Tuesday 17 November 2009

LAUGHING FIT TO CRY


In 1997, in the Melancholy of Photography, the late Susan Sonntag said that `photography has become the art of quintessential, affluent, wasteful, restless societies`.

Today photography is the name of the game. But the picture industry is in a state of melancholia, more particularly the stock libraries which have played an historic role in the publishing world.

Like writers being challenged by bloggers, photo agencies are greatly affected by the rise, and rise, and rise of `citizen camera` who is content to simply see his work in print. Frequently without payment.

Helped by the genius of digital and Adobe Photoshop, amateurs are giving the professional a run for his money by flooding the market with many good images, but which are available for as little as a dollar.

The sorry state of many image libraries today relates to this, and to the credit crunch which has impinged on demand. But it is equally due to huge corporations dropping prices to levels at which smaller collections cannot compete.

Mega players such as Getty had the nous, and funds, to buy up competitors eating into the international footage market, valued at more than £200 million annually.

Corbis, owned by Bill Gates, has also swallowed competition so that these, and a few other names such as Alamy, now call the tune. Such collections often counting 10-15 million images, return a good income, but at the expense of their photographers who experience diminishing sales.

The conflict between amateur and professional is that photographers who have studied their trade are not trying to be a surgeon, and perform an appendix operation on the side, as it were.

In fact countless amateur photographers are doing themselves an injustice by handing over image rights with no knowledge of how to license them. And in entering their photos in vaguely worded competitions, even those run by some of the major newspapers and websites.

I, too, was an amateur once and in an ideal world, there would be room for both parties. But the situation is far from ideal and it`s very unfortunate when all around are people, some of whom have spent years building up splendid specialist collections, being overtaken by circumstances beyond their control.

Founded in 1966, the French photo agency Gamma, which rose to fame documenting the May 1968 uprising in Paris and the Vietnam War, is the latest victim of the crisis.

Image: Nomad woman at the Pushkar Camel Fair by Ann Cook.
Source: www.copix.co.uk

4 comments:

  1. Excellent article.
    And isn't it the case in so many areas of expertise where the value of the years is over run by the quick fix or should that read pix!
    Once everyone wakes up the damage is done and the resource is lost. Double standards abound, cries for expertise and the lack of skills or quality of age and experience against the flood of the cheap is best market place. I commiserate with you entirely.

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  2. I agree entirely. The amateur is busy snapping up the easy subjects but who is going to be left to take those less saleable specialist images.Who wins? The owners of the microstock sites and the publishers who are reaping the benefits of small picture budgets.The loser - the pro photographers.

    The same is happening in publishing too with newspapers giving away content and google giving access to whole books. However I sense it is beginning to change and for once I applaud Murdoch's decision (if implemented) to charge for access to online newspapers.

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  3. Very sad situation that leaves me quite speechless.

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  4. I don't know how many pro photographers make a living these days. Very difficult

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