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Pictures that tell a thousand stories

John Pilger

Published 23 July 2001

This month, the Barbican opens an exhibition of great eyewitness photographs chosen by the NS columnist John Pilger. Introducing this selection, Pilger calls for a return to the best traditions of photographic journalism

Almost from the day I went on the road as a newspaper correspondent in the 1960s, I worked with photographers. We were a team, often assigned to places of upheaval, but also to peaceful streets, the sinews of people's lives, to ask ordinary people to tell their extraordinary stories in words and pictures. This was a new kind of reportage, pioneered in postwar Britain by Picture Post, following Life and Look magazines, whose essays allowed pictures and words to complement each other and the meaning of both to speak to the reader.

Great photographers are both story-tellers and truth-tellers, going against the consensual versions of events, such as the illusions of "booming" economies and "smart" wars. This is not to suggest that a photograph says it all. On the contrary, words are often vital to draw out the narrative and the intrinsic mysteries of documentary photographs. The two forms serve each other, and my best work, I believe, has been produced in harness, and comradeship, with some of the great photographers of my time. As media technology has advanced and become "global", so journalism, especially photojournalism, has become increasingly parochial, prurient and politically safe.

The great documentary form, the still photograph, has become largely a fashion and fame vehicle, answering to the incessant demands of the market. As for people's true lives, these are deemed unprofitable and of minimal interest. There remain many outstanding exceptions to this. By honouring the work of some of them, I would like this exhibition to be a rallying cry for the renewal of photojournalism as the first draft of people's history that journalism ought to be.

"Reporting the World: John Pilger's great eyewitness photographers" is at the Barbican Gallery, London EC2, 26 July-30 September. A book of the same title, from which this introduction is taken, is published by 21 Publishing Ltd (£12.99)

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About the writer

John Pilger

John Pilger, renowned investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, is one of only two to have twice won British journalism's top award; his documentaries have won academy awards in both the UK and the US. In a New Statesman survey of the 50 heroes of our time, Pilger came fourth behind Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela. "John Pilger," wrote Harold Pinter, "unearths, with steely attention facts, the filthy truth. I salute him."

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