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Three acclaimed photojournalists, Peter Howe,
Jenny Matthews, and Joseph Rodriguez came together at a special
Dart Center and Center for Communication panel discussion on “Photojournalism:
Tragedy in Focus” in New York. Below are some excerpts
from the discussion. For video, click on the images to the right.
ON THE ETHICS OF PHOTOJOURNALISM

Jenny Matthews
For
me, it's important to communicate with the people I'm photographing.
Through talking, which it usually is, or just through eye contact.
There's an exchange there, that they know what I'm doing.
If you want to be very moralistic about it, there's an element
of photography that is voyeurism, that you're exploiting a situation.
A lot of the moral issues drop away if you know why you're doing
it, if you feel this is story that needs telling, that there's
a reason to be there. Photographers are often masochistic. They
take on the most difficult subjects. You don't go for the easy,
happy time in the park, you go for the hard edge.
I feel this is an unjust world. I've been born with privileges,
and the only way I can redress the balance a bit, is to do this.

Peter Howe
You've
got to check your motives. It is so hard to make moral and ethical
decisions when somebody is shooting at you. It is so hard to do
it when the car bombs go off. When the car bomb goes off, your
first thought is not about moral and ethical issues. Photographers
are trained to photograph.
In Salvador, a bunch of us were driving around — you spend
a lot of time driving around, looking for something interesting
— and there was a bus that had obviously been attacked by
the guerillas. There was just one body, a guy who had probably
been a police informer. He was executed with a gun put in his
mouth, and it had blown the back of his head off. I was photographing
him, moving around. You work the angles. While I'm photographing,
I hear this voice behind me. "Peter, who the hell do you
think is going to publish that picture? At that point I realized
I was photographing his empty skull. Not only that, but it wasn't
going to tell you any more about what had happened to that man
than the picture from the front.
But it's so hard when the adrenaline is pumping, and you don't
know if the guerillas are still there, to make those kinds of
decisions. Often, particularly if you're a news photographer and
you're shooting from the field, those decisions are made for you
by the editor. To me, the editor's job is to be the first reader.

Joseph Rodriguez
It's
personal, because I grew up in New York. Every Monday, you'd open
the Daily News and the New York Times and see
the crime stats. I wanted to get beyond that story, to a more
in-depth story.
ON MOTIVATION

Peter Howe
During the '60s
in London when I was growing up there were three professions that
were acceptable to a male heterosexual child. You could be a soccer
star, a rock star or a photographer. I couldn't sing, I couldn't
play football, so I became a photographer.
I ended up in this by sheer chance. I was working for a photographer,
David Montgomery. I was his assistant. He was the archetypal groovy
'60s photographer. He drove a Bentley Continental. He had this
groovy studio. He had beautiful models hanging around. That was
the other motivation.
When you're an assistant you get to know who all the picture editors
are. He sent me to an picture editor he used to do a lot of work
for, at a women's magazine called Nova, which was one of the most
wonderful — never mind women's magazines — magazines
ever published. And the art director saw me and gave me a job.
It happened to be a documentary job. I was looking for a fashion
job, but I got this instead. And I did it pretty well. He gave
me another one. I started to get into it. I was doing great stories.
I did a story about child poverty in Britain, I went on the road
with the British ballroom dance team, which was a wild story.
Suddenly I realized telling stories was a lot more interesting
that photographing very thin women in dresses.

Joseph Rodriguez
Basically,
this saved my life. I was a drug addict, a criminal, and I found
photography, and it turned my life around. Made me what I am today.
That's why I spent three years with gangs in Los Angeles, four
years in Spanish Harlem, three years in Mexico. These are issues
that are related to me personally. I'm speaking to myself first,
and then to the world. I'm very honest about that. I'm not a very
good objective journalist.

Jenny Matthews
To some extent,
the economics of survival as a photographer. No one's going to
be interested in pictures from a country where nothing's going
on. If you're working in a country where there's news, more people
are likely to buy your picture.
FURTHER READING

For more on each photographer's work, see:
Juvenile
by Joseph Rodriguez
Shooting Under Fire
by Peter Howe
Women and War
by Jenny Matthews
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For a complete transcript
of the panel discussion, hosted in New York by HBO, visit the
Center
for Communication.
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