Graffiti No 42

From the Graffiti II collection

(Intro from Graffiti I)

When I taught photography at various workshops I always made it a point to dissuade my students from taking pictures of other people’s artwork. I did this because I felt it to be a form of plagiarism.

I exclude graffiti because in most cases the graffiti will disappear, either covered by later layers or washed away by those offended by it.

I have always felt that one of the functions of photography is to bear witness without comment or cleverness to what may be gone someday. That is a legacy we leave to the future—simple documentary evidence. Because of that, it became important to photograph it as a record of its existence.

Graffiti No 42

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From the Graffiti II collection

(Intro from Graffiti I)

When I taught photography at various workshops I always made it a point to dissuade my students from taking pictures of other people’s artwork. I did this because I felt it to be a form of plagiarism.

I exclude graffiti because in most cases the graffiti will disappear, either covered by later layers or washed away by those offended by it.

I have always felt that one of the functions of photography is to bear witness without comment or cleverness to what may be gone someday. That is a legacy we leave to the future—simple documentary evidence. Because of that, it became important to photograph it as a record of its existence.