Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/12/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Very nicely articulated Peter; great context. The only piece you missed: Adams and Weston et al also worked (somewhat in harmony as the f:64 group) revolting against the pictorialist's romantic view of people, places and things; making them cutting edge and going against the current trends. Fond regards, George george@imagist.com http://www.imagist.com http://www.imagist.com/blog http://www.linkedin.com/in/imagist On Dec 23, 2008, at 3:22 PM, Peter Klein wrote: > George, you're right, Erwitt's jab *is* ridiculously glib. Let's > try to > put it in context. > > We have to remember that Adams was a generation older than Erwitt. > In the > 30s and 40s, both Adams' almost Wagnerian interpretation of the > American > West and the level to which he quantified the process of > photography were > relatively new and unique things. By the time Erwitt came of age, > an Adams > landscape was an established norm that newer artists were reacting > against. > > The Zone System was just a codification of things Adams had worked > out in > practice. His followers turned it into a One True Faith. Of course a > photographer like Erwitt would find that nonsense--by the time you > could > think "N-1," the moments that most Erwitt images captured would be > gone. > Plus, Erwitt wasn't interested in grand landscapes. He was > interested in > people, dogs, oddball moments and quirky juxtapositions. > > Lots of photographic trends become ridiculous at the hands of the > faithful. Remember the "I never crop" fetish of the HCB followers, > which > included filing black border space into your negative carrier? > Then we > found out that HCB did in fact crop. > > My own way of photographing is much more like Erwitt's than like > Adams, > but I appreciate Adams, too. > > I had the good fortune to see an exhibit of Adams' prints (in Las > Vegas, > no less!), along with some of his equipment and letters. In his > letters, > I found a man who was as much an emotional artist as the most > unablashed > Romantic. It's just that he developed a painstaking method that > gave him > the best chance of capturing what he saw. > > Here's a good article placing Adams in perspective: > <http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/ansel-adams-but- > is-it-art-749574.html> > > I remember an article in the old "Camera 35", probably by David > Vestal. He > had a dream where he was trying to photograph a subject with > particularly > challenging dynamic range. The Adams' ghost appeared to him and > whispered > in his ear: "Bracket." > > --Peter > > George wrote: > >> I too love what Erwitt notices and how he presents it to us. >> He notices visual irony at a very sophisticated and humorous level. >> He has a unique and uncanny ability in noticing what he does. >> >> "Photography is simply a function of noticing things. >> Nothing more." - Elliott Erwitt >> >> Ridiculously glib. Probably (hopefully) taken out of a larger >> context. >> >> All photographs "notice things." >> True enough. So what? >> >> Noticing unique and/or universal qualities in a subject; >> precise relevant moments; >> whether humorous, tragic, elegant, ironic, or whatever; >> the convergence of lines, shapes and forms into striking >> compositions; >> the balance of tones and/or colors; >> the use of textures and rhythms; >> then putting those notices >> onto a two dimensional surface >> in a way which actively communicates to the viewer of that piece >> of paper >> what, with a bit of why, you noticed; >> goes well beyond "simply a function of noticing things." >> >> And none of the above touches on the technical skill set >> required to achieve, in print, that which we "simply noticed." > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information