Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/04/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]To put this whole thread into a little perspective you need to know the Sante Fe art market. Art photography there is sold in several venues, each with its own characteristic slant. The traditional masters (HCB, AA, the Westons) and the popular contemporaries (Annie Liebowitz, et al) are handled mainly by the Andrew Smith Gallery. Prices range from the mid-low 4-digits to well into the 5-digit range for the better-known artists. PhotoEye handles lesser-known but emerging artists whose reputations are still being formed, along with some leading-edge contemporaries (Teri Wiefenbach, John Gossage) and a few venerable locals (William Clift). Prices are lower than at Wm. Smith (upper 3-digits to mid 4-digits), and the artists less well known. To keep this market viable PhotoEye has to do some market-making of the type Tina has pointed out. Some of the richer Anglos in Sante Fe tend to be somewhat earth-crunchy and "spiritual" in orientation, and thus constitute a well-defined target that PhotoEye understands and caters to (or exploits, if you prefer). This doesn't say one thing or the other about the Morando photos, but it does sort of explain the hype, or Barnum hokum, or brilliant marketing, however you want to view it. I sort of like the pictures, think the marketing blab is silly, and wouldn't pay that kind of dough for any chromogenic print. I bought a Stephen Shore C-print back in the early 80s and it's no longer viewable. I think things are better now with the chemistry, but still ... BTW, a visit to the PhotoEye bookstore and gallery is a must if you're ever in Santa Fe. Amazing collection of photo books, and the gallery is usually fun, though problably not exactly up the typical LUGger's alley. It's right off Canyon Road, where they sell the *really* overhyped stuff (mostly paintings). -- Phil Swango 307 Aliso Dr SE Albuquerque, NM 87108 505-262-4085