What makes a photo iconic? I have had this talk with a few friends over the years and every time I come back to a similar resolution. It all boils down to being at the right place at the right time. If you hang out with any photographers, each will have a style in which they shoot their subjects or have a methodology to their work.
Digital cameras have for the most part destroyed the high art of the photograph. Hand a person over a camera and chances are they can learn to take a decent photo in a short amount of time. What will never change though is having the right subject matter to shoot and pulling off an iconic photo at the same time. Thank you Jim Marshall for chronicling some amazing times in music history.
Link to original post on Collector's Weekly
"Photographer Jim Marshall, who grew up in San Francisco’s Fillmore district in the 1940s and ’50s, and passed away in March of 2010, was one of the pre-eminent chroniclers of the rock, blues, and jazz musicians of 20th century America. Marshall had amazing access, capturing the Beatles during their last performance at Candlestick Park, as well as Janis Joplin backstage at Winterland, a bottle of Southern Comfort in her hand. He attended the best of the 1960s music festivals, from Newport Folk (Joan Baez) to Monterey Pop (Jimi Hendrix) to Woodstock (The Who). And his images were turned into album covers for Jefferson Airplane, the Allman Brothers, and hundreds of others.
One of Marshall’s favorite subjects was Johnny Cash—Marshall’s last book, “Pocket Cash,” devoted entirely to images of the great country singer-songwriter, was published by Chronicle Books shortly after Marshall’s death. To mark the one-year anniversary of that sad event, three galleries are hosting “Pocket Cash” exhibitions during March and April of 2011. They are SNAP Galleries in London, Morrison Hotel Gallery in New York, and San Francisco Art Exchange (SFAE).
On the SFAE website, Jim Marshall recalls the day, January 13, 1968, when Cash and his band, the Tennessee Three, with the great Carl Perkins on guitar, entered the prison (see the pensive portrait of Cash, above). “The granite walls in Folsom are about eight feet thick, and we had just gotten off the bus and gone through one giant gate into a holding area. Then we went through a second gate, and, when it clanked shut, John said, ‘Jim, there’s a feeling of permanence in that sound.’ After that, I started wondering when we were going to get out of there.”
The success of “Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison,” with a Marshall close-up of Cash on its cover, sweat dripping down his face from the bottom of his sideburns, sent Cash to San Quentin a year later for another live album. That recording, which made it to No. 1 on both the country and pop charts in the U.S., is famous for its black-and-blue cover, with Cash’s head silhouetted from behind by a harsh spotlight.
Digital cameras have for the most part destroyed the high art of the photograph. Hand a person over a camera and chances are they can learn to take a decent photo in a short amount of time. What will never change though is having the right subject matter to shoot and pulling off an iconic photo at the same time. Thank you Jim Marshall for chronicling some amazing times in music history.
Link to original post on Collector's Weekly
Johnny Cash about to enter Folsom Prison in 1969 |
One of Marshall’s favorite subjects was Johnny Cash—Marshall’s last book, “Pocket Cash,” devoted entirely to images of the great country singer-songwriter, was published by Chronicle Books shortly after Marshall’s death. To mark the one-year anniversary of that sad event, three galleries are hosting “Pocket Cash” exhibitions during March and April of 2011. They are SNAP Galleries in London, Morrison Hotel Gallery in New York, and San Francisco Art Exchange (SFAE).
“It’s probably the most ripped off photograph in the history of the world.”Some of Marshall’s most arresting photographs of Cash were taken at two California prisons, Folsom (1968) and San Quentin (1969). These were not Cash’s first performances for prison inmates—indeed, his song “Folsom Prison Blues” had been released more than a decade earlier, in 1955, as a 45 and 78 by Sun Records. But the trip to Folsom would be recorded for a live album, and Jim Marshall was invited along by Cash’s label, Columbia, to document the event.
On the SFAE website, Jim Marshall recalls the day, January 13, 1968, when Cash and his band, the Tennessee Three, with the great Carl Perkins on guitar, entered the prison (see the pensive portrait of Cash, above). “The granite walls in Folsom are about eight feet thick, and we had just gotten off the bus and gone through one giant gate into a holding area. Then we went through a second gate, and, when it clanked shut, John said, ‘Jim, there’s a feeling of permanence in that sound.’ After that, I started wondering when we were going to get out of there.”
The success of “Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison,” with a Marshall close-up of Cash on its cover, sweat dripping down his face from the bottom of his sideburns, sent Cash to San Quentin a year later for another live album. That recording, which made it to No. 1 on both the country and pop charts in the U.S., is famous for its black-and-blue cover, with Cash’s head silhouetted from behind by a harsh spotlight.
The most famous image from the day, though, is unquestionably the candid shot of Cash taken during a rehearsal before the show. Again from the SFAE website, Marshall recalls the origins of what he believed was “probably the most ripped off photograph in the history of the world. There was a TV crew behind me and John was on the side of the stage. I said ‘John, let’s do a shot for the warden.’” Apparently, that’s all the prompting Cash needed to look straight into Marshall’s lens and flip him the bird." (All photos by Jim Marshall from San Francisco Art Exchange)