After completing the Research point for The Decisive Moment, (Link) there were two areas that interested me more than any others. Cartier-Bressons feeling of intuition, luck and coincidence, coupled with the ability to see, and John Suler’s Psychology of The Decisive Moment, where he breaks things down into ten distinctive features.
I am a great believer in breaking things down to understand them better and also considering the extremes of a concept to get an insight into the practicalities.
The extremes of a Decisive moment go from completely blind shooting to controlled staged shots. I believe the Decisive Moment lies somewhere in between.
To try and find a decisive moment in the traditional sense, I decided that I needed to break it down, and I also to think more about “looking”.
I was going to have to leave my comfort zone, having never really attempted street photography in its true sense. I thought it would be good idea to first go out into the streets without my camera and just look. However, at the decisive moment (sorry)! I couldn’t make myself leave the house without it as I would have kicked myself if a DM had occurred whilst I was sitting there with no camera!
To break it down and try to fully understand what a DM is, I decided that it might be useful to take pictures that corresponded with some of Suler’ elements. In addition, I wanted to incorporate Henri Cartier-Bressons ideas concerning the ability to see, taking into account his comment, looking for it means you are unlikely to find it. I hoped that if I was focusing on a single feature of the decisive moment, then I’m not actually looking for the complete DM shot, one might present itself.
“You can’t go looking for it; you can’t want it, or you want get it” Henri Cartier-Bresson , (1997) American Photo , Page: 96
At this point, I’m not sure if these shots will make the final assignment images or not. I still feel that they are more a process to get me to a deeper level of understanding and seeing.
I spent about 3 hours out on the streets “looking”. I had my camera with me but didn’t take any shots! This was without a doubt one of the best things I could have done at the start of this assignment. One of the biggest hurdles it got me over was being noticed. I realised that there are so many people taking pictures in the City where I live that I probably won’t have a problem at all.
I was looking for several things; people, their interactions, movements and expressions. I was also looking at the surroundings, the backgrounds and the general makeup of the streets. The nice thing was that I gave my self time to look at these things individually and tried not to see a whole picture in one go. I think I may have found one of the reasons for doing the exercise 3.3 What matters is to look!
I came away feeling more certain that I should take the ten individual shots that correspond with Suler’s elements of the DM.
Before doing this I looked at another photographer to see if I could could recognise any of Sulers’ or Cartier Bressons’ elements.
I decided to select images by Vivian Maier.
She was born and brought up in America and only became well know as a street photographer after her death in 2009. She took the majority of her better known photographs in her spare time during the 50s and 60s. I love the fact that photography was a hobby and that she had no idea what she was producing. Her technique of holding the camera at waist height gave her images a viewpoint that was so different to other photographers at the time and a symmetry that makes them very easy to look at. I wondered if she was a photographer that had the ability to take a DM shot in the ways that both Henri Cartier-Bresson and John Suler described. I only chose one image per feature, although there were many images that could have been selected for each.
1. Composition, Visual Coalescence, and Gestalt Psychology
“A sophisticated composition in which the visual coalescence of the photographed scene capitalizes on the principles of Gestalt psychology to create a “prägnanz” atmosphere of balance, harmony, simplicity, and unity” Suler, J (2012)
Horizontal and vertical lines – everything balanced with the eye being drawn down and along the line of women. The image looks very formal and geometric. The shadow also helps the geometry. The women like they have been instructed to stand behind the line on the pavement. It almost gives the feeling of a firing squad!

Fig. 1 Vivian Maier, October 31, 1954. New York, NY
2. Figure/Ground Relationships and the Gestalt Field
“A sophisticated background to the subject that interacts both visually and psychologically with the subject in a synergistically meaningful figure/ground relationship” Suler, J (2012)
The eye is drawn from the subjects coming out of the shop, up to the ladder and the sign, then back down to the people on the pavement. The background contributes to the overall look and feel of the shot, giving context and additional meaning.

Fig. 2 Vivian Maier, 1956. New York, NY
3. Closure, The Gap, Anticipation
“The visual as well as psychological anticipation of completion and closure, which often surfaces as a visual gap, interval, or suspension of some kind” Suler, J (2012)
It looks like the child on the right is waiting for something to be dropped, perhaps from a window? Is this where all the other items have come from? I don’t think this works in the same way as the Henri Cartier-Bresson image where the foot is just about to hit the puddle (or not), but there is definitely a sense of anticipation. Perhaps if there had been an object visible in the top of the image then it might have fitted this feature more.

Fig. 3 Vivian Maier, September 1953. New York, NY
4. Ambiguity and Curiosity
“An element of ambiguity, uncertainty, and even contradiction that rouses the viewer’s curiosity about the meaning or outcome of the scene depicted” Suler, J (2012)
(To fit this feature it is best viewed without reading the caption). Is she asking the policeman for help? Has she just had an accident?, or perhaps a parking ticket! (given the parking machine in the foreground). Is she praying? Or is she being arrested? Is the policeman asking her for something? There is so much ambiguity in this image. She was in fact fighting, but it’s not clear who she was fighting as there don’t seem to be many other people near them.

Fig. 4 Vivian Maier, Armenian woman fighting on East 86th Street, September, 1956. New York, NY
5. Capturing the Unique Fleeting Moment
“The capture of a unique, fleeting, and meaningful moment, ideally one involving movement and action” Suler, J (2012)
I believe this image fits with so many of Sulers’ (and Cartier – Bresson’s) features that I have written a separate paragraph at the end of this section.

Fig.5 Vivian Maier, (nd) Chicago, IL
6. The One Hit Wonder
“A precisely timed, unrepeatable, one-chance shot” Suler, J (2012)
The composition could have changed at any moment. This is a beautifully composed image and unless it was staged (which I doubt), it seems Maier most definitely had the ability to “see” in the Cartier – Bresson sense. This image reminded me of a Cartier-Bresson image taken in 1969 in France (fig.7a)

Fig. 7 Vivian Maier, June 1963. Chicago, IL

Fig.7a Henri Cartier-Bresson, FRANCE. The Alpes de Haute-Provence ‘department’. Town of Simiane-la-Rotonde. 1969.
7. Candid Shots of People in Real Life
“An unobtrusive, candid, photorealistic image of people in real life situations” Suler, J (2012)
The fact that the photographer is behind the subjects makes this very unobtrusive

Fig.7 Vivian Maier, Chicago, IL (nd)
8. Meaning and Emotion
“A dynamic interplay of objective fact with subjective interpretation that arouses meaning and emotion about the human condition” Suler, J (2012)
I used this image earlier in Ambiguity and Curiosity, but I believe it is also a very an emotionaly meaningful image. Note the expression on the woman’s face and the way her hands are being held tightly by the policeman.

Fig. 8 Vivian Maier, Armenian woman fighting on East 86th Street, September, 1956. New York, NY
9. The Shoot leading to DM shots
“The overarching context of a productive photography session – or “good hour” – that starts with tension, then culminates in a personal and artistic realisation that is the DM image” Suler, J (2012)
I am not entirely sure I fully understand this feature but as Maier was taking pictures in her spare time, I suspect her timings were very often more when she could, than when she wanted to. It is not known whether Maier had any great knowledge of other photographers or their work. Geoffrey Dyer wrote “Did she take certain pictures because consciously or not, they resembled work she had seen in exhibitions or magazines?” Dyer, G (2011)
10. Skills in Capturing the Decisive Moment
“The DM photo as a product of a unique set of technical, cognitive, and emotional skills developed from extensive training and experience in photography, as well as from a psychological knowledge of people” Suler, J (2012)
I can’t find any evidence that Maier had any extensive training in photography although there were photographers in her life as she grew up, but It is obvious that she had the technical, cognitive and emotional skills or she would not have been able to be able to produce these amazing images.
When I was looking through her images there was one that for me stood out amongst all the others (fig.5) The image is balanced, the background helps to frame and organise the main subjects, there is anticipation, ambiguity and curiosity, the moment is almost fleeting, it is candid and there is meaning and emotion. There are so many of Suler’s and Cartier-Bresson’s ideas of the DM in this image. The way the the eyes of the female passer by are looking furtively to the right, but her shoulders are angled to the left as if protecting herself. The body language of the couple by the wall suggests an argument, the male has his arm up as a barrier to stop her moving; is his other arm holding her back? She has her feet apart as if to keep herself steady. Are they shouting at each other? Her expression and the closeness of their faces says yes; there definitely seems to be a lot of tension in the body language. The doorway is also interesting. Is it a bar that they have just come out of? or is it just a coincidence that they stopped by the doorway?
The two sets of subjects seem to mirror each other but perhaps in a different place and time. Perhaps the couple by the wall were walking hand in hand a few minutes before like the passers by? This feeling is enhanced by the similarity in clothing (pale coats and dark suits).

Fig.5 Vivian Maier, (nd) Chicago, IL
Going through this process has really helped me to understand what I need to be able to achieve in order to try and capture a DM shot in the Cartier-Bresson sense, whilst also taking Sulers’ psychological elements into account.
I need some luck, be able to see what is going on, what is about to happen, what the composition and background are giving and the skills to take the shot at the right time. How intuitive this will all be I have no idea!
Bibliography
Cartier-Bresson, H (1969) Simiane-la-Rotonde.
At: https://pro.magnumphotos.com/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult&STID=2S5RYDYMZR5E
[Accessed 23/09/2019]
American Photo (September/October 1997) page 96
At: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AU_di09SdbkC&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96&dq
[Accessed 18/09/2019]
Dyer, G (2011) Geof Dyer on Vivian Mayer, (Foreward) Vivian Maier Street Photographer, (2011) USA, Powerhouse Books p8
At: http://truecenterpublishing.com/photopsy/decisive_moment.htm
[Accessed 28/08/2019]



















