Lessons in the street philosophy of Garry Winogrand
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Garry Winogrand
“I photograph something to find out what it will look like photographed,” American street photographer Garry Winogrand (1928-1984) famously said, revealing the fundamental principle of his philosophy. Through his lens, life was rendered anew, giving us a fresh perspective and vantage point for seeing the world.
“The more interested you get in Winogrand the more eager you are to see stuff you have not seen,” British writer Geoff Dyer reveals about the hunger that drove him to create The Street Philosophy of Garry Winogrand (University of Texas Press), a luxurious meditation on the many ways in which the photographer’s remarkable images work.
The book, which is modelled on John Szarkowski’s classic book Atget, presents a brilliantly curated selection of 100 photographs, including 18 previously unpublished colour works, from the Winogrand archive at the Centre for Creative Photography. Each image is accompanied by an essay, in which Dyer explores the relationship between the artist, his subject, and the photograph in a wholly original manner that is as insightful as it is engaging.

Untitled
“I put a lot of trust into the idea that I would remain faithful to the vagaries of my own nature and interests, confident that even though there are any number of people who could write a certain book maybe if I really remain faithful to my own interests, I’d wind up writing a book that only I could write,” Dyer explains.
Indeed, there is no one quite as well matched to give voice to Winogrand’s work as Dyer does in this exquisitely layered and thoughtful book. He examines the underlying issues that define the ways in which Winogrand used his camera to document the essence of mid-20th-century urban life.

Untitled, ca. 1980
Each section begins with a series of questions that open the mind to a way of seeing that is just as radical today as it was when these pictures were first made. For Winogrand and Dyer alike, the resolution comes when the act of looking is transformed into understanding.
Like his photographs, Winogrand’s words are poignant, profound and direct – he challenges us to distinguish the infinite nuances that exist between representation, interpretation, and the object itself. “I think it’s a version of the old, ‘Ceci n’est pas un pipe,’” Dyer explains, referencing Rene Magritte’s infamous 1929 painting, ‘The Treachery of Images’ (“This is not a pipe”). “Winogrand has said so many profound things about photography because he is not trained at all as any sort of academic but he has this knack for going verbally to the real philosophical, conceptual heart of the matter. It reminds us that there is such a difference between things that are there in the world and the way they are transformed by putting frames around it.”

New York, 1966
The best images, it can be said, are those that continue to reveal something new – for even though they never change, we do. They continue to speak to us in such a way that the meaning evolves to speak the language of the present day. For Dyer, this presents an infinite space to engage, recognising that the desire to “talk about pictures” can go on for days.
“No matter how much Winogrand you see, you are always conscious of how much more Winogrand there is still to see,” he acknowledges. “Within each photograph, there seems to be more happening in a Winogrand than there is in most other photographs. On both the individual and collective level, the hunger is being fed even as it is being assuaged.”

Untitled, 1970s

Untitled

Central Park, New York, 1970

Untitled

Untitled, 1950s

Untitled, 1950s

Untitled

Untitled
Follow Miss Rosen on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
You might like
On the frontlines of Britain’s ’80s protest movements
Protest and Equality — Against a backdrop of Thatcherism, hospital closures and global conflict, photographer Sarah Saunders was a documentarian of the long decade’s effects on society, as well as the communities actively resisting it.
Written by: Miss Rosen
How one of the world’s best big wave photographers & filmmakers gets the perfect shot
Staring down the barrel — Sachi Cunningham has built an immersive body of work documenting huge barrels by getting closer to the action than most. Josh Jones speaks to her about her process, finding order within chaos, and the importance of feeling awe.
Written by: Josh Jones
In photos: The gritty golden age of the UK’s skateboarding scene
Elsewhere — A new book from Science Vs. Life founder Neil Macdonald explores the characters, photographs and ephemera that defined the sport in the ’80s and ’90s, just before the internet and commercialisation changed it forever.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The London passport picture studio that became an unexpected repository of 20th century stars
Passport Photo Service — From Mick and Bianca Jagger to Muhammad Ali and Poly Styrene, the unassuming Oxford Street store was frequented by hundreds of musicians, actors, artists and more over its 70 years of operation.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Sophie Green’s maximalist, technicolour vision of Britain’s fringes
Tangerine Dreams — The photographer has spent over a decade documenting the rituals, subcultures and social gatherings that form the collaged fabric of the UK’s society. A new exhibition at the Martin Parr Foundation celebrates her work and the communities she captures.
Written by: Roxana Diba
When the Chelsea Hotel was New York’s countercultural epicentre
Closed doors, open minds — Albert Scopin’s new photobook collects photographs that were once thought to be lost, documenting the city’s creative scene that gathered during the building’s 1969 to 1971 heyday.
Written by: Miss Rosen