Fotogrāfs Doug Menuez stāsta par elitārā fotožurnālisma ēnas pusi
“If we spent more time with our families, wouldn’t we then
develop more as human beings? Wouldn’t we become more emotionally
rounded and more sensitive to the human experience? And wouldn’t that
make us better photographers, better able to observe, empathize and
understand our subjects on a gut level, rather than what is often a
purely visceral news content level? It went over like a lead balloon.”
My wife Tereza is holding our two-year old son Paolo in 1989. I had
arrived the night before after 8 weeks in China and was leaving at that
moment back to China via Hamburg to shoot “A Day in The Life of China,”
with 100 of the world’s top photojournalists and then on to another
assignment for another month after that. I was able to fit a visit home
in San Francisco and had grabbed clean clothes and a meal. As I leaned
to kiss my wife goodbye she burst into tears. My son looked at her and
also began to cry. My reaction? I snatched the Polaroid off the dresser
and shot this image. It was pure training; a moment was happening right
in front of me and I reacted as if I was covering a story, instantly.
Heartless? Sure, but in retrospect it was probably the only way I could
have suppressed the very real pain of leaving my family. I was steeling
my mind for more weeks on the road. Super glamorous.
Since then I”ve shown this picture in my talks and workshops because
it was such a searing pivotal moment for me in my evolution as a
photographer and a person and often relevant to younger shooters
contemplating their futures. My heroes in photojournalism, most of the
legends, had pretty much abandoned their families to survive as best
they could while away on shoots. All my mentors were divorced and
married to the camera and job. The attitude I learned with was that to
be any good, you had to be willing to die for the picture. It was the
work, the work, the work. Everything else came second, if at all.
The life I led then was similar to so many magazine news
photographers. You kept a bag packed at all times. You had your eye on
the news all the time looking for stories. You would either get a call
to cover something or you’d pitch a story. If there was a big story and
you could get to it first or second you’d just go knowing your agent
would secure the “guarantees” for a number of days plus space. You
could never say no to an editor or ever, ever fuck up. At a conference
in the 80’s I once heard a young photogapher ask Roxanne Edwards at
Business Week what would happen if, you know, somehow the film just did
not turn out? Response: “Then you would never work for us again.”
Sharp, honest, true answer. But seriously, doh! The other editors on
the panel from Time, Newsweek, US News all shook their heads solemnly
in agreement. The pressure to get world-class images on deadline
against tremendous competition was unrelenting, yet it was also what
fueled us. I was on the road so much that at one point I had to write
notes to myself before I passed out in my hotel with the name of the
city I was in, so when I woke up I’d know where the hell I was. Berlin.
Bangkok. Khartoum. Paris. One trip had me shooting in 17 countries in
17 days.
And I do believe there is a natural tendency when you photograph the
misery in the world– people dying or starving– to shut down our
emotions, not that differently from an EMT at an accident scene. You
must function as a professional. The by-product is that we become
damaged goods; emotionally stunted, untreated PTS victims. This is just
another layer on top of what the loneliness of the road does to you.
I’d say some of us probably become borderline sociapaths. But hey, I’m
probably just confusing some photojournalists with hard core paparazzi.
Kidding! Or maybe not…
So I laid out my evolving thesis to the crowd of young shooters: if
we spent more time with our families, friends or significant others,
wouldn’t we then develop more as human beings? Wouldn’t we become more
emotionally rounded and more sensitive to the human experience? And
wouldn’t that make us better photographers, better able to observe,
empathize and understand our subjects on a gut level, rather than what
is often a purely visceral news content level? It went over like a lead
balloon. One slightly older guy approached me later with tears in his
eyes and said he was struggling with just this issue. But the reaction
from the crowd that day, and later from my my peers was pretty
negative. None of my friends––who were also my competition––had kids
and most were not yet married. From there I chose my own path and moved
into a kind of wilderness of isolation from my colleagues and clients
in photojournalism. A new life began.
This photograph of my wife and son is always a good reminder to me
of the goals I set to try to be a better parent. My son is now a
talented musician finishing college so for that I’m grateful. Obviously
my career could not have happened without the support of my wife who
became my partner in the business and primary caregiver. For her, the
decision was easier because she was told she’d never have children. Our
son was a miracle kid and she wanted to be part of his every minute.
And this issue is obviously more complicated for women in general. It
used to be that most women became picture editors; now there are many
more women in the field shooting– not enough, but still way more.
Of course smart people will find ways to balance the competing needs
of work and family, that’s not new. The issue is about what it takes to
do what Ben does in Afghanistan. Can you be at that level, all in, and
still create a balance? It can be done I think, but it is not easy and
only with careful planning. And with so many more people starting
families while working in photojournalism I’m interested to learn some
of the creative solutions out there.
The truth that I’ve learned to live with and embrace is this: how my
son turns out is way more important than any picture I produce. His
impact on his world, the world he grows into, his friends or future
family, is my only real legacy. And I’m so, so fine with that.