Shoot! Interview: Antonin Kratochvil

antonin.jpg
photo by Clay Enos

Since it's kind of photojournalism day here on the blog, and since one of the winning Pulitzer photographs this year happened to be from Myanmar, I thought I'd post a short Q&A session I was lucky enough to have with Antonin Kratochvil. Kratochvil, if he's new to you, is a Czech-born American photojournalist. He is also founding member of the VII Photo Agency. His career is rather epic at this point; when not in Mongolia or Iraq, he's working on issues between the ACLU and the Department of Homeland Security, or bringing his unique style to Ray Ban or Harley Davidson. He's also won many of these awards. And he's a nice fellow, to boot. Below, Kratochvil answers some questions about his photographic journey.


Do you find it distracting to balance jobs that run the gamut of the
industry- photographing Mongolian children for the Museum of Natural
History, shooting a campaign for Ray Ban, going on assignment for
Fortune, or working on a book project? Does the commercial work ever
inspire the personal work, or only vice versa?


To be honest, I don't do much of the commercial work.  But, sometimes I miss a juicy editorial job because I am booked on a commercial job.  You have to commit.  So, I don't, really.  I enjoy different challenges.  Because 70% of my work is editorial, I only get hired for jobs that are within my main thrust, humanity in crisis.  I get hired for a kind of conflict, or social photography.


k_ray.jpg



How has the use of embedded photojournalists changed the images we see
coming from Iraq? Is there any truly objective imagery coming out of the
region now? And how do you think the embedding has changed war photography?


Uh, that's a very long answer.  You know by being a western photojournalist in Iraq it's very hard to cover it, and give a voice to the opposition. To give a complete picture of the war in Iraq, it's become difficult, because the opposition hasn't been given a voice.  And in the beginning of the war, which I covered, I was independent.  I was unilateral, so I got the other side of the conflict, where the embedded got the view of the moving of the forces.  There were two sets of embedded photojournalists; one with Saddam and the other with the invading forces.  A third set was unilateral, meaning independent, and it was a very small percentage. So basically, even though the unilateral journalists existed in Iraq during the invasion, the Pentagon considered these people illegal and they were subject to arrest and deportation.   I was a unilateral photojournalist in that conflict. I didn't want to be embedded, because I was concerned that my opinion would be obscured, by associating too closely with the soldiers.  I think definitely being embedded can cloud your vision and judgment. On the other hand it gave photojournalists unprecedented access and it was up to their objectivity.

k_war1.jpgAntonin Kratochvil, from Iraq Documentary - January, 2006

k_war2.jpgAntonin Kratochvil, from Iraq Documentary - January, 2006

The movement and abstraction that your work is famous for is something
that's becoming increasingly rare with the rise of digital imagery and
the tack-sharp images many editors crave. How do you preserve this look
and feel when you do shoot digitally? Have you felt pressure to change
your style?


 No I haven't, because it's actually possible to achieve the same results with digital capture. You achieve the same result, but you have to master the new media.  It takes time.

Your Myanmar prison image from 2003 is seared in my brain. Did the
actual photo meet your expectation/conception of when you shot it? Are you ever surprised at your images when you see them?


 This particular image was a big surprise to me.  I mean, I felt it, because that's how I photograph, I feel.  People asked me how I made this picture, I don't know how I made it, but I felt it.  A lot of my pictures are off the cuff, made through my subconscious.

kratochvil_myanmar-thumb-512x341.jpg 

Tell me about your involvement with Project Red. Bono has become a real
international symbol for justice; what has he been like to work with?


Um, Bono, let's see. Working with Bono, is working with a man who stands for the same things as I do.  That's it.

k_bono.jpg photo by Antonin Kratochvil

I hear you are a big fan of the restaurant Republic. I like the salmon broth noodles. What's your favorite dish?
'Kay my favorite dish is hot beef soup, and fried tofu as an appetizer. My son likes the mint noodles, and my wife likes the duck noodles.


Yum!
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