Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Thu, 15 June 2000, Martin Howard wrote: > > > I've been thinking about quality of cameras and quality of photography since > Kyle posted his message about the Toy Camera people. First off, I don't > think that it's necessary to justify the purchase of a Leica anymore than > the purchase of anything else. We live in a consumer society. If you want > one, buy one. If you don't, don't. Who cares what pictures you take with > it, or if it only sits on a shelf and collects admiring looks from jealous > acquaintances? Some people buy a $4000 camera rig to take close-ups of > blooming flowers, a genre of pictures that bores the living daylights out of > me, but I don't feel that I have the right to judge their expenditure of > money. Everyone has a different reason and arguing that one is more noble > or worthy than another is like arguing that people with red hair make better > citizens because they eat less peanut butter than fat kids: It doesn't make > sense. > <SNIP> > > I think that one of the most fundamental differences between good > photography and bad photography (or indifferent photography, which may or > may not be the same thing) is whether or not the photographer cared for the > subject they were taking a picture of. > <more SNIPped> > > I don't know what the answer is (short of selling all your possessions and > travelling the world taking pictures of people in plight to inform conceited > Western audiences in an attempt to educate them of the reality outside the > range of MasterCard, but that would mean having to drop the PhD studies and > I wouldn't be able to get that six figure income job in California that I'm > hoping for in a year's time) but my way of tackling it is to set myself > photographic assignments. Some get carried out, some don't, but it focusses > my photographic efforts. Caring for the subjects then follows as a > secondary reaction as you are forced beyond the first five rolls to start > looking at things properly and thinking about how you might portray them. > > So (and this is where we break from our previously formulated > epistemological efforts), how do *you* deal with this? > > M. > Very few LUG posts have caused me to reach for the dictionary as much as this one has. <g> Over-simplifying the question, it's "Why would any of us spend money on anything beyond basic nessesities like a used refrigerator box for shelter, a fig leaf for clothing and a couple of mouse traps for catching food?" I justify spending money on Leicas the same way I justify spending money on a weather-tight house instead of a cardboard box, Goretex instead of coated nylon, and a balanced meal instead of a box of macaroni & cheese: it makes my life more enjoyable. Nobody besides me knows what my priorities are, and criticism of my expenditures is a reflection of the critic's priorities. I enjoy using Leicas, I like the photos I can make with the camera, and my use of such an expensive camera doesn't jeapoardize my family's health, safety or education. No other justification is nessesary. Doug Herr Sacramento http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/telyt ___________________________________________________ The ALL NEW CS2000 from CompuServe Better! Faster! More Powerful! 250 FREE hours! Sign-on Now! http://www.compuserve.com/trycsrv/cs2000/webmail/