this from you.

  • @stans6582
    @stans6582 Před 9 měsíci

    Well done...........thank you Robert

  • @photograch
    @photograch Před 5 měsíci

    Excellently inspiring video ! Thank you so much !

  • @craigcompoliphotography1235

    This body of work is amazing.

  • @paulpiasecki
    @paulpiasecki Před 10 měsíci +1

    Incredible body of work!

  • @MichaelRayGreco
    @MichaelRayGreco Před 5 měsíci

    Robert I really enjoyed your video and the truth that you captured. So many people in dispeare so sad.

  • @bala1000mina
    @bala1000mina Před rokem +1

    A video that sparks inspiration! Thank you so much!

  • @stevecrawford3551
    @stevecrawford3551 Před rokem

    This is a great documentary. Thanks for sharing. 😀

  • @eddiekelly3224
    @eddiekelly3224 Před rokem +1

    What a lovely inspirational guy. Keep up the good work. X

  • @outtathyme5679
    @outtathyme5679 Před rokem +1

    I’d love to see Mr Osborn do some environmental portraits

  • @zone1man
    @zone1man Před 5 měsíci

    Robert, Great Video, I shared this with the Studio Photography class I teach. You cover so much important information. Thank You!

  • @gillesmonaco4842
    @gillesmonaco4842 Před 2 lety +1

    I love your work

  • @barter5
    @barter5 Před rokem

    Thank you! This gave me a valuable and thoughtful insight into what good portrait photography is and really should be like, in order to experience what people feel rather than get expressions of persons acting to get ordinary photos... Thank you!

  • @marioandrelima
    @marioandrelima Před 11 měsíci

    This is brilliant!

  • @shadabquaderi753
    @shadabquaderi753 Před 11 měsíci

    This is unbelievable. Full Stop. I have never seen anything like this.

  • @ruudkuiper5515
    @ruudkuiper5515 Před 4 měsíci

    I’ve just watched a pro at work ❤

  • @WALSTIB107
    @WALSTIB107 Před 2 lety +1

    fantastic portrait of a fantastic portraitist (and more importantly, human being)

  • @craigcompoliphotography1235

    This work is incredible. Outstanding.

  • @WillFaulknerPhotography

    Thanks for this, I enjoyed it.

  • @andersblomster
    @andersblomster Před 2 lety +1

    I really appreciated this one.

  • @gilltim5711
    @gilltim5711 Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful!

  • @stuartwalker121
    @stuartwalker121 Před rokem

    Anyone know what lens he's got on that D3? Is it a 24-120mm VR? What a great artist by the way! Beautiful work!

  • @gordonbrunner9429
    @gordonbrunner9429 Před 2 lety +2

    re: andy warhol sock....he calls it brilliant, but what would he think of it if he had no idea it was warhol??

  • @anils.rkumar6551
    @anils.rkumar6551 Před 2 lety +1

    What an amazing person.

  • @q3813
    @q3813 Před 2 měsíci +1

    But u don't see Genocide.

    • @JAI_8
      @JAI_8 Před měsícem

      Good point. He never mentioned 1:41 seeing genocide in the Native American’s face here huh? Not for a moment. I guess that wouldn’t sell too many prints in the gallery?
      And this odd 3:27 aestheticized fashion shoot with makeup applied directed by the photographer’s desire for aesthetic appeal to him rather than any historical accuracy is telling.
      This fetishized nostalgia walks right up to the brink of kitsch … technically proficient and borrowing from some of the best examples of fine-art photo style. But dangerously close to kitsch just the same.
      I’ve seen a lot of comparisons between Avedon “In the American West” and this man’s work. I beg to differ.
      Avedon was constantly concerned about the possibility of stepping over the barrier between documentary fine art portraiture and exploitation of his subjects. This photographer here doesn’t seem ever to consider that what he’s doing might transcend art and become exploitative of his subject matter.
      Another profound difference, related to the above, is that Avedon never romanticized his subjects “In The American West”. One of the reasons he consciously chose the white or light gray background for studio portraits was to AVOID romanticizing his subjects and their social position. This guy here makes it his entire approach to 12:55 romanticize these “anachronisms” as he calls them. He even admits as much right here 12:50.
      If he was genuinely concerned about these people and their plight and their future, he wouldn’t be concerned about their “soul” 14:25 he’d be concerned about the material and economic and political (not “cultural” BTW) forces making their lives more and more difficult to live.
      Don’t look at this guy as a hero. He’s a collector and purveyor of an aestheticized version of an already almost entirely vanished past. His “aw-shucks” demeanor while perhaps even honest doesn’t change this fact. Avedon was had the political conscience of a true believer in the importance of the power of the unromanticized image to make a political statement. This photographer here is trying to tell you he’s accessing these people’s souls so you too can share in collecting them with him before they are gone. Avedon’s portrait work inspires political questions that demand answers. This guys work inspires cultural questions that provoke romanticization, collection and commerce.
      Avedon was a genius who could flip a switch and even using sometimes the same overall aesthetic approach to the image make commercial photos of fantasy worlds that provoked commerce and then the next day create probing portraits whose political effects ranged from so subtle as to be missed by the commissioners or subjects themselves (like famous Coco Channel and the background Nazi poster portrait, or the huge series of American political and power figures for Rolling Stone (“The Family” (1976)) to overt and obvious … like the portraits of napalm victims (“Vietnam” in The New York Times Magazine (1971)).
      This fetishized portraiture might be associated with a friendly and unassuming artist but it lives in the same world of denial about the plight of working people in his states right around him, as well as denial of the genocidal history that created the romanticized cowboy and Indian imagery he’s pretending is still there all around to capture if you just go look for it.
      Go look at the images and the videos associated with Avedon’s In The American West if you want something that’s even still a little dated … but honest and caring and respectful of its subjects, compared to the clear commodification of a long gone fantasy world that never actually existed.

  • @BS_Patrol
    @BS_Patrol Před 2 měsíci

    Here’s to hoping that some of the money made by taking photographs of homeless indigenous people actually helps them…