Category: Street Photography Inspiration

Our aim is to provide you with Street Photography Inspiration, here at www.street-photography.net

  • Can you make images everyday for 30 days?

    Can you make images everyday for 30 days?

    Artquest and 30/30

    Have you ever considered making 30 images in 30 Days?

    Artquest runs an event every year and it is fun to participate and have other artists also seeing your work. This year, I am suggesting that, Street Photographers might find this an interesting thing to do. Starting on the 1st of February, you will need to make and post one image a day, to stay in the running. Can you make it to the end, and post 30 images over 30 days.

    I signed up for this last year and found it really good for exploring work, that I would not normally make.

    30/30 is a free challenge designed to encourage daily making, risk taking and experimentation for artists, working in any medium, anywhere in the world.

    The 30/30 challenge will begin on 1 February 2026 and registration is open until 31 January 2026.

    I personally, would love to see a lot of street photographers doing this. And get out there, to see what we can do, every day in the month of Feb. To make images and get them posted, before the day is out.

    It is a challenge. I did it last year and I have already signed up, for this years 30/30, will you join me?

  • Who wants to be a Pro Photographer?

    Who wants to be a Pro Photographer?

    Why is there an emphasis on Turning Pro for Photographers.

    I have noticed for quite a long time now, that on a lot of photography blogs and websites that there is an emphasis or assumption that, every photographer wants to become a Professional Photographer. Now for the life of me, I do not know why that assumption exists. While, I have been a photographer for a long time now. In fact, I actually started trying to work as a photographer back in 1988.

    Having been what I would call professional photography ever since. I have made mistakes in how I would market myself and I really wish, that we had available the kind of information that is available online, these days when I started. I learnt a lot of what I know about the business side of being a photographer, the hard way. That is by making mistakes and learning important lessons along the way, which had real financial costs attached to them. 

    I think there is a lot of negativity about being how difficult it is to be a professional photographer. Then there are people who will tell you the magic formula, (for a fee). While at the same time, I perceive some sort of vibe/feeling that it is somehow not cool to be an amateur photographer. 

    I personally gave up trying to be a professional anything years ago and now just call myself a photographer, no where in that is there anything about whether I am a professional or an amateur, as I have a deep love of photography and I have ever since I started making images. Photography is my life it is how I see the world and it is how I think about light, surface and intention when out and about in the world. Maybe that is why I am drawn to a particular kid of photography.

    Business cards, etc.

    Yes, I have a business card and it lists my website, social media handles, email address and photo number, oh and features a logo and an image. But all it says for job description is photographer. I encourage people go to my website (www.michaelwayneplant.com) to see what kind of photography, I do. I also have a reasonably well thought out elevator pitch, that I give if someone asks. It goes something like this: “I am a photographer interested in the social landscape of capitalism and I make street photography images, social documentary and portraits.” Yes I could also add other things to this, however it is simple and to the point of what I do.

    I am not saying I make any/much money from it as a pro photographer. If fact, I now really only make images, because I want to, on subjects that I want to work on. This for me as a photographer has been very liberating, as I no longer need to satisfy a client. As more often than not, I am my own client. If I am not happy with my images, then I have only myself to blame. And I subsequently think, that I need to work harder on making better images, for the purposes that I intend them for. 

    I asked ChatGPT ….

    Street Photography is one of those areas that there are not so many clients so it is hard to make money with. Yes it is possible so I asked ChatGPT how I could make money as a professional street photographer. Here is and edited version of what it said 

    Me: How can I make money as a professional street photographer?

    Chat GPT: Becoming a professional street photographer who earns consistent income requires combining creative skill, business savvy, and diversified income streams. Here’s a detailed breakdown of how you can make money sustainably:

    1. Sell Prints and Fine Art

    Tip: Build thematic series — e.g., “Urban Silence,” “Reflections of Paris,” or “City at Dusk.” Collectors and curators love cohesive stories.

    2. License Your Photos – Upload to stock agencies

    3. Lead Workshops and Photo Walks

    4. Freelance and Editorial Work – Pitch your work or services to: Magazines and newspapers’ Event organisers, Brands

    5. Build a Strong Online Presence – Maintain a portfolio site, Grow your Instagram and TikTok Publish on platforms like Instagram, TikTok, 500px, Flickr, or Behance. Collect emails and start a newsletter

    6. Diversify Income Streams – Don’t rely on one source.

    7. Legal and Ethical Notes – Be aware of privacy laws. Editorial use is safer than commercial when photographing people without consent. When selling to brands, always obtain model releases if subjects are recognisable.

    I then went onto ask it to create ‘draft a step-by-step business plan tailored to London.’

    ChatGPT then gave me generic information on how to go about this. Only thing with it is that it gives the same information to everyone who is interested in doing the same thing. So how do you develop a unique photography business, as a professional if we are all using the same resources and steps to become pro photographers. 

    And why would we want to, when as I state in the beginning of this article that; there is often this underlying assumption, that all photographers want to be pros. What is wrong with just wanting to be a great photographer, who has some of the aspects of a professional photographer, without needing to earn money from something that you love doing. 

    Follow your own path in street photography

    So why not as a street photographer, have a business card that simply gives contact details social media handles and website. Have a website, because you love your images and you want to share them, not because you are looking to work as a street photographer, but because you control the space . Have the social media platforms, because you are not worried that someone else controls through the logarithms who gets to see your work based on the programming that social media companies do, as all they want to do is keep us addicted to viewing their platforms. 

    Do street photography because you love it, if you find that you want to turn it into your profession, then learn how to go about being a small business owner and be prepared to learn skills that you never thought you needed as a photographer. The nature of photography has changed and it is still possible to be a professional, if that is what you want to do. However, there is no issue, if you find that having a job that lets you be a photographer in your own time. And provides an income that lets you think freely when you do pick up your camera, to make images that these are your images and they are made for your needs, not someone else’s. This is a great place to be and is okay as you still thinking photographically as a photographer. 

    Ricoh GRIV Brisbane PhotoWalk with GR Space Brisbane

  • Vivian Maier: Street Photographer

    Vivian Maier: Street Photographer

    Vivian Maier: Street Photographer, published by powerHouse Books in 2011, edited by John Maloof, with a foreword by Geoff Dyer.

    The photo book is a collection of 100 duotone street photographs taken during the 1950s in New York and Chicago, as far as I can tell. Vivian Maier’s story is as interesting and mysterious as her large, extraordinary body of work.

    Vivian Maier, New York, NY

    Vivian Maier is an enigma and one of the best street photographers, shoulder to shoulder with Helen Levitt and Henri Cartier-Bresson. What we currently know of Vivian is that she was born in New York and spent her youth between the U.S. and France. In 1951, at age 25, she moved from France to New York. By 1956, she had settled in Chicago, where she worked as a professional nanny for 40 years.

    Vivian Maier

    With a Rolleiflex twin-lens reflex (TLR) medium-format camera, she made over 100,000 negatives between the 1950s and 1990s, in Chicago, New York, and elsewhere. Later in her life, she became destitute and was taken care of by the Gensburg brothers, whom she had looked after as children. She had kept her vast collection of negatives, prints, and unexposed film in storage units. After failed payments, those units went to auction. In 2007, two years before her death, John Maloof, Ron Slattery, and Randy Prow bought them, discovered her body of work, and began publishing it.

    Vivian Maier, New York 1953 © Estate of Vivian Maier. Courtesy Maloof Collection and Howard Greenberg Gallery, NY

    Vivian Maier: Street Photographer is one of the only photo books in my library that the photographer did not compile or curate herself. I really appreciate that these three men exposed the world to Maier’s photography, which otherwise would never have been seen. On first viewing, however, the sequencing, presentation, printing, and selection of photos—with no context or depth—show the lack of John Maloof’s understanding of photography.

    Despite its flaws, Vivian Maier: Street Photographer is visually arresting, emotionally resonant, and produced with care. It serves as an introduction. It draws you in, it inspires, and it leaves you wanting more.

  • Is Street Photography Ethical?

    Is Street Photography Ethical?

    We like to think it is, because we are street photographers. However the question ‘Is Street Photography Ethical?’ Is still worth asking. 

    Tim Jamieson has a thought provoking video on this subject here: 

    He shows example of Mark Cohen and Bruce Giden both photographers who use flash making images on the streets with no regard for how people will react to them making images of them. For me personally this is not street photography as I want to see it practiced. It is confrontational as an approach and this is why some street photographers get a bad reputation.

    How it has to be acknowledged that every time you walk out your door you are going to be on camera somewhere. I can walk down my street and I know that I show up on my every Ring doorbell between my house and the train station. Amazon has no problem with this and will even share video clips with law enforcement agencies if requested. Then there is especially in London the ever present CCTV cameras everywhere, from carparks, to street lampposts. You can not get away from being filmed when out in public. 

    Documentary Intent

    Street photography when practiced with the idea of not manipulating the final image has its routes in the documentary intent of photographers. They want to be out in the world documenting what they see, what catches there eye. As well most street photographers are standing, walking or doing something with there camera so they are obvious in what they are doing. So it makes it easy if someone does not want to be photographed for them to turn away from the photographer or stop them from making an image by saying they object. In which case it is up to the photographer to not make or use the photograph they might have already made. This is about respect for your subject. 

    Respecting your subjects 

    If a potential subject sees a photographer actively making images, it makes it easy if they do not want to be photographed, for them to turn away from the photographer or stop them from making an image by saying they object. In which case it is up to the photographer to not make or use the photograph they might have already made. This is about respect for your subject. It is not okay to use a long lens and hide away, so people cannot see that they are being photographed. iI you are doing this, because you are shy, then please consider working on this to overcome your hesitancy in making street photography images. Attend a workshop, watch videos on overcoming your fears in making images. Then work on the type of image you want to make. This is the best way to respect your subjects.

    Rights to street photography

    It is legal to photograph in public places in most of the world1. It is not legal to use the image to sell or endorse a product as the subject of your photograph has rights as well. I never sell my street photography images for commercial purposes to be used in publications or endorsing products etc. This is when the subject is entitled to being paid. And why models exist, or in the future why Ai image making will exist. I do believe that good street photograph that shows the world as it is being lived is going to be a valuable contribution to how people in the future see the world that we live in now. This is one of the best reasons to be practicing street photography. 

    Tim Jamieson’s2 video is a good introduction to this topic and well worth a watch.

    In answer to; ‘Is street photography ethical?’ it like all things, depends on where you stand on the subject of what do we owe the future, do we want to show them how our world looked or do we look away and leave it to the Ai Image generators. To make images, that approximate what our world looks like, as the people in the Ai images will not be real people. I believe this is another whole ethical dilemma that I do not want to get into. As I think we do owe it to people in the future to show what our world is like, as unfiltered as possible. 

    1. Please note* I do not profess to know the laws in all countries in the world, so this should not be taken as legal advise, on the legality of street photography where you live.  ↩︎
    2. Click here to see Tim Jamieson’s website, with his street photography ↩︎

  • How to practice street photography without leaving your neighbourhood.

    How to practice street photography without leaving your neighbourhood.

    Why do we all think we need to visit the city centres to practice street photography?

    Street photography can be practiced anywhere. It is not the preserve of big city locations. It does not need to be do int eh centre of cities, it can be make anywhere. Great street photographers know that they need to be bale to photograph the places they have access to. Those places happen to be in your neighbourhood. 

    Henry Wessel

    Henry Wessel, who photographed in San Fransisco area for over 30 years. Working mostly in Black and White he would take his camera out whenever he had a errand to run. His idea is that a good photograph can happen anywhere. Taking that idea why not photograph the area that you live in. Your own neighbourhood while it might not be what you see in others photographs it is what you have access to and for a photographer access is everything.

    To improve you need to be able to practice your eye and return repeatedly to the same spot till you get the image that was in your sides yes when you first made the image. And like all good artists photographers need to be able to practice so why not photograph your own location.

    Henry Wessel interview on KQED where he talks about his process. 

    Henry mostly used a film Leica with a 28mm lens and Kodak Tri-X for his work.  

    Saul Leiter

    Saul Leiter is another example of a photographer who made street images in his neighbourhood. He is now considered a early pioneer of colour street photography. You can see Saul Leiter’s work at his website here https://www.saulleiterfoundation.org/

    The movie, In No Great Hurry: 13 Lessons in Life with Saul Leiter. Is a good exploration of Leiter’s approach to making images in his Neighbourhood, Okay, he did live in New York City, for most of his life and spent most of it photographing the area around his home. So in a way he had an home town advantage. That is what you get when you photograph your neighbourhood.

    Bill Owens

    There are photographers who have photographed Suburbia like Bill Owens made while working as a photojournalist for a local newspaper. 

    Bill Owens published a book called Suburbia back in 1972 , it was reprinted and expanded on in 1999 , Which has been quite influential.

    Bill Owens Suburbia

    Amazon UK link

    Amazon USA link

    What will you do?

    We all know what our neighbourhood looks like, as that is where we live. We however we often forget that someone else does not know what it looks like and how life is lived in your area as they live elsewhere. What for you is everyday, to someone else is exotic. So why not photograph, what you know, as you can always go back and rephotograph it, working often will let you eventually make image that show how you see things in your area. This is a great way to become a much better street photographer. 

    Street Photography without leaving your neighbourhood 

    So you want to practice street photography, then get up go for a walk, take your camera. Make sure the battery is charged and the memory card is in the camera before you head out.

    Then you need to notice things. Notice the quality of the light, check out what time of day it is, for the light you just noticed. Is the light quality what you like, could it be better, would a different time of day, give the light a different direction or angle. Would an overcast day allow you to see into the shadows, or would a bright sunny day create deep shadows. These things are all learning steps in training your visual perception and being in your neighbourhood.

    You can go back and see the same scene often. Notice how it changes, in different lighting conditions and times of the day. This is a great first step and a huge as I like to call it, the hometown advantage, that you have when you are photographing your own neighbourhood. 

    A thought process on finding time to make street photographs.

    I will use myself as an example. I live in London, near Ilford the place where the Ilford Photo company, had their headquarter until as recently as 1996. Maybe, I should take the bus for 10 minutes and go and photograph this area. If I had more time I would, ‘no stop’ that is a negative thing to say, if I had more time. As we can always find time can’t we? I could, I suppose, just take a different route home. Whenever, I am out and about, I could take a little longer to get home, so I can walk around the streets of Ilford, for 20/30 minutes at a time. This would give me to time to explore my neighbourhood.

    If I was to do it often, it would add up to a significant about of time, this would let me get images. Looking for ways to find time in our busy lives, is what we all need to do, especially if we are looking to make enough time to get projects off the ground. Finding a way to incorporate the photography process, into our daily lives is a good step to making street photography images. It helps us to document the lives of those around us and to show what life is like at this moment in time where we live. 

    How can you carve out time in your daily routine to make a project on your neighbourhood? We would love to see your suggestions in the comments below.

  • Street photography hotspots in London for first-time visitors

    Street photography hotspots in London for first-time visitors

    I have lived in London for over 30 years and there are spaces that I return to often to make street photography images. Because they are just about always busy and ever changing.

    London is not short of places to photograph and being a street photographer in London is exciting, as there is always something happening. A market, a protest, an event celebrating something or other, where you can blend into the crowd, or not depending on how you want to work as a street photographer.

    London reveals itself to the visitor slowly as it is a huge diverse city and while the English have a reputation for not being overly friendly they will chat if they have time. I have always found that it is easy to make images on the street of London. If you are to aggressive then you could get in trouble, but generally people are occupied with their own lives and do not want to engage with strangers.

    You never know when a stranger can become a good contact or friend, so get out there and engage. Make images, if you can share them. I often hand out my photographers business card to people and say if you want to see that image I just made, send me an email. Don’t DM me, as it is easier to send you an image via email. In fact, my business card gets given out to more people who I have photographed, than potential business clients. 

    A quick list of top street photography hotspots in London are:

    West End

    • Oxford Circus, and Oxford Street. 
    • Portobello Road Market (not strictly in the West End as it is further west)- Fridays and Saturdays. More info here
    • Carnaby Street
    • Piccadilly Circus
    • Trafalgar Square 
    • Old Compton Street & Berwick Street Market.

    City of London

    • The area outside the Bank of England in front of the Royal Exchange. Corner of Threadneedle St and Cornhill.
    • Spitalfields Market.
    • Liverpool St station area, including Broadgate.
    • Leadenhall Market

    East End

    North London

    • Camden High Street and Market

    South London

    • Brixton Market
    • Greenwich mainly around Greenwich Market
    • Brough Market near London Bridge

    When or if you are visiting England, we would love to hear what could become, your very own Street photography hotspots in London.

  • Cinema Series: How Wong Kar-Wai & Christopher Doyle artistic collaborations will inspire your street photography.

    Cinema Series: How Wong Kar-Wai & Christopher Doyle artistic collaborations will inspire your street photography.

    Introduction:

    Cinema and photography are built on the same foundation of light, composition, and emotion. In this series, we will explore films that can inspire and elevate your street photography.

    Finding inspiration in photography is as essential as breathing. It fuels creativity, hones skills, and shapes unique visions by opening us to new perspectives and emotions. It pushes us out of our comfort zones and allows us to create work that is more personal and meaningful.

    Before becoming a full-time photographer, I worked as a cinematographer for 20 years. I hope my insights into cinema will inspire you to bring cinematic elements into your street photography.

    Director and Cinematographer

    Hong Kong director, screenwriter, and producer Wong Kar Wai and Australian born cinematographer Christopher Doyle’s multiple film collaborations have produced some of cinemas most beautiful, poetic, and romantically lonely films.

    Wong Kar Wai has an usual approach to his filmmaking, he writes the script as he shoots and expects the actors to develop their characters as they film. He prefers small crews, working on locations, collaborating with the same actors, and tight budgets. Wong has a heady mix of influences an affinity for Latin American writers such as Manuel PuigGabriel García Márquez, and Julio Cortázar, He has been influenced by a broad range of directors from Martin Scorsese,  Bernardo Bertolucci to Patrick Tam. Wong’s use of music and a kaleidoscope of colours gives a uniques style to his films.

    Christopher Doyle is a true master of cinematography. his deep understanding of colours, use of practical lights and his experimentation with compositions, lenses and movement set him apart from other cinematographers. Over his career, he has worked on more than 60 films, several in collaboration with Wong Kar-Wai.

    Doyle is an adopted son of Hong Kong, having lived in the dense port city for three decades. He has captured the energy and soul of the city in an intimate and loving way. When asked by Anthony Bourdain about the slow disappearance of the region’s culture, a product of gentrification in the city…

    The only function of what we do, with art or anything, is to give voice to the unspoken, to give it a form that it has never been perceived in before. We can’t change the evolution of history or the gentrification — you can’t stop that. But, at least you can say: Look what you’re losing.

    – Christopher Doyle

    Hong Kong episode of Parts Unknown

    In this article, we will discuss three of their films whose style, elements, use of environment, and emotional depth can be applied to street photography

    In The Mood for Love (2000)

    In the Mood for Love is one of my favorite films of all time. From the first frame you are immediately drawn into a lush tapestry of romance, colour, style, music, small rooms, cigarette smoke, and humid alleyways of a neon lit British Hong Kong in the early 1960’s. I won’t go into the masterfully told story, that is for you to explore. Instead, the focus here will be on the photographic elements of the film..

    Frame within a Frame

    Frame within a frame is a photographic and cinematic compositional technique where a subject is framed with an element( like a doorway, window, archway, etc…) with in a frame. In the Mood for Love, the two main characters are, for much of the film, framed this way. Far from feeling sluggish or repetitive, this technique isolates the leads from the background, visually expressing their internal emotions and cultural restraints while drawing the viewer into their private thoughts.

    Notably, Doyle often uses objects in the foreground to create the frame within the frame giving the feeling that the characters have of being observed, not to mention our own feelings of being observers.

    The creative ubiquitous usage of the frame within the frame in this film yields volumes of inspiration for framing on the street. When looking for interesting backgrounds to frame my subjects to walk through I look for foreground elements to frame them in. Using this technique creates a three dimensional depth with a foreground element, mid-ground subject, and background. Regardless of your millimeter or aperture using this technique will create focus on your subject and depth to your images.

    Colour

    Watching Dolye’s films is a master class in colour theory. I would be remiss to not mention his work on the film Hero, but I digress. In the Mood for Love, use of colour is interwoven into the story of the of the characters. Subtle in the beginning expressing loneliness transitioning to a vivid palette of greens, reds, and yellows that express truth, love and moral principles,

    colorpalette.cinema

    The complexity of colour theory, involving cultural, emotional and subconscious elements is an article onto itself with multitude of references. But by watching In the Mood for Love, you can see how Doyle pairs colours and the moods they create. Transferring this knowledge will help you see colours in the street and subject with colour that compliment or contrast from the background, giving your photos an emotional depth.

    Chungking Express (1994)

    During post-production on his big-budget epic Ashes of Time . Wong Kar-Wai found himself creatively blocked. To blow off steam, he took two months away from editing and decided to make ChungKing Express. His approach to the film was basically let’s make a movie, almost no budget, fine, permits who needs permits, and lets film it and edit it in 6 weeks. Sounds like it would turn out to be a painful student film to watch. ChungKing Express turns out to be a highly stylized, visually amazing, romantic film that I fell in love with. The film takes place in 1994 Hong Kong about two heartbroken cops told in two short films. I leave the story for you to explore.

    Composition

    Doyle heavily referenced French New Wave style in his approach to handheld camera work, a feel of in the moment documentary style. His use of lower frame rates for both effect and to get an exposure from the standard motion picture 24 fps to 12 fps and even 8 fps (photographic shutter speeds of 1/24 and 1/16). The first opening scenes you can see street photographer Ernest Hass New York work of blurred coloured images.

    Like street photographers, Doyle was filming fast and in the moment. His compositions are airy and fluid in extremely tight space that would challenge many cinematographers and photographers. Doyle has described his work on the film as “dancing with the actors”. His creative compositions in the film both on the streets (stealing the shots) and in small cafes, bars, and apartments is mastery of creative compositions. An inspiration to reference when challenged in the moment photographing in tight spaces.

    Ambient Light

    Doyle is a master of using ambient light with a limited budget his use of available light (daylight, neon lighting, and street light) immerses you in the characters urban life. Finding the light in street photography is not only essential for exposure but an intricate part of telling a story. Viewing and studying ChungKing Express will give you insight to finding and using light sources be it a daylight from a window, street light, a neon sign, or an overhead fluorescent lights.

    Fallen Angels (1995)

    Wong Kar-Wai’s Fallen Angels is an action film with barely any dialogue, told through visuals about delicate, lonely characters that makes you introspective on your life. Shot entirely at night in Hong Kong using a Century Tégéa 9.8mm lens with a wide-angle attachment, which gave it a 6.8mm depth of field​.

    Wide Angle View

    The bold stylistic choice to use an ultra wide-angle lens for an entire movie, sets Wong and Doyle apart from other filmmakers. The typical range of 24mm to 85mm we see in films, shows, advertisements, and instagram is a baseline of reality for us. Fallen Angels ultra wide-angle view and shallow depth gives a larger than life dreamlike quality, but also an intimate connection with the characters.

    The amazing use of the ultra wide-angle lens in Fallen Angels by Doyle, inspires me to move out my own field of view comfort zone and to experiment with different perspective.

    .

    Night scape

    The neon lights of 90’s Hong Kong is not a backdrop of Fallen Angels but a cental character of the film. Christopher Doyle’s understanding and use of neon light to create Wong Kar-Wai’s characters world is both beautiful and haunting. I think it is best to have Doyle express it in his own words.

    I hope that watching and studying these three films will inspire you, push you out of your comfort zone, and help you create more personal and meaningful photos in your street photography.

  • It’s Over, So Let’s Try This Again. But This Time Good: Street Photography In A Post-Street World.

    It’s Over, So Let’s Try This Again. But This Time Good: Street Photography In A Post-Street World.

    By Bil Brown

    If as the MFA Photo students say, there is a visual language to photography. I have been saying for the last few years, “If there is a visual language, then there must be poets!”

    I was a writer before I was a photographer, a poet, well… a poetry student that never really went “pro” because I wasn’t built for the stuffy halls of academia, tenure and the like. I’m a little too street. However, at that time words were my medium of choice—words that could invent worlds, abstract meaning, dissolve time and space. At Naropa’s Kerouac School, studying under Allen Ginsberg, Anne Waldman, Kathy Acker, Hakim Bey, and others I learned that writing was insurgent, restless, able to destroy and rebuild meaning. But writing is also severed from the necessity of presence. As former MAGNUM Photos President Charles Harbutt once observed, a writer can describe winter in Japan from a sweltering New York apartment. The page permits this displacement; it owes nothing to the immediacy of reality.

    Photography, however, demands presence. Photography is like that. You can’t get away. You cannot photograph a winter street in Tokyo from a summer room in Brooklyn. You have to be there—the camera has to be there—at the moment light bounces off the world into the lens. This, for me, was revelatory when I realized it. It meant that the camera did what the pen could not: tether me irrevocably to the real. A cure for the depression of “thinking it through” as a poet. I could engage reality as it was happening, in an instant. I could remember or forget it as I saw fit, but I had some real document of my presence in that time-space. Writing was imagination’s laboratory. Photography was the real colliding with perception in an instant of undeniable evidence.

    It was Allen Ginsberg that introduced me to his friend Robert Frank in 1994. I sat in Frank’s studio speaking to his schizophrenic son, during a time when I was avidly reading R.D.Laing and thinking about The Asylum –– a documentary we had went over in a class I was teaching assistant for at Naropa. Laing’s thesis was that if schizophrenics were pulled outside of the social dynamic they could be cured. He proved it! That is until they went back in. I could be outside and inside, seeing or photographing and then writing. This was like my Naropa teacher Bernadette Mayer’s photo-word art intersection, Memory. She photographed a roll a day for a month in the early 70s, wrote before it after shooting remembering what she shot and then after wrote what the drugstore prints showed her. When the exhibit went up in 1972, it predated Eggleston’s Guide by a few years, and was color shot by a rangefinder. Bernadette had the words she wrote read on loop for 6 hours with the photographs up. Ideas and photographs have a place together, poetry and photography are totally intertwined.

    When I moved from writing to photographing, I carried language with me. My images are still constructed as sentences, fragments, ruptures of syntax. But what I learned from Harbutt is that photographs are not written—they happen. As he said: “I don’t take pictures; pictures take me.” This inversion strikes me because it acknowledges what I feel: the camera is not a passive instrument but an active collaborator, a medium that seizes as much as it yields.

    To write is to build. To photograph is to surrender, to be taken. Like a writer learning to have clarity with their words, a photographer becomes more and more clear as they learn the simple syntax of technology, emotion, eye, hand, and especially heart.

    Collision with Reality

    Harbutt makes clear that photography’s uniqueness lies in its compulsory relationship to the external world. Unlike painting or writing, which can invent from imagination, photography requires something outside itself: light, object, presence. This is what he calls the continuum—the collision of photographer, world, and camera in a specific fraction of time. That continuum is what fascinated me as a writer. In prose, I could summon the dream. In photographs, I had to confront the real.

    I will say I have been shocked and pushed again, not by an American photographer but by the Japanese post-war moment of PROVOKE. First Daido Moriyama of course, he’s still around and very active–but when I learned of Takuma Nakahira’s For A Language To Come it brought me in.

    Nakahira’s radical insistence on dismantling perception intersects with Harbutt’s existential continuum. Both refuse the comfort of the artificial sense of the image. Both declare that photography’s power lies in its uncontrollable dependence on the world as it is. The photograph is not a dream but a confrontation. It is an image that, as Harbutt writes, is “caused by reality” and therefore carries the chisel-mark of existence itself.

    In my practice, this means entering the street not as a playwright staging a scene but as an interlocutor waiting for language to be spoken by the world. A glance, a collapse, a gesture becomes the sentence; the shutter punctuates. Unlike writing, I cannot reorder time; I can only intercept it. The street is not a metaphor. It is an unfolding text, one that I can only enter mid-sentence.

    I’ve recently become aware in dialectic with the photography spaces online that many times photographers police-themselves and others for ethics. Ethics are important, but maybe we should be clear here: we are taking a photo that is either shared or not shared. If it is shared it is of a person, place or thing. The agency of that person place or thing has already been compromised. Ethics in art isn’t about playing safe or avoiding discomfort—it’s about intention and accountability. Bruce Gilden doesn’t exploit misery, personally he’s been there, his history is well documented and I don’t need to recant it here; what Bruce does is confront us with what we’d rather not see. That confrontation is ethical because it forces recognition instead of erasure. In his Face photos in particular they are consensual, in some cases maybe the last photos of the people in question — made into icons, or illustrative mosaics. The work lays directly in the art world like few other photographers.

    The history of art has always been bound to suffering—Goya, or say in photography Arbus, Goldin, D’Agata even the Ancient Greeks knew that beauty and horror live side by side. Ethics in art isn’t about denying that reality; it’s about how we frame it. To me Gilden doesn’t exploit misery, he forces us to face it. If you want to say it’s his ego, well he isn’t a photojournalist feigning objectivity. It’s subjective.

    Susan Sontag said, ‘Photographs cannot create a moral position, but they can reinforce one.’

    “There’s no standard way of approaching a story. We have to evoke a situation, a truth. This is the poetry of life’s reality” – Henri Cartier-Bresson

    Let’s get this out of the way. Even if someone is impaired, their image can still carry dignity, truth, or resistance. Many people living on the street want to be seen, remembered, or acknowledged. This I know, I’ve been there. The camera can give them presence in a world that often erases them.

    As Gordon Parks said: “I chose my camera as a weapon against all the things I dislike about America.” Consent is compromised precisely because of systemic oppression—and photography is one way to fight that oppression. W Eugene Smiths MINIMATA is a perfect example, as is Antonie D’Agata’s entire body of work. I agree with D’Agata that if we have a subject of our photos that is disturbed the subject’s agency is already fractured—by drugs, by society, by exclusion. The camera doesn’t “steal” it; it mirrors it. It’s a form of solidarity, or can be according to context. The person already lives without agency, they have been out there by circumstances. The context is apparent. As is the reason you are doing it. Your subjective view, your personal history, your approach is documented in every image you take. We can see the angles, the lighting, whether or not you confront or command. We can see it all in the photo.

    The ethical core is not: “Did they agree?” but “Did I expose the violence of their condition honestly, and often with myself implicated?” Your authorship is the very thing you are photographing. Every shutter pull is a signature.

    So yes, if you feel it, snap that unhoused person, that drug addict, that nightlife drunk. If you feel otherwise, we will not see eye to eye, not because your ideology around aesthetics and photography differ from mine – but because I will have a hard time trusting you. If we are on the streets, and you are my photo buddy, I could be in a bad situation and you would choose to think of someone’s “agency” while we are being jacked. This is reality. The streets are hard. If someone is really on them, they know. If you hesitate, often you put yourself at risk. Just stay away if this is how you feel. I mean that. Don’t go down that alley or on San Pedro in LA if you are not ready for it. You will end up in the hospital. This isn’t hyperbole. This is the way it is.

    I get the other side as well, you want to protect people’s agency and dignity. The recently passed Sebastiao Salgado famously said, “It is not the photographer that is taking the picture but the person being photographed.” Yet his work was condemned for making it too aesthetically beautiful. I think you must think of dignity in image making but also, not walking away from a feeling that you need to take a photo. Those are the photos that we must take. These are irreconcilable truths. If the people who believe the people do not have agency because of drug use or intoxication, and therefore should not be photographed are right, then the image cannot exist. If I am right then you cannot practice safe distance, controlled output and ethical distance and get anything like a good photo.

    I agree to disagree, and not negate either practice. As we say, you do you.

    Street is A Rupture

    “There’s a part of cowardice in the usual position of documentary photography in between voyeurism and safety. This is where exploitation lies.” Antonie D’Agata

    Takuma Nakahira argued that photography must revive language by dislocating it-by producing images that unsettle the familiar bits, making us stumble over what we thought we knew. Harbutt described photography as that moment before interpretation, before design-when perception collides with the outside world. For me, the bridge between these two insights is the street.

    The street, in its flux, is pure visual syntax: fragmented, nonlinear, resistant to closure. A child runs across the frame like a sudden comma. A drunk falls into shadow like a broken line. A unsightly tall man wears a blonde wig and bathrobe walking with a book that references LA’s pink Vette street queen. The photograph is not a complete sentence but a cut, a rupture in language that forces the reader-viewer-to fill in the gap. In this way, the street photograph is both image and writing, but a writing of interruption, not narration. It never really was storytelling, unless you see an entire catalog like W Eugene Smith’s multi-volume 10,000 or so photos you can never know the whole thing, the photographer of course only tells you a moment. This isn’t cinema.

    As a writer-turned-photographer, I understand my images as grammarless stanzas of the present tense. They are documents, yes, but they are also provocations. They remind us that the real cannot be contained neatly, that language always stutters when confronted with existence. Harbutt’s notion of being “taken by the picture” is precisely this: the surrender of authorial control, the acceptance that reality writes itself through us, not the other way around.

    Post-Street and the New Continuum

    But here lies the rupture of our own era: the street itself, as stage and commons, is vanishing. Where Harbutt could walk through New York in the 1970s and let pictures seize him, today’s photographer encounters privatized zones, algorithmic mediation, and infrastructures of surveillance. The continuum Harbutt described-photographer, world, camera-is increasingly interfered with by corporate and state apparatuses.

    This is what I call POST-STREET. The decisive moment (although that is really just Cartier-Bresson’s interpretation of Poet-founder of Surrealism’s Objective Chance) is now infiltrated by invisible others: data capture, surveillance feeds, corporate architectures of control, and even masked agents with iPhone apps that tell them what’s in your bank account. When I raise my camera, I am no longer the only one looking. Every face I photograph has already been scanned, tagged, categorized by unseen lenses-or will soon be. Soon as I post it to social media it becomes part of the database of “I was there”, or even “YOU were there.” The street, once a democratic commons, has been fragmented into regulated flows.

    And yet, Harbutt’s existential lesson still holds: the photograph remains tethered to reality. Even in POST-STREET, the act of photographing insists on presence, on being alive in a world that wants to disappear us into data. To be “taken by a picture” in this context is to resist the flattening of life into metrics. It is to recover the shock of existence amid infrastructures of invisibility. This is why D’Agata, who is vehemently against the relationship of documentary photography and thinks it is complicit, might be correct.

    I think our work should embody this transition. Not about capturing the street as a physical space but immersing ourselves in the raw, visceral experiences of life-often in the margins of society. I think our images are a means to“contaminate” traditional photography, to “pervert” or “subvert” and undermine pre-formatted assumptions surrounding and supporting the insidious ideology of a culture made out of the sometimes most banal of conventions.  I like the deeply personal and experiential approach; I mostly work alone, focusing on the physical experience of the moment rather than on technical or aesthetic control. This method allows me to delve into the intimate and often uncomfortable aspects of human existence, I haven’t thought about it specifically but since I am now I want the viewer to confront the realities I present. It’s like photographing is a “matter of physical survival,” enabling communication and the exchange of ideas. One photo that leads to another can be a sort of instant manifesto, that negates the last, ad infinitum.

    Charles Harbutt’s statement holds rigorous threat in today’s post-truth world, “Photography is not art; it is something totally new in human experience… And art critics and philosophers have reacted like the Pope to Galileo. Since the fact doesn’t fit the theory, jettison the fact.” 

    Writing with Light

    I want you to consider a new blueprint for street-photography. The photographer no longer merely walks the avenues, the crosswalk at Shibuya, Winnograd’s 5th Avenue or waits for the decisive moment in public squares—they enter worlds that exist in-between, where control, exposure, and intimacy are mutable. I want to see work shows that street photography can survive not by nostalgically chasing open-air streets but by tracing the human condition in the spaces we rarely acknowledge: the hidden, the intimate, the precarious, and the transient. The street is gone—but photography, when willing to navigate both public and private thresholds, persists.

    I want us to use the history, techniques (a lot of them) and skills in both film and digital capture to go further. The photo-books and zines we create should be something more, the pop-up galleries and street activations should be abrupt. Every Instagram account should be shadow banned or lost and we keep making more so people follow you around the app to see what you are doing or continue to do. We should cause a stir, controversy, our photos should not be polite. And there should be a a lot of them, constantly like some Situationalist graffiti in wheat paste posters everywhere all the time. 

    If writing taught me to construct meaning, photography taught me to confront it. Harbutt’s belief—that photographs seize us more than we seize them—remains central to my practice. As a writer, I controlled the sentence; as a photographer, I surrender to the collision between lens and world. Nakahira demanded that we dismantle complacent ways of seeing; Harbutt reminded us that photographs are the residue of encounters with the real. Both insights converge in the street, where images erupt, rupture, and demand witness.

    So when I photograph now, I do so not as simply a decorator of instantaneous moments (although somehow I have developed “a style”–maybe this is for a future essay) but as a writer of interruptions, a recorder of ruptures. I’m down with Alan Schaller or Matt Stuart, even Phil Pennman doing what they do although in many cases it seems more like graphic design or Pictorialism infused street looking scenes than pure photography. I am not interested in polishing the street into nostalgia, nor in submitting to its erasure under this surveillance cult that engulfs us worldwide. I am interested in the continuum Harbutt named – the point at which self, camera, and world collide to produce an image that is both document and a direct question.

    Street photography is not artifice. It is not nostalgia. It is not safe, let me reiterate that. Street photography in a POST-STREET world is not safe at all – – take of that what you will. Street photography is the language of interruption, or a typographical map of a stressed-out face, a testimony of your presence in the space-time continuity. It is writing with light, but writing that resists grammar, that accepts rupture as truth, and often people will dispute that truth and call what you do un-ethical, dastardly, evil, perverted––ah yes, perverted. to turn completely, to overturn the expected path. You may have to reinvent yourself many times. Not just one style not just one thing but many to get at what is happening.

    Street photography once assumed streets as stages, strangers as props, and chance as its law—but that street is gone now, or just barely around. POST-STREET demands we pervert the form itself: reject neutral observation, blur public and private, embed in margins, confront intimacy and danger. As Harbutt said, I don’t take pictures. Pictures take me. And that, in the end, is the only honest manifesto for photography that remains.

    Additional note from the editors of Street-Photography.Net

    Please join the discussion below. We are looking forward to hearing what you all think of Bill Brown’s first Article for Street-Photography.Net. I found Bil Brown via a series of comments to an article on F-Stoppers and reached out to ask him, if you he would like to write an article for us here.

    I believe that he makes a great case for a Post-Street World for street photography, One that is authentic and possibly confrontational, one that is also not afraid to show the world as it is not as we want it to be. It would be great to have a discussion on this topic. So let’s start by using the comments below.

    A little more on Bil Brown.

    To check out more of Big Browns photography and a video with him talking and walking with Dave Herring, follow these links.

    Bill Browns website