All travel is now merely a means of moving a camera from place to place, all travellers are ruled by the all-powerful lens. Visitors old-fashioned enough to wish only to stand and look with their anachronistic eyes are shoved aside by the photographers, who take it for granted that while they do their ritual focusing, nothing else may move or cross their vision. Those peculiar souls without a camera must step aside for those more properly occupied, must wait while the rituals take place, and must bide their time while whole coaches stop and unleash upon the landscape the Instamatic God. And the populations of whole countries seeing themselves cannibalised, swallowed up, vacuumed into the black-ringed staring eye, wrench what they can from the cannibals. You want picture my house, my camel? You pay.
None of this would matter, perhaps, if anything worthwhile was being accomplished. If all the constant busyness and clicking produced, at its end, what had not existed before, images of beauty captured or truth told. But, sadly, this isn't so. The camera is simply graffiti made respectable.
The camera is the means by which we stamp ourselves on everything we see, under cover of recording the Wonders of the World already wonderfully
recorded by professionals and on sale at every corner bookshop and newsagent. But what use to show Aunt Maud, back home, postcards of the Tuscan landscape, since we are not in the picture to prove that we were there?
No stretch of rocks has verity unless I am within it. No monument exists
but for my wife, leaning against it. No temple is of interest without my face beside it, grinning. With my camera I appropriate everything beautiful, possess it, shrink it, domesticate it, and reproduce it on my blank sitting-room wall to prove to a selected audience of friends and family the one absolutely vital fact about these beauties: I saw them, I was there, I photographed them, and, ergo, they are.
from "Amateur Photography: the World as it isn't and our Fred" by Jill Tweedie in the Guardian | 现在的旅游其实就在移动照相机,旅游到哪儿,照相机也就对到哪儿。镜头犹如权杖,向每一位游客发号施令。别以为简单来个造型就可过关了事,您的眼光属于老土,需听摄影师的指挥。别忘记摄影师总是想当然地认为一旦焦距调准,所有在其范围内景物都不得移动或受其他干扰物影响。旁边的游客,没带相机的话,劳烦你靠边挪一挪,这儿正占着位呢,噢,顺便提醒一下,旅游大巴停靠景点后,傻瓜机族们都会一个劲地向景点冲,您可得卡准时间,免得和他们范冲。还有那些眼看着即将成为'亮眼炮筒'俘虏的景区居民们,想要逃离虎口,就要奋力挣扎,你得说,要照俺的屋子、俺的骆子?君先交钱。
这些都不算什么,可能吧,凡事值得拥有,就应进行到底。只要那东奔西路、平平快门所付出的辛勤劳作收获的是真,是美,是无曾拥有,那就值得。可惜人非所愿。摄影说白了也就是个文人涂鸦。
通过摄影,我们在浏览的景色前刻上我们的印,又把世界奇迹再拷贝一遍。虽然专业录制的有关世界奇景的影带在各处书报亭都有销售,但带这些回家,意义何在? 给亲爱的老姨妈亮一亮托斯卡尼景色的明信片?人不在其中,能作数吗?
所谓,绵延山石非我人在难言壮观;纪念丰碑若妻不倚不垂千秋;古刹名寺无我开怀一笑情趣何在。有了照相机,我才能对美景取挪缩放,冲印后悬挂于白墙客厅,呈现于亲朋好友,这才是美的真谛:此景,我亲睹、亲临,亲取 , 君请欣赏。
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