I remember as a child, I loved photos.
Not so much having my picture taken, but watching people pose for their own.
One memory is clear as daylight: perched at the kitchen table, looking out onto our sunny veranda as Dad took a picture of Mum with our newborn baby brother.
I squinted into the sun at my beautiful mother, smiling her megawatt smile towards the camera. Dad was smiling too as he clicked the camera, and that was that. One shot. He was happy, she was happy, and it would be weeks before the roll of film was developed and anyone could, or would, feel otherwise.
In 2016, Golden Age of The Selfie – have we lost the art of posing for a picture?
Self-taken photographic portraits have been around since the invention of the camera.
Humans have always been fascinated with capturing the world around them, which inevitably included themselves. One of my favourites surely must be Buzz Aldrin’s space selfie snapped during the 1966 Gemini 12 Mission, pictured above.
It was so innocent, so fumbled, so gleeful – it seemed to say, look at me! I’m in space!
But it was what it didn’t say that was more significant: unlike the modern selfie, it was not vainglorious. It didn’t say, look at me, I’m a handsome chap! Or, look at me, I’m in space and you’re not!
The narcissistic ‘selfie’ as we know it today, is said to have crept into our common vernacular around 2013.