• Blog
  • Archive
    • Portfolio
    • China
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Singapore
    • Singapore Literature
    • Thailand
    • Vietnam
    • About the Book
    • Q & A
    • Media & Reviews
    • Images
    • Buy it here
    • Writing
    • Short Story Recommendations
    • Writing Resources
    • Tools for Writers
    • Writing Prompts
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

The Sun Shines & The Igloo Melts

Photography & Writing
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • Gallery
    • Portfolio
    • China
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Singapore
    • Singapore Literature
    • Thailand
    • Vietnam
  • We Rose Up Slowly
    • About the Book
    • Q & A
    • Media & Reviews
    • Images
    • Buy it here
  • Writing
    • Writing
    • Short Story Recommendations
    • Writing Resources
    • Tools for Writers
    • Writing Prompts
  • About
  • Contact
Woman, Leica M9, Singapore, 2011

Woman, Leica M9, Singapore, 2011

Woman, Singapore

June 14, 2020 in Singapore

“Since the photographer's picture was not conceived but selected, his subject was never truly discrete, never wholly self-contained. The edges of his film demarcated what he thought most important, but the subject he had shot was something else; it had extended in four directions. If the photographer's frame surrounded two figures, isolating them from the crowd in which they stood, it created a relationship between those two figures that had not existed before.”

  • John Szarkowski, The photographer’s Eye

Tags: John Szarkowski, Singapore
← Bloke, SingaporeBloke, Singapore →
Back to Top

Copyright Jon Gresham 2013 to 2020, All Rights Reserved. 

Nothing on this website may be reproduced, whether in part or as a whole, without explicit, express  permission in writing from the author.   

Sign Up here for more information or leave a comment.