Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/11/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I was at MoMA three weeks ago and was marveling at the poor technical quality (by today's standards) of some of the world's most famous photographs from the turn of the century. In fact, some of the pictures weren't that good either. This prompts two comments to points that Ted and Tina made. 1. It's one thing to say - at (or near) the retirement end of your career - that it would have been nice to have advanced technologies fifty years ago. But where those technologies democratize photography, it's another thing to say you would have survived - or even started - in the field. What we see as great photos throughout the ages were largely filtered by barriers to entry. Materials were expensive, not everyone owned a good camera, and not everyone knew how to print. Today, with the accessibility of digital photography and publishing on the internet, it is clear that many, many people have raw talent on what have once been called a high level, and the market is tough. And people who are not full-time photographers are dumping literally millions of pictures into the market and are doing so at cut- rate prices. Even though a large proportion is noise, it still exerts downward pressure on pricing. 2. It's a bit of an overgeneralization to suggest that what is true of a commercial photographic practice is true of people who pursue photography for enjoyment (or sale of physical prints). If production of color stock photos is the goal, then digital photography wins hands down. Once you wander outside of areas that need mass production or accelerated completion, the questions change. Should Adobe Illustrator displace all hand drawing for people who aren't commercial artists? After all, it's more efficient and doesn't require exposure to India ink. Shouldn't we replace watercolor painting with Photoshopped photographs? Maybe you've decided that darkroom work isn't for you - but there are plenty of people who use computers all day and don't want to use them for leisure activities. And for "fine- art" sales? I'll offer this observation based on several years of work on the exhibition committee of nonprofit gallery: in some markets, it's very difficult to sell photography at all, and conventional forms of photography (b/w, C-prints, etc.) sell far better than inkjet work. Rightly or wrongly, potential buyers seem to be a bit put off by the identification on a price card of a technology that they associate with an office supply store. And one other comment (directed to a slightly broader group): 3. Calling "elitism" a motivation for darkroom work in the context of the LUG is absurd and hypocritical. This is a group that uses $7,000 digital cameras, $3,000 lenses, $2,000 inkjet printers, $100-a- cartridge archival ink, and $2-a-sheet rag inkjet paper and talks about how great they are... so it would call a group "elitist" that is using basically free equipment to manually print pictures the same way people have done for about 100 years? "Troglodytic" may be a more appropriate adjective, but it's not one that Leica users on the whole have any right to call anyone. Sorry to be such a grouch, but I've been drinking IKEA coffee at home. It's possibly made from roasted ground particle board. Dante NO ARCHIVE On Nov 5, 2009, at 4:10 PM, Tina Manley wrote: > At 03:09 PM 11/5/2009, you wrote: >> I'm glad digital came along when it finally did, although it was 45 >> years too late for what it could of done during my career. >> >> Dr. ted > > I agree totally, Ted, and the bottom line is - if darkroom > processing yielded a better result, even with the possibility of > chemical poisoning, I would still be doing darkroom processing > today; however, I get better results from lightroom and digital > printing than I could ever get in the darkroom. There might be some > professional darkroom aficionados who would disagree and could eek > better results from a file in the darkroom, but I'm sure if Ansel > Adams were alive today he would be printing totally digitally in the > lightroom. There is a lot of nostalgia and elitism connected with > darkroom work that I'm not sure is fully deserved. > > Tina > > Tina Manley > www.tinamanley.com > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information