Notes on The Decisive Moment

While watching Henri Cartier Bresson’s The Decisive Moment, I took notes on what interested me in regards to authoring, publishing and distributing photos. What I found particularly intriguing were his approaches to authoring photos, his perspectives and musings on the act of taking a photo and the qualities of the world that make photography so appealing.

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Notes:

  • Photography as a mean of drawing
  • Can’t correct it
  • Life is fluid, once the moment is gone, it’s gone forever
  • Not a reporter
  • Visual pleasure
  • Geometry
  • Sensuous and intellectual pleasure
  • Difference between good and mediocre picture is millimetres
  • Facts are not interesting
  • Portraits are difficult
  • A question mark you put on someone
  • Difference is the fact they agreed to be photographed
  • Like an ‘animal in their habitat’
  • Be like a cat, don’t disturb them
  • Have to try put camera between skin of person and their shirt
  • People act differently in front of the camera
  • Like an animal on prey
  • There are no new ideas in the world, only new arrangements
  • The world is being created every minute and the world is falling to pieces every minute
  • England like watching actors, cannot jump on stage and play with them
  • Some places where the pulse beats more
  • ‘In places where I am all the time, I know too much and not enough’
  • Lucidity
  • Camera as a weapon – a way of shouting the way you feel
  • Camera can be a machine gun, can be a psychoanalytical couch, can be a warm kiss, can be a sketchbook,
  • Photography is ‘yes, yes, yes’
  • No maybes
  • An affirmation