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Posts tagged ‘Street Photographer’

# 6 SIEGFRIED HANSEN, Hamburg Street Photographer


Leica Liker is honored to have Siegfried Hansen, a Hamburg Street Photographer as our #6 guest.

Syn·chro·nic·i·ty
“an apparently meaningful coincidence in time of two or more similar or identical events that are casually unrelated” (dictionary.com)

When I came across Siegfried’s work in Flickr, the first thought that came to my mind was the word “synchronicity”. It’s a word that Swiss psychologist Carl Jung coined to describe what he called “temporally coincident occurrences of acausal events.” (Wikipedia) I love to page through his images to vicariously experience these serendipitous moments.

Capturing synchronicity is really difficult. It requires an acute awareness of the environment. But to capture it more than once comes only with a lot of experience. After 10 years of shooting, Siegfried has trained himself such that it’s wired into his psyche. Combine this and his art influences and you see what Siegfried sees. He even has a term for the resulting images: “expected coincidence”.

So much of street photography is about the individual (sometimes forgotten) experience within a community or environment. Perhaps, even the shared moment in a party or a gathering. But many of Siegfried’s photographs celebrate our connection to someone else or thing, like a grain of sand touching another grain of sand on a beach. Which in turn exists on our planet floating in a vast universe. He often reminds us of being a part of something greater in our most mundane moments.

I know Siegfried doesn’t think about these things when he’s shooting and he chuckles when people read deep into his photos. He’s even skeptical. Maybe it’s because of his upbringing in the small country town of Meldorf in northern Germany. But he presents a piece of art. And good art provokes and asks questions.

Here’s my interview with SIEGFRIED HANSEN.

Nick Name: Siggi
Currently living in: Hamburg, Germany
Motto: I am always curious, what will happen around the next corner.
Profession/Job: I have a regular job but it has nothing to do with my photographic life.

Street Photographer since: 2002.
Website: www.siegfried-hansen.de
Organizations or Groups: Seconds 2 Real, Street Photographers, and Public-life


Favorite Street Camera & Lens: Digital: At the moment a Fuji X100; Film: Leica CL with Leitz Wetzlar Summicron 1:2/40mm Lens
Favorite Back up camera: I don’t have one but if my main camera breaks, I’ll buy a new one.
Favorite photography gadget: None
Favorite street food: When I stop for a break, I like to drink a cappuccino.


Do you listen to music while shooting? Never
Favorite music when shooting and/or editing Photos: I like to edit in the quiet of my space.
Favorite photo software: Photoshop Elements 2

3 Favorite Master Photographers: Ernst Haas, Saul Leiter and Ray K. Metzker
3 Favorite Contemporary Photographers: Alex Webb, Jesse Marlow, Trent Parke
Which 3 photographers’ prints do you own? I don’t own any prints. I prefer books.


Color or Black and White? Both
Shoot Film or Digital? I shoot mainly digital because I can process immediately. I do shoot film occasionally but there is too much effort to get the film processed. I have 40 film rolls, which I shot with my Leica CL and I have yet to develop them. I understand why Garry Winogrand had thousands of rolls of film unprocessed. The process is more interesting.

Is there a special time of the day you like to shoot or is any time good? If you live in Hamburg, any time and place is fine. I’ll go outside in any weather. But, I love snow because verything looks new especially when sunlight breaks through the clouds. Red looks like deep red in snow. If I had to choose, I mostly like the sun because of the dark shadows. Light is like a switch. It adds another layer like shadows.

Why did you choose Street Photography and not another form of photography or stamp collecting? It was a lucky circumstance that I found my way to “street photography”. About 10 years ago, I was a “typical” snap shot photographer. I use to shoot a lot of sunsets with my Minolta X300 in both black and white and color. But I wasn’t really engaged in photography. Then I visited an exhibition of André Kertész and his pictures completely changed my way of looking at my environment. Since that day in 2002, wherever I go, I carry my camera with me so I can catch all the moments I see and like.

What motivates you to photograph the streets? The unbelievable great variety of possibilities and the idea, that any given moment, something unusual can happen.
Is Street Photography an obsession? Yes, I am guilty, it is an obsession. 🙂
Are you a lone shooter or do you like shooting with friends or a group? Alone.
Favorite street photography city: I live in Hamburg and it is the city where I take most of my photographs. But I also travel often to London, Paris and other cities as well to get new inspirations.

What inspires your photography? I love painters like Lyonel Feininger and Egon Schiele, two major figurative painters in German Expressionism of the twentieth century. I like the abstract ideas that Feininger presents in his paintings and the amazing colors and views of people of Schiele’s work. I also love the “Bauhaus” style, especially Maholy Nagy’s work. Feininger was also part of the Bauhaus movement.


Is there a philosophy or aesthetic behind your compositions that you apply to your photos? I don’t consciously apply any philosophy to my photographs when I go out shooting. But in the back of my mind I’m sure I am influenced by what inspires me. For instance the Bauhaus philosophy of experimenting with new views of ordinary things that have clear structures. If you were to find an equivalent design today, then you can look at Apple or Braun products. When you inspect them, they have a clear concept and design structure. The clarity of their concept is their brand. One thing is for sure, I try to transform our 3D environment into 2D via layering.

What do you look for in a good photograph by others? This is hard to explain. Input, which in general inspires, but also helps me to further develop my work and ideas. I try to be open-minded. I often visit exhibitions and look into many good photographers’ portfolios. Sometimes I see small things in a photo that inspires me to try a new angle or view something in a different way.


How do you go about shooting a street photograph?
When I go out to shoot, I don’t think about anything. I just go with the flow. Your mind needs to be free. I simply see what looks right to me and not think too much about it. So when I make a photo I just shoot it, then move on. I don’t stand around to analyze the scene or shoot from different angles. I usually have a feeling, I know it’s nice and I shoot it. I may capture a second one but then that’s it. I leave the analyzing until I go home and see if the shot worked.

Over the years, I learned to recognize the special moment or lines and space around me. I also learned to act immediately using available lines or graphic I see as the foreground and background. Then I wait for the situation to reveal itself. I call it “the expected coincidence.” Most of the time nothing happens, but you have to be patient and impassioned. So I often walk the same routes in my hometown, Hamburg, Germany. After 10 years I still see something new every time. Mostly small things, but the small things are often the difficult things.

I also try to arrange several layers in my photographs, the more the better. From my point of view, compositions with more than one layer are more interesting. Sometimes I like to compare things like a double pair, to make the pictures more interesting.

After so many years of being a street-photographer my eyes are well trained to catch situations, lines and graphics, in a fraction of a second, that help me make the compositions I envision. I simply love it!

Best 3 tips for shooting the streets: Learn from Master photographers; Vacation in big cities; Always keep your eyes and mind open. One more thing: keep shooting. When I shoot, I may not capture the big one all the time but I shoot many small ones to train myself to recognize the big one.

Best single advice on how to edit or improve your work. When you edit images it is the same as shooting pictures. You see the results of the day and some pictures are better than others. Some might even be top. But keep in mind, you just don’t see a good picture every time. And you don’t have to. It’s all about selecting the good ones. Quality over quantity.

Another thing I do. I often make small (13x18cm including 1cm border) prints of my favorite photos from Photoshop. Later on, when I look at them again and again, I print the ones I like most in a larger size (30x45cm) and hang them up in my apartment. And if I still like them after 3 weeks, then I’m satisfied and happy.

Best single advice for someone who wants to get into street photography: Get inspired by Master photographs.
What’s the best moment in your street photography career? To participate in the “Street Photography Now” book (Thames and Hudson)
What’s the worst moment in your street photography career? Each time when the battery of my camera is empty or my memory card is full.

What projects are you working on? There are many, but at the moment I’m not ready to talk about them. However on my homepage, you can check out the section “projects”, where you can see some photos of ongoing long-term projects. Some of the projects have been going on for 10 years.

Where do you want to be in 5 years with regard to street photography? I would be lucky if I could still walk around, take good pictures, and have wonderful feelings about my walk. And I would be happy, if a lot of people like my style of art.

Are there exhibitions planned in the future? Yes, a solo exhibition at the end of August 2012 here in Hamburg, Germany, at the Gallery Kunst-Nah.

Leica Liker thanks Siegfried for sharing his experience and inspirational advice with us. :-)We look forward to checking in on him in the future.

You can check out Siegfried’s gear in “Liker Bags’n Gear here”.

This is Siegfried’s self portrait.

My One Hit Wonder


The Big Sleep

Somehow everything in the universe aligned for me when this shot was taken. When I shot it, I knew I had something special. I later showed the photo to my friend Mario and he told me I had hit the jackpot: The One-Hit-Wonder. Ever since then, I have been sitting on it and relishing it every time I look at it. Yes, I have been secretly enjoying this photo.

Today is as good as any day to finally show this photo. Now it’s onto the next. 🙂

BTW: Leica M9, Leica Summilux-M 1:1.14 35mm asph

# 5 GABI BEN-AVRAHAM, Tel Aviv Street Photographer


Leica Liker is pleased to have Gabi Ben-Avraham, as our #5 guest.

Social Media has enabled everyone to connect with others to share common interests. That’s how I have been able to see a lot of amazing photographs and ‘meet’ wonderful photographers. But as you know, there is no filter. Everything is game. What you get together with the good is quite a lot of bad. Two sides of the coin.

When Gabi’s photos popped into my news feed, I had discovered something special. I was immediately taken away by his empathy with humanity – in whatever form it came. He modestly says it’s looking for the surreal juxtaposition in life. There’s definitely more than just that.

Gabi is a quasi, self-taught photographer living in Israel. Quasi in that he took some courses in commentary and photojournalism as well as the 101 of digital photography. Like, how to use the menus, EV wheels, and so on. However, he never studied art, yet he has a great sense of composition and light in his photographs.

Most importantly, Gabi has an innate ability to capture the ‘joie de vivre’ of any situation. He has no hesitation to delve into the lives of strangers. Just look at how close he can get in someone’s face. He has a skill I envy. I’ve never seen him photograph but you see from the images he loves to share the lives of his subjects and deeply respects them.

Gabi’s work is not well known compared to the photographers whom I have interviewed so far. But his photographs always garner a lot of praise within the small loyal Facebook Group communities he belongs to, who eagerly await his posts. In my humble opinion, I hope this interview will bring the well deserved attention to his worthy work.


Here’s my interview with GABI BEN-AVRAHAM:

Nick Name: None that I know of.
Currently living in: Tel-Aviv, Israel
Motto: Try capturing the decisive moment that’s beyond reality.
Profession/Job: IT Manager

Street Photographer since: I use to photograph with a film camera during the 1980’s after I came out of the army. But then I didn’t touch a camera for 20 years until 2009, when my wife decided that I needed to get back to photography. She bought me a Nikon D90 and just like that, I returned to my old hobby in a very strong way.
Websites: www.gabibest.com and I also use Facebook to share my photos.
Organizations or Group: Street photography Facebook Groups


Favorite Street Camera & Lens: Body – Nikon D-700. Lens- most of the time I use Nikon 28 mm/2.8 mm prime lens and Nikon 20mm/2.8 mm prime lens
Back-up Street Camera & Lens: Body – Nikon D-90, Lens Nikon 16-35 mm
Favorite photography gadget: None
Favorite street food: Meat sandwich and a pint of Guinness.


Do you listen to music while shooting? No, I prefer to hear the street sounds in order to complete the street feeling.
Favorite music when shooting and/or editing photos: I love to listen to classical music, particularly Mahler, when I edit.
Favorite photo software: Adobe Lightroom 3.6


3 Favorite Master Photographers: Henri Cartier-Bresson, Raymond Depardon, Robert Capa
3 Favorite Contemporary Photographers: Alex Webb, Bruce Gilden, Matt Stuart
Which 3 photographers’ prints do you own? None, but I own books such as: “A Year in Photography” by Magnum, “Street Photography Now” and “The Great LIFE Photographers”


Color or Black and White? I prefer B&W. I add color only when it’s meaningful.
Shoot Film or Digital? Digital. Because I believe in progress. Film is for nostalgic reasons and it expresses the connection to “classic” photography.
Is there a special time of the day you like to shoot or is any time good? Because of the strong sunlight in Israel, I prefer the morning time or afternoon as the light is better and the shadows are longer.

Why did you choose Street Photography and not another form of photography or stamp collecting? I love taking photos of people in urban surroundings because there is always a story to capture. The street is not a studio. It has life. Things constantly change. Sometimes I stand and wait for things to converge – a cyclist, a dancer, a child – moving along. They are not aware that they are moving towards a certain object, but I am.

Street Photography is my favorite way of looking at the world. My camera has become an integral part of me and I cannot imagine myself without it. Everywhere I go I take it with me thinking ‘maybe today will be my lucky day and I will take the photo of my life’. I am constantly looking around me through the camera lens, searching for that ‘decisive’ moment that will never return – unless I catch it.

When pushing the button, I try to make some sense – restore order to the chaotic scheme of things in the composition. The components ‘speak’ with each other in a special dialogue, either by color, shape, or light. Capturing the elusive, special moment after which things will never be the same and making it eternal – that is my goal.

Forgotten, transparent people in urban surroundings are being granted their moment of grace. The shadows, fragile outlines, reflections of daily lives that are not noticed in the busy and thick urban landscape and sometimes are even crushed by it – these are precious to me. Those expressions, compositions – flickering like dim lights on the horizon – I treasure these before they are lost in time.

What motivates you to photograph the streets? The story behind the scene, the surrealism hiding amongst us.


Is Street Photography an escape or an obsession?
As I said, my wife was responsible for getting me back into photography. By the way, her name is Gaby too. 🙂 I think she might regret it because on weekends, I am wandering the streets for up to 12 hours. It’s become an obsession: an excuse to meet people and the city. It fulfills me more than my regular routine job. I work 5 days a week, waiting all the time for the weekend, to get out and photograph.

Are you a loner or can you shoot with friends of a group? Loner.

Favorite street photography city: Tel-Aviv is my home field for street photography. I’ve lived here all my life. It’s a great city. We call it the “state of Tel-Aviv” because it has a lot of atmosphere and a lot of people. It’s a modern city of pleasure, contrary to what the world thinks of Israel. Everyone knows the Old City of Jerusalem. I also like this city very much because it is the junction of three religions. It’s excellent for street photojournalism.

As for abroad, I adore Paris – the classic city for street photography. I just got back from a trip to Havana. I shot so much I was exhausted when I returned to Tel-Aviv. In fact, every city offers its unique surrounding for street photography.


What inspires your photography, including any philosophy? Classical photography and my imagination. As for philosophy – I don’t ascribe to any.
What do you look for in a good photograph? I look for a combination of a good story, excellent composition, reciprocal relationships between the segments that create connection or contradiction. And of course wise usage of light, shadow and color if the photo is in color.

How do you go about shooting a street photograph?
I often choose the location by looking for the right light.  I love to use shadows and reflections. I sometimes wait for 1/2 to 1 hour for something to occur. If you want something to happen, maybe the color of dress, or composition, or you are patient enough – it will happen.

When you compose, what are you looking for?
Take a look at the photograph with the ominous hand waving ‘no’ over smokers walking by (below). I stood there for a half hour and sure enough, it happened. In this case, I had the preconceived idea of stronger hand, teaching or telling something.

I also like high contrast.  I use color especially when it has meaning. Sometimes I change the color to b & w. I often view in black and white.


What are you trying to achieve when you shoot? I try to frame a surrealistic moment differently than it appears in reality: Another way of looking.

Best 3 tips for shooting the streets:
1. Find the story behind the scene, using a wide lens.
2. Establish connection or contradiction between the objects to create a surrealistic impact.
3. Use light and color to strengthen composition and story.

Best single advice on how to improve your work: Be open to critique from people whose opinion you value. Do not fall in love with your own work. Learn to be cruel and selective when necessary.

Best single advice on how to edit your work: I object to heavy editing in the street photography genre. Or to making changes in photos. This is the reason why I don’t use Photoshop. Instead, I try to imitate the classical dark room methods by using “Lightroom” and edit only with parameters such as exposure, contrast and brightness.
Best single advice for someone who wants to get into street photography: Create your own style – personal signature and stick to it.


What’s the best moment in your street photography career? Until now I have not had any specific best moment. The best moment will hopefully be when I catch the photo of my life.
What’s the worst moment in your street photography career?
Sometimes, after a while, I cannot find any good photo within all the ones I’ve taken.


What projects are you working on? I made the “Social Protest” project with regard to the temporary tent city in Tel Aviv last summer. Currently, I am making a series on ceremonies, cult and religions all over Israel.
Where do you want to be in 5 years with regard to street photography? I wish to achieve recognition and be one of the best!
Are there other exhibitions planned in the future? I have exhibited my work at several group exhibitions. But right now, I am busy preparing my next project about religions in Israel.

Leica Liker thanks Gabi for sharing his experience and inspirational advice with us. 🙂 We look forward to checking in on him when he finishes his ‘Israel’s Religions’ project.

You can check out Gabi’s gear in Liker Bags’n Gear here.

This is Gabi’s self portrait.