The Picture of Their Life #1
Transcription
The Picture of Their Life #1
The Picture of Their Life #1 – Laerke Posselt www.picturalis.fr The picture of their life is our new monthly column that explores the world to meet international photographers. They tell us how a famous picture has changed their way to work. Lærke Posselt, 28, is a Danish photojournalist focusing on social issues and human conditions. Already as a student, she won numerous national and international prizes, including World Press Photo and Pictures Of the Year. Her recent projects include “Beautiful Child”, which is about child beauty pageants. Lærke, about the Jacob Aue Sobol photography: “This photo by the Danish Magnum photographer Jacob Aue Sobol is taking us to a place where we are rarely allowed. The very intimate, private moment of first love between two people we don't know. The two teenagers lie naked together and between them is nothing else than a gaze containing an enormous amount of energy. The parted lips of the girl give the whole frame a tension. They make me hold my breath like she seems to be doing. In her eyes there is a devotion that seems absolute and maybe naïve. In its contrasted, almost charcoal-like registration of the bodies, the photo is very graphic and has a beautiful composition. It doesn’t explain too much. It talks the language of our hearts, not our brains. © Jacob Aue Sobol Love is such a fundamental, timeless and always important theme. The pictures I am inspired by are pictures with this kind of existential themes. For this image I don’t really care about learning to know who they are, where they live and why they are together. All I care about is that moment and the reflection of my own experiences of love and intimacy. To me, there are two types of important photography: pictures that show us what is happening to the world we live in, and those that tell about what is happening inside us. As a documentary photographer, my constant aim is to try and combine these two. When I get an assignment, I am most often asked at least to show what is happening in front of the camera and how. With inspiration from the more existential kind of photography, I always try to approach the why. With the innovation of the digital mobile camera everybody can contribute to the documentation of the world we live in. But being able to communicate more than the surface still takes some skills in psychology, sociology, sensitivity, and visual language, that takes years to build. And as I see it, this is where we, as photojournalists, can find our justification.” You can find all Lærke’s work on her website !