PHOTOGRAPHERS LIKE to joke that becoming a member of Magnum is
tantamount, in the rigour of the initiation, to joining a religious
order. Not for nothing do critics deride the agency as a closed
community of self righteous monks scorning heathen outsiders.
Acolytes accepted on probation may claim membership of the order,
but have no privileges and must prove their worth while undergoing
rigorous assessment and instruction from older members. After
two years they are required to submit a portfolio of work to move
on to the next stage and become a novitiate in preparation for
taking their final vows as a penitent and fully fledged member
entitled to vote at the annual convocation. Fortunately, none
of the usual monastery rules regarding chastity and obedience
apply.
The annual convocation of Magnum photographers takes place towards
the end of June each year, rotating between the major Magnum offices
in New York, Paris and London. Part business meeting, part social
gathering, part therapy session, part family reunion, part tedious
debating chamber, it is axiomatic that it is held against a background
of crisis, since Magnum is always embroiled in a crisis of some
kind, and it is almost a tradition that at one point or another
the meeting will deteriorate into a furious shouting match, if
not worse.
Many and colourful are the stories about Magnum’s incendiary meetings.
One year the shouting got so bad that Erich Lessing, who is a
professor of photography in Vienna and was then in his sixties,
was obliged to clamber on to a table, stamp his feet and bellow
at the top of his voice to try and restore order. Another year
Bruce Davidson and Burt Glinn, both long-standing Magnum colleagues
based in New York, could be found on their feet, leaning over
from opposite sides of a table, noses inches apart, veins bulging,
screaming at each other. Observers vividly remember Davidson,
who was in his fifties, accusing Glinn, who was in his sixties,
of being a prostitute, an apparent reference to Glinn’s willingness
to take on corporate work. A different disagreement, the details
of which few can now remember, left Erich Hartmann looking as
if he might be the sole surviving member after everyone else had
threatened to resign en masse and in high dudgeon. On yet another
occasion, when Philip Jones Griffiths refused to attend the meeting
in New York, a delegation went round to his apartment intent on
kidnapping him. Unfortunately Jones Griffiths is a burly Welshman
built like a rugby forward and all attempts to bundle him into
the elevator on the eleventh floor of his building failed. Jones
Griffiths’s grievance was that he disapproved of a decision to
move the New York office into new premises in Spring Street, SoHo,
and consequently vowed never to set foot inside the place. Since
the meeting was being held in the new office, he naturally felt
honour bound to absent himself
Eugene Richards was so appalled by the experience of his first
meeting that he could have left the agency that very day. ‘There
were tirades that went on for hours and there was a sort of pleasure
in the abuse. This kind of behaviour among such a sophisticated
and talented group of people was quite shocking. And it went on
and on. It was an eye-opener and I didn’t understand it: such
malevolence, such negativity seeping into the institution and the
quality of the relationships. It was very sad that such bitterness
would persist for so long that it developed into paranoia and
fear.’
‘It takes several years of meetings to begin to have a clue as
to what is going on,’ explains Alex Webb, a Harvard graduate who
joined Magnum in 1974. ‘You can be listening to someone speaking
and you begin to realise he is referring to something that could
have happened fifteen years ago, some great grievance that is
still sitting there and you can’t understand why. Why all the
anger, what’s it about?’
‘I often thought Magnum would self destruct,’ says Lee Jones,
who was New York bureau chief in the 1960s. ‘There were always
lots of fights, people walking out, doors slamming. Rumours ran
rife that so-and-so was resigning, or had already resigned, and
then they would turn up next day in the middle of dinner. Sometimes
the photographers would literally throw tantrums, lie on the floor
and drum their heels or bang spoons on the table.
‘The history of Magnum is full of murders. They always kill their
kings; they killed anybody who tried to run them. It’s probably
why they’re still around. The things that most organisations offer
are money or power or glory. In Magnum money has always been problematical,
power is something that was never allowed to rest in one person’s
hands for very long and glory most certainly had to be shared.
A great many people have come in, rolled up their sleeves and
tried to get the place straightened out, but it always fell apart
when they tried to do it.’
The annual general meeting in 1996 was held in Paris, at the Magnum
offices in Passage Piver, in the distinctly unfashionable 11th
arrondissement. Before the meeting a black-bearded Iranian member
who goes by the single name of Abbas circulated a memorandum warning
of problems ahead: ‘As we are about to celebrate – with some complacency
– our 50th [anniversary], the main danger we are facing is not
money, shrinking markets, shifting organisation and a tough outside
world. The danger is within ourselves: it is mediocrity.
Wa salaam.’
With these portentous words to chew on and chew over, members
gathered in the courtyard at Passage Piver on a warm and sunny
Thursday morning for the first session, which was due to start
at 10.30 but was promptly postponed because a number of the French
photographers were due to attend a ceremony at which Robert Delpire,
director of the Centre National de la Photographie in Paris, was
being invested with a medal. Chris Steele-Perkins, the president
of Magnum, announced that the meeting would now start at one o’clock
sharp.
With his white T-shirt, baggy cotton trousers and sandals without
socks, Steele-Perkins set the informal tone for the occasion.
Multi-pocketed waistcoats and variations on a safari theme were
favoured by other members. But no one could mistake the fact that
this was a conclave of photographers, for many of them had Leicas
hanging round their necks and amused themselves by taking pictures
of each other. Larry Towell, who farms in rural Ontario when he is
not working as a photographer, turned up in a straw hat, striped
shirt, braces and jeans, while Micha Bar-Am, who has covered every
war in the Middle East since the foundation of Israel, would have
looked like an Old Testament prophet, with his luxuriant beard,
had it not been for his combat jacket and tinted spectacles. Jean
Gaumy, the French vice-president, bears a striking resemblance
to a mischievous pixie and darted about with a video camera to
produce a filmed record.
Usually only those members who are sulking or are on unavoidable
assignments miss the annual meeting, even though it often means
travelling halfway round the world. But travel is nothing to these
people; it is an integral part of their lives as professional
photographers and getting to Paris is a lot easier than reaching
many of the places in which they find themselves. Indeed, not
long after chairing the meeting, Chris Steele-Perkins was in Afghanistan
with the government forces just outside Kabul when a rocket-propelled
grenade failed to explode right in front of him.
The meeting did not, of course, start at one o’clock prompt because
by then a buffet lunch had materialised in the courtyard with
cold chicken, salads, some fine cheese, an excellent red wine
and, curiously, two bottles of Pernod which remained primly unopened.
But at two, after much cajoling, the members were assembled in
a darkened ground floor studio for the traditional opening event,
an opportunity for members to show what they have been working
on during the previous twelve months. ‘Please make it very tight’,
the agenda pleaded, ‘as there are a lot of people, around 30 slides
per presentation.’
Chris Steele-Perkins kicked off with a selection of bleak pictures
of the homeless he had taken as part of a project he was working
on with a London charity. As the carousel clicked, the wretched
faces of the urban dispossessed stared out from the white wall
on to which the pictures were being projected. They were followed
by scenes of crime and violence in South Africa, competitors at
the Paralympics and British football supporters. Steele-Perkins’s
presentation was received with a polite ripple of applause.
For the next hour or so those present were whisked around the
world, mostly with images in black and white, which is the preferred
medium for those who consider themselves to be serious about photography.
(It is also an enigma for ordinary folk: why would anyone want
to photograph an indisputably colourful world in monochrome? If
colour film had been invented first, would anybody even contemplate
photographing in black and white?)
Thomas Hoepker showed the destruction of the rainforest in Borneo
and Sarawak; Patrick Zachmann showed the elections in Taiwan,
the Mafia in Russia and the funeral of François Mitterand; Nicos
Economopoulos showed the Greek Orthodox religion struggling in
Israel, Serbia, Albania and Monrovia; Abbas brought along pictures
from Israel and the Philippines, part of a major project on Christianity
around the world; John Vink had been working in the mountains
of Guatemala with Médicines sans Frontières – ‘I kept the project
cheap,’ he explained. ‘I only spent $300 in six weeks’; Larry
Towell showed a portfolio on a Mennonite community in Mexico;
Elliott Erwitt presented a typically wry selection from a new
book called Museum Watching; David Hurn showed Welsh landscapes,
portraits and lifestyle; Martine Franck had photographed children
in Nepal and India considered to be reincarnations of deceased
lamas; David Harvey gave his presentation on Spanish culture in
Cuba; and Ferdinando Scianna showed a moving set of pictures of
invalids clinging to faith and hope on a pilgrimage to Lourdes.
As a demonstration of a truly international organisation it was
impressive in every way, not least in the backgrounds of the presenters,
who were: an Englishman born in Burma; a German living in America;
a Frenchman; a Greek; a Belgian; an Iranian living in France;
a Canadian; an American born in Paris to Russian immigrants; a
Welshman born in England; a Belgian raised in America and married
to a Frenchman; an American and an Italian.
At four o’clock it was time for the first business meeting in
a borrowed room on the opposite side of the courtyard. Eve Arnold,
diminutive, silver-haired and slightly stooped, arrived just before
it was due to begin and was warmly welcomed by everyone with kisses
on both cheeks, rather like a much loved Jewish mother turning
up for a big family reunion, which in a way is what she was. She
took her place at the long table in the centre of the room and
those unable to find chairs sat around the floor and leaned up
against the wall or squatted on a flight of stairs leading to
an office above. This proved to be something of a nuisance since
the office above was a production company auditioning for a television
commercial and throughout the meeting a procession of astonishingly
beautiful young women picked their way up and down the stairs,
causing considerable distraction and much nudging and eye-rolling.
The first business was to hand out a green report containing the
previous year’s figures. This was initially studied with enormous
concentration, not because everyone present was suddenly taking
an interest in the balance sheet, but because the report listed
what each photographer had earned. ‘Of all the paper that is going
to be pushed around this weekend’, one member whispered, ‘this
makes the most interesting reading.’
The news that Chris Steele-Perkins had to impart to his colleagues
was uniformly bad. Magnum, he said, was facing the worst crisis
in its history. It was different from the crises that are always
raised at every annual meeting: this one was life-threatening.
Unless urgent action was taken, Magnum would collapse. The figures
continued to go down relentlessly. Assignments, both editorial
and commercial, were decreasing every year. The archive, the so-called
‘gold mine’ that everyone said Magnum was sitting on, was not
being sufficiently exploited, particularly in America, which was
the biggest market in the world. The debts incurred by the New
York office were now no longer sustainable, but none of the offices
was working properly. A new, radical business strategy had to
be devised, and additional funding identified, if Magnum was to
stand any chance of surviving. . .
The members received all this with remarkable equanimity. It was
immediately clear that Magnum meetings were unlike any corporate
meeting anywhere in the world. While Steele-Perkins was talking,
people wandered in and out, whispered among themselves, read newspapers,
took photographs and occasionally nodded off to sleep. Philip
Jones Griffiths remained engrossed in Private Eye more or less
throughout.
‘When I look at the consolidated figures,’ Steele-Perkins continued,
‘I find it very depressing that a lot of the new members are only
earning peanuts, making $9000 or even less. With the offices not
working properly, we have not much to offer them. What we are
saying to them is, give us your money and get screwed and they
should be thanking us. Is that what we are offering new photographers?’
Jones Griffiths looked up from his magazine for a moment to offer
the following: ‘Everything that has happened in the world of photography
we did first and here we are bankrupt and divided and on our knees
and our competitors are millionaires. Why? Everyone think
on that before they go to sleep tonight.’
‘How can we be efficient and make concrete decisions in the next
days?’ asked Gilles Peress. ‘We must have a business plan.’
‘Every year we make plans and rules,’ complained Thomas Hoepke
‘and every year they are forgotten as soon as we walk out of the
door.’
Patrick Zachmann said the structure of the agency had to be made
lighter to make them all more free. If you ask younger members
if they are satisfied with the structure, they are not.
‘We’ve never been businessmen,’ Leonard Freed put in. ‘If it’s
a business, let’s hire businessmen to run it. We are out photographing,
that’s what we do. Why ask us to make business decisions?’ Freed
was wearing a T-shirt which resonated curiously with the despairing
nature of the debate. Written across his chest was ‘What does
it all mean? What is the purpose of it all?’
A young Belgian member, Carl De Keyzer, complained that he had
been in Magnum for six years and had only had five or six assignments.
‘We don’t just fail in one area,’ Jones Griffiths put in, this
time not bothering to look up from his magazine; ‘we fail in all
areas.’
‘People keep blaming each other,’ Martin Parr, one of the most
successful of the London members, pointed out. ‘But if you are
not selling pictures, maybe your pictures are not good enough.
If you want to do a project, you have to set it up yourself You can’t
blame everyone else.’
Burt Glinn swore that running the New York office for the last
year had been the hardest year of his life.
‘When I came to my first meeting,’ said Patrick Zachmann, ‘I thought
we were going to talk about photography and photographic issues,
but all we talked about was business, even though we are not businessmen.’
At this point Chris Steele-Perkins asked for views from those
members who had so far not spoken and Georgui Pinkhassov, a quiet
Russian attached to the Paris office, volunteered the information
that thus far he had rien compris. He was ashamed because
he did not speak English and he did not want to talk in banalities.
‘That won’t disqualify you here,’ Glinn quipped.
When Gilles Peress offered to translate, Pinkhassov embarked on
a long and emotional speech about what it meant to him to be a
member of Magnum, how much he was stimulated by membership and
how much more cultured he had found his Magnum colleagues than
those unfortunates who worked for other photo agencies. ‘I am
looking for someone in Magnum,’ he finally concluded, somewhat
mysteriously, ‘who will be on my side against the world.’
Chris Boot, the bureau chief in London warned the members that
they had to decide collectively which way they wanted to go. ‘You
could decide to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary by closing
Magnum down. The first question is whether there is the collective
will in the organisation to work together and reach the market
potential.’
‘Options,’ said Chris Steele-Perkins, summing up, ‘will be put
on the table and you will have to decide. It’s your company.’
With these words, the meeting adjourned for the day, leaving everyone
just about enough time to prepare for the party which is always
held on the first evening. No stranger attending the crowded party
on the roof of the Paris office that night would ever have guessed
that Magnum had a care in the world. It was a wonderfully warm
evening with the last rays of the sun bathing the surrounding
rooftops in a pink glow. Taittinger champagne flowed, appropriately
by the magnum, the buffet was magnificent and spirits were high,
to judge by the animated conversation and the laughter. Only later
did Paris bureau chief Francois Hebel admit that Taittinger had
donated the champagne in return for a Magnum member photographing
the bottle.
Friday was the big day for the presentation and assessment of
portfolios from photographers aspiring to join Magnum and from
those wishing to move up a level from nominee to associate and
from associate to full member. All young photographers are welcome,
and indeed encouraged, to show their work to Magnum at any time,
but to join the agency the work has to be seen and approved by
a majority of members at the annual meeting. A leaflet advising
aspirants how to present a portfolio to Magnum is hardly encouraging:
it points out that successful applicants will only be invited
to become a nominee member – ‘a category of membership which presents
an opportunity for Magnum and the individual to get to know each
other but where there are no binding commitments on either side’
– and that in each of the last five years no more than two applicants
have ever been successful. Some years none made it.
The meeting was due to start at 10.30 on Friday morning and so
it started promptly at 11.30, with Steele-Perkins muttering dark
threats about what he intended to do if people couldn’t keep to
the schedule. The morning was occupied by presentations from Donovan
Wylie, a Belfast-born associate applying for full membership,
and from Luc Delahaye, a young Frenchman hoping to move up from
nominee to associate. Both, by coincidence, showed photographs
from the bitter fighting in Chechnya earlier that year. Wylie
bolstered his portfolio with an offbeat photo essay of Russians
going to the polls, while Delahaye included more war pictures
from Bosnia and Rwanda, among them some terrible shots of bodies
being tipped into a mass grave by bulldozers, and a quirky set
of pictures taken with a hidden camera of people travelling on
the Metro in Paris.
Thirty-three-year-old Delahaye was a popular figure in the Paris
office and was talked about as a worthy successor to Robert Capa.
By the time he had joined Magnum in 1994, he was already a veteran
of Beirut, the fall of Ceausescu in Romania, Bosnia, Afghanistan
and Rwanda. Only a few months after being elected as a nominee
he was arrested by the Serbs in Bosnia and held blindfolded for
three days, during which he was tortured and frequently told he
was going to be taken outside to be executed. He was only released
after Magnum put pressure on the French foreign ministry to take
action.
The discussion over the relative merits of the pictures submitted
by Wylie and Delahaye was animated and occasionally heated. If
there were any reservations about Delahaye’s work it was only
that it conformed too closely to Magnum’s bulging archive of war
pictures. ‘I’ve seen so many pictures in war situations,’ sighed
the voluble Italian, Ferdinando Scianna, ‘that I’m starting to
think I have seen them all before.’
London member Peter Marlow tended to agree. ‘How many people have
to die,’ he asked, ‘for someone to become a member of Magnum?’
James Nachtwey, Magnum’s best-known and most experienced war photographer,
argued persuasively that while the world suffered from war it
had to be covered. He was supported by Stuart Franklin, the British
photographer who took the famous picture of the student standing
in front of a tank in Tiananmen Square: ‘I think Luc is documenting
history in an eloquent and forceful way, not just for us but for
the world.’
The argument then moved on to the struggle between art and journalism,
Magnum’s tendency to reincarnate itself and its doubtful willingness
to consider truly innovative work seriously. ‘What kind of photographers
do we want?’ Patrick Zachmann demanded. ‘Those who reassure us
by taking the same kind of pictures we are taking, or those doing
really new work?’
It was finally left to Ferdinando Scianna to put his finger on
what was going on. ‘While we are talking about them,’ he announced,
‘what we are actually doing is talking about ourselves.’
In the end, Delahaye was accepted as an associate. Wylie’s application
for full membership was rejected, but it was agreed he should
be asked to stay on as an associate and apply again later. Both
men were sitting outside in the courtyard waiting for the decision.
David Hurn, a long-standing and respected member who was a friend
of Wylie’s, was designated to break the bad news to him, while
everyone else fell on the alfresco lunch buffet laid out on trestle
tables.
Wylie seemed philosophical about it. Indeed, it is no disgrace
to be passed over for membership since it is far from an infrequent
occurrence. Sebastiao Salgado, one of the most illustrious names
to be working in Magnum in the 1980s, failed on his first attempt
to become a full member, although he admitted it hurt at the time.
Peter Marlow recalls walking round New York in a fury muttering
‘Bastards, bastards’ under his breath after being told he was
‘not ready’ for full membership.
In the afternoon it was time to consider the portfolios submitted
by would-be nominees. They were spread around on tables in the
studio and were mercilessly scrutinised. None provoked much enthusiasm
and most were dismissed as not worthy of serious consideration,
even though they represented the best of the work tendered to
the individual offices. Only one submission generated any heat
– a portfolio by a woman photographer of intriguing colour pictures
of ordinary Russian families at home, staring directly into the
camera. They were in some ways strangely compelling, the kind
of pictures that instantly make you want to know more about the
subjects, but they had nothing to do with photo journalism and
thus immediately aroused the animosity of the photo journalists,
while the ‘art photographers’ waxed enthusiastic.
The debate quickly returned to the topic of the morning, Magnum’s
unwillingness to accept genuinely original work, and soon everyone
was talking at once, their voices rising to try and make themselves
heard. When Philip Jones Griffths boomed ‘WE ARE NOT ARTISTS’
there was complete uproar, with many members on their feet shouting,
some quivering with rage. Sadly, the argument turned personal
when someone said that the photographer concerned was a ‘bit pushy’;
Eve Arnold ventured the view that if she was admitted she would
be divisive. So then they began to quarrel about why it was that
the personality and character of women applicants was always taken
into greater consideration than when men were being considered.
In the end it was academic, since only three names got through
to a final short list and only one, a young Italian, was deemed
acceptable to the majority.
The final meeting of the day was to discuss the photographers’
contracts. By then Magnum’s lawyer, Howard Squadron, had shown
up at Passage Piver. Squadron is a highly regarded corporate lawyer
in New York who numbers Rupert Murdoch among his clients. He has
been the legal adviser to Magnum since the 1950s, more out of
affection than out of any hope that the agency will ever be able
to pay his fees. He is an unashamed fan, a close friend of many
of the photographers and describes the annual meeting as his ‘marvellous
annual lost weekend’. He enjoys the adventures of the photographers
vicariously. He still talks about the meeting when Burt Glinn
arrived straight from Cuba after accompanying Castro on his triumphant
entry into Havana, while other photographers arrived from covering
the revolution in Hungary and war in the Middle East: ‘I remember
looking round the room and thinking what a very remarkable group
of people they were.’ Squadron has handled most of Magnum’s numerous
divorces and he and his family have, he says, been photographed
‘up, down and sideways’ by members.
The lawyer sees his role in the agency as somewhere between a
rabbi and a business adviser, helping the photographers to figure
out a way of doing whatever it is they want to do. ‘Essentially
the same issues are discussed at every meeting,’ he explains.
‘The first is how to run an agency when the bosses are constantly
travelling all over the world, the second is money; the third
is competition between the offices and the fourth is philosophy,
the direction Magnum should be taking. Because photographers are
concerned with the creative aspects of their work, they are neither
interested nor involved in the nuts and bolts of corporate management
and are not very business oriented.’
Squadron candidly admits that he is ‘stunned’ that Magnum has
endured so long. ‘It is extremely difficult to run what is essentially
a profit-making business on a non-profit basis. I think it is
held together by a rather special glue – the commitment of the
photographers and their conviction that the only way they can
protect their rights is by staying together.’
Saturday was devoted to the thorny question of how Magnum is to
survive. Chris Steele-Perkins greeted his colleagues like this:
‘Today is the day. We are in a lot of trouble. Today we have the
chance to put it right, or we can just hope for a miracle.’ The
New York office had lost $300,000 in the last twelve months and
accumulated losses now stood at around $I million. The loyalty
of the photographers was in doubt because they could never be
sure when they would get their money. The previous October the
New York office literally ran out of money and could not even
pay its telephone bill, let alone the fees owed to photographers.
Both the Paris and Tokyo offices had also lost money, although
not to the same extent as New York.
‘The reason New York is such a disaster,’ someone would confide
later, ‘is that the photographers there won’t work together because
they all hate each other.’
François Hebel and Chris Boot, the bureau chiefs in Paris and
London, began explaining a radical rescue package they had devised
which would involve setting up a separate company within Magnum
– Boot called it M2 – to co-ordinate the global marketing of the
archive, including a catalogue. It would require raising new investment
but could dramatically improve profit. A key part of the plan,
they emphasised, was that the members should be willing to loosen
their control of the agency and allow the staff to get on with
it.
Howard Squadron, the voice of reason, was sceptical. ‘What is
being suggested here is an entrepreneurial exercise and in general
entrepreneurial exercises are run by entrepreneurs and not by
committees. This proposal will essentially eliminate photographer
control and I would suggest that that is a matter for discussion.
Many photographers over the years have been concerned about how
their images are presented and marketed. If you embark on this
path many of those concerns will have to be put aside if you are
going to have commercial success. Every business venture starts
with the question: what is the market? If you do not know the
market very clearly, you are not going to be able to proceed.
Furthermore I think it will be very difficult to borrow the money;
I don’t think a bank will lend without a demonstrable track record
of commercial success, which you do not have. That brings me to
investment. It would be best for the photographers themselves
to invest the money needed rather than give away part of the store
and give up some control. Quite frankly, and do not take this
wrongly, this is not an amateur exercise.’
Uniquely among those present, Squadron could command complete
silence and total attention, even from those French photographers
who could not understand a word of English. After he had finished,
a babble broke out with a dozen different points of view being
expressed at once. When Steele-Perkins had restored a semblance
of order, everyone was given the opportunity to put their point
of view, but Patrick Zachmann, who was sitting on the floor on
one side of the room, clearly felt he was not getting a fair hearing:
suddenly he got to his feet, shaking his head and muttering something
in French, threw his bag over his shoulder and stalked out, his
dark eyes flashing furiously.
For a moment there was silence while everyone looked at each other,
possibly wondering what had brought on this fit of pique or whether
an attempt should be made to persuade him to come back. Eventually
Gilles Peress went out after Zachmann, followed by François Hebel,
followed by Steele-Perkins, followed by Jean Gaumy, followed by
Bruno Barbey. They all huddled in the courtyard while those remaining
in the room read the newspapers or gossiped. ‘There was no reason
for him to walk out like that slamming the door,’ someone said.
‘He didn’t slam the door,’ Burt Glinn pointed out; ‘there isn’t
a door.’
Zachmann, who joined Magnum in 1985, is one of the cadre of Paris-based
photographers who see themselves as artists rather than journalists.
He takes pictures, he explains, to express himself and to try
to understand the world and himself better. This has not, however,
prevented him from being shot. He happened to be in South Africa,
working on a personal project, when Nelson Mandela was released
from prison. Because he was a Magnum photographer and because
he thought he might be able to make a little money, he decided
he ought to try and record the occasion and so he made his way
to the city hall in Cape Town, where Mandela was due to meet the
people. Waiting with two other photographers for the great man
to arrive, they heard shooting and ran to where the noise was
coming from, straight into a confrontation between nervous white
policemen and a crowd apparently looting shops. As Zachmann turned
the corner the police fired and he took a full blast of buckshot
in the chest, legs and arms. He clearly remembers falling and
thinking he was going to die and being angry at the injustice
of being shot when he wasn’t even a journalist. He was also rather
irritated that one of his companions, who clearly was a journalist,
took a picture of him before dragging him into shelter and calling
an ambulance.
It took about half an hour to persuade Zachmann to return to the
meeting, but he would only stand at the back, glowering. He was
in time to hear an impassioned speech from Ferdinando Scianna
which was hard for an outsider to follow, partly because he spoke
from his scribbled notes in a mixture of English, French and Italian
and partly because his theme was centred on the need to ‘free
ourselves from our mothers and the kibbutz’. When he finally resumed
his seat he received a round of applause, perhaps more for élan
than for content.
A suggestion that every photographer should ante up $20,000 to
help the New York office out of its financial crisis was rejected
on the incontestable grounds that many members did not have anything
like that kind of money available to put into the pot, even if
they felt so inclined. There was also an unpleasant spat between
Gilles Peress and Chris Boot, when Peress complained about the
accounting in New York and asserted that he could spot mistakes
in ‘the blink of an eye’. ‘If we tried to answer all the questions
you raise,’ Boot retorted, ‘it would take up all the time of the
staff,’ Peress fixed Boot with a sullen stare as Boot explained
that Peress had once asked him to provide all his figures for
the previous fifteen years. Peress has since insisted he could
not have asked Boot for the figures for the last fifteen years
but only those for the last fifteen months in which the photographers
did not receive their monthly statements and, that when accounting
figures were finally received, they contained substantial inaccuracies.
It was clearly a surprise to all those present that when it was
time to take a vote on the rescue package, everyone agreed that
it should go ahead. Boot was jubilant. ‘Do you realise,’ he whispered,
‘this is a real breakthrough?’ Howard Squadron, a slight smile
playing on his lips, said nothing.
By Sunday it was evident that the members were getting demob happy
and looking forward to the meeting drawing to an end. There were
no fireworks and the debate was flaccid, covering a whole range
of issues, from the legal implications of people injured by a
bomb in Algeria successfully petitioning that photographs of them
at the scene had invaded their privacy, to whether or not Magnum
should have its own Web site and design its own screensaver. Jones
Griffiths was dismissive. ‘Will a screensaver make Magnum look
like a serious organisation with its finger on the pulse. What
next? A T-shirt? The asset strippers will be marketing our
toenail clippings in plastic bags next.’
One desultory exchange prompted a rare contribution from the taciturn
Elliott Erwitt, who, as one of the very early photographers to
be recruited, says he only intervenes in the debate to ‘protect
some of the things that the younger ones are too stupid to understand’.
Someone complained that a proposal was unfair. ‘Well life is unfair,’
said Burt Glinn, ‘no question about it.’ ‘Since when?’ "
said Erwitt.
A journalist who was once commissioned to write a 12,000-word
article about Erwitt was warned that it would be impossible because
Erwitt had ‘never spoken 12,000 words in his whole life’. He certainly
had only one word – ‘tiresome’ – to describe the tenor of most
annual meetings. ‘Magnum is a combination of a lot of diverse
people who are prima donnas. There are a lot of egos and so there
is a lot of in-fighting. I have been a witness to this stuff for
the last forty-three years and it gets a little tiresome because
a lot of it is the same, but I guess it’s a part of running your
own business. If you analyse it, I guess it’s better than working
for Time Inc. or Murdoch.’
‘The meetings used to be great fun in the old days,’ said Ian
Berry. ‘I used to look forward to them. You know, this crazy gang,
with not a damn thing in common except photography, would get
together and try to sort out why we’d lost so much money during
the year. There were some great characters around and it would
always deteriorate into the most marvellous rows.’
During the lunch break Jones Griffiths told a wonderfully malicious
and probably apocryphal story about how the New York photographers
had once organised a joint project on Paris, much to the fury
of the Paris office, which could not abide the idea of American
photographers working in their beloved city. When the project
was selected for inclusion in an exhibition in Paris it was the
final straw. On the night before the exhibition, said Jones Griffiths,
Cartier-Bresson organised a van loaded with pictures taken by
the Paris photographers, drove round to the gallery, removed all
the pictures by American photographers and replaced them with
the French pictures. (‘Totally untrue’, Cartier-Bresson said later,
‘Absolute rubbish.’)
Coincidentally, a letter from Henri Cartier-Bresson was read out
that afternoon expressing his regret that he could not be present
– he was in hospital for a minor operation – but wishing everyone
well. Cartier-Bresson, the sole surviving founding member, retains
considerable affection for Magnum. Although he has not been working
actively as a photographer for more than twenty years he says
there is an umbilical cord which keeps him attached to the agency.
He points out, with delight, that in the year he was chairman
of the board the minutes of the annual meeting note that the chairman
was ‘kindly requested to avoid doing water colours during the
meeting’.
‘Magnum,’ he says, ‘is a community of thought, a shared human
quality, a curiosity about what is going on in the world, a respect
for what is going on and a desire to transcribe it visually. That
is why the group has survived. That’s what holds it together.’
‘Sure we’re like a family,’ says Elliott Erwitt; ‘that’s why we
tear each other’s throats out.’
‘Oh yes, we’re a family,’ says Ferdinando Scianna. ‘I hate my
family.’
Copyright © Russell Miller 1997
Extracted from Magnum by Russell Miller
by arrangement with Secker & Warburg, Random House, 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road, London SW1V 2SA