Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/12/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Steve Barbour offered: "This all makes me wish very much that the FOM2 book could eventually see the light of day... That incredible collection of photos, goes back 5-10 years...a competition that lasted 5 years...! a juried set of winning photos that really has got to be published somehow.<<<<<<<<<<< Hi Steve, I know Alistair and others put a great deal of time into this 5 year collection and it's a shame nothing has ever been done with it. I know Alistair has gone farther than most would in trying to make some kind of book or international exhibition happen. Let's say it hasn't been for lack of trying every trick in the book! If he hasn't yet done so maybe one last shot at the new owner of Leica as a commemorative book or international traveling exhibition when they open the new plant returned to Wetzlar. Whenever that is next year? Or 2009, but it is happening. Many newbies on the LUG have no idea what this series is about, quite frankly having been one of many judges around the world working on the selection, this final collection is far better then the "Family of Man" from the early '50's that became a major exhibition at MOMA in New York. The unfortunate part is that MOMA, if this is the case, didn't see the value in such a collection as a look at the world 50 plus years later from the original. WHY? We didn't have any Robert Capa's and other great name shooters of LIFE etc. from those early 1950 days entered. But what we did have were real everyday photographers shooting beautiful images of the world as it was during the first 5 years of the new millennium! A terrible error on MOMA's part not to grab onto it and show a statement of the changes over 50 years. You see these kinds of things happen because you have over educated university people with no simple folk experience running a big museum! NO BIG NAMES? Not worth doing anything with it! PITY! Maybe the new owner of Leica will have the fore sight and appreciate what sits before him as an incredible marketing tool and tribute to the Leica camera for the new Leica users of the future and those of the past. ted