There are two high-traffic, and therefore very profitable, busking areas within the city. One is Pitt Street Mall, the other is the Circular Quay concourse. Each requires a licence.
Flaneur (n). A person who strolls the city in order to appreciate it. |
Sontag maintains that
The photographer is an armed version of the solitary walker reconnoitering, stalking, cruising the urban inferno, the voyeuristic stroller who discovers the city as a landscape of voluptuous extremes. Adept at the joys of watching, connoisseur of empathy, the flâneur finds the world 'picturesque'. I neither reconnoitre, stalk nor cruise. However, I do empathise and try to walk in others' shoes. On the other hand, Baudelaire was said to hold that a flaneur was a
man of the people who enters into the life of his subjects with passion ... a botanist of the sidewalk. That seems closer to the mark.
Excellent photos!
ReplyDeleteThe lighting in these pictures is perfect - sets a mysterious mood. I love how you included the reaching hand in the first one! And I agree - Baudelaire fits more than Sontag.
ReplyDeleteVery well done!
I agree with Clytie-- the quality of the light is amazing! I've told you before how much I love your photos of people, but I rarely have the courage to do it myself. Do you get permission from people when you take their pics, or not?
ReplyDeleteA Botanist of the People...that's a lovely phrase, adn your photos are lovely as well. Wonder if he's reading music, or checking out the weather forecast...
ReplyDeleteI tend to agree! These are beautiful shots as always Julie. I wish we had busking areas here.
ReplyDelete'A botanist of the sidewalk' - what a superb phrase and a lovely description of a 'flaneur'
ReplyDeleteYep a botanist of the sidewalk is definitely what you are ... and in fact having those very words in your head may influence your activity even further. You have caught this man in beautiful light.
ReplyDeleteThese photos are amazing. I love the sharpness, the light on the guitar, the shape of his body in the first shot. Woohoo!
ReplyDeleteGood moments of a Flamenco musician, the light is perfect.
ReplyDeleteNice.:-D
Serge
Beaudelaire was right when he described a flâneur as "a person who walks the city in order to experience it" and if you happen to capture it on film or a chip that;s great. As you have done with this guitarist.
ReplyDeleteooooh - I love that - "a botanist of the sidewalk" And you photos are lovely and capture great moments (I like the phone and blue sneaker)
ReplyDeleteI would think Martin Place was another profitable busking area. This guy looks familiar, he looks a little older but reminiscent of the boy I caputured down by the Quay one very wet evening a year or so back.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Sontag on the voyeuristic aspect of photography, I glimpse moments of people's lives and often spend time wondering about them and what the moment I have captured really says.
I love the light on the body of the guitar.
ReplyDeleteI'm really enjoying seeing your photographs. Thanks!
Captivating. Of all your photos, these Friday Flaneurs are my favourite shots.
ReplyDeleteGood tunes, I hope.
ReplyDeleteYou have an uncanny ability to 'enter the life of your subjects.' You capture their essence and then you use natural light to illuminate their inner and outer core. Remarkable shots, these. Thank you, Julie.
ReplyDeleteThat first shot of the guitarist plus portable telephone is priceless.
ReplyDeleteLizzie, During 2009, together with others, I took the 100 Strangers challenge. There is a link on the side-bar. There, I always asked. However, for this blog I never ask. The essence of what I do is to capture life as it occurs, not to have it alter it for the camera. Not to capture the "public face" but the inner core. There is a conflict here with ownership of self-image, I realise that. However, that has only arisen in this age of the media-feeding-frenzy.
ReplyDeleteJoan, indeed you are right. The more I have the concept of "flaneur" in my head, the more my blogging is heading toward the celebration of life as lived by ordinary people. However, I link that with my interest in history, and celebrate the lives of ordinary people through time.
ReplyDeleteAnn, I don't consider what I do as "voyeuristic" at all. There is an undertone to that word that is not applicable at all. However, I am a life-long "people-watcher". This blog gives a voice and a text to a simple non-invasive, and non-continuing past-time. "Non-continuing" in an individual sense. All my watching of individuals does not really pertain to the individual but rather to the human condition.
'enters into the life of his subjects with passion'
ReplyDeleteI think that's a great description of you Julie, and it definitely reflects here, he surely picked the perfect place, at least for his photo lol. did you pay him? (jk) i've always been totally fascinted by people over the world, from their quirkly mannerisms to their brash customs. I so enjoyed 'living among the ordinary' if there is truly any such thing. I've come to believe that any course is it's own, but we're each reliant on another. this guy looks like he's from spain or portugal, or maybe south american.
Both of the bottom two would be wonderful for album covers...love the humor or the top one!!!
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