Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/04/10

[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]

Subject: [Leica] Is Eggleston in the right? What is the meaning of "limited edition"?
From: mark at rabinergroup.com (Mark Rabiner)
Date: Wed, 10 Apr 2013 09:08:11 -0400

Make that then I'm guessing other materials  than carbon  to make pigments
from many of which being metal oxides but in other cases just plain powdered
metals.


On 4/10/13 8:56 AM, "Robert Meier" <robertmeier at usjet.net> wrote:

> Carbon is a metal?
> 
> 
> On Apr 10, 2013, at 4:15 AM, Mark Rabiner <mark at rabinergroup.com> wrote:
> 
>> Its just that EDITIONS in the graphics print making sense was not simply a
>> term which had dollar signs all over it. It came out of the process 
>> itself.
>> A stone or silkscreen or metal plate was only good for so many images as 
>> it
>> simply for oblivious reasons wore away and the image would get softer.
>> Early on in the edition is where you wanted to be. And those would cost
>> more. And for good reason as they'd be sharper.
>> The edition was defined by how many images one could produce from the
>> printing medium. A stone could make a lot more than a sheet of starched
>> silk. Or a potato cut in half.
>> It was for obvious reasons the stone would be broken when you were done
>> printing with it. It had gotten past the point where it would produce 
>> prints
>> to your liking. And you'd want any more prints made from it to be done by
>> you or your people with the money going into your bank account not some 
>> guy
>> you never met in the year 2525.
>> 
>> Photography by nature on the other hand is not about that.
>> Photography  never wears out;  a negative or slide or digital file can by
>> nature produce as many images as you'd want. Millions. Billions. You can
>> stack them up past the Empire state building to the moon.
>> 
>> And chances are next year or next decade when you return to that neg or 
>> file
>> the prints you'd make would look even better as the software and hardware
>> and people wear get better in time. As we are in the middle of burgeoning
>> image making technology we photographers. We've gone quickly from dye to
>> pigment to carbon and who knows what will be shooting out of those inkjets
>> next year? I'm guessing other metals than carbon. And the papers are 
>> getting
>> fabulous being made of Bamboo and returning to traditional Japanese  and
>> German paper making processes from hundreds of years ago mainly for the 
>> use
>> of water color people.
>> 
>> The idea of retiring a neg came out of desperate attempts to establish
>> earlier on photographs as a viable thing for gallery owners to make money
>> on. Why buy Pepper #6 for huge bucks if the artist is still alive cranking
>> them out? Or his son is?
>> I feel for the gallery owner who needs the latest BMW M or collector who
>> needs his body of collected work to keep their value but the medium itself
>> is just not about that.
>> Ansel was firmly against and and he in his writings on the issue certainly
>> convinced me.
>> I find destroying a neg to be an ultimate tragedy. And an insult against 
>> the
>> photographic process. And I'm not going to proceed in that direction.
>> All I can so is what I'd do. I cant speak for anyone else.
>> I've found at the AIPAD show last week seeing top work from the top 80 
>> photo
>> galleries a hell of a lot of limited editions. And I find such forced
>> business practices disheartening. I never thought it would get this big 
>> when
>> I first started seeing it I thought it was an unfortunate fad done by 
>> second
>> rate greedy business people. Not its quite accepted.
>> I will never succumb to it in my own work practices. And I'm not the only
>> one.
>> 
>> 
>> On 4/9/13 12:17 PM, "Lottermoser George" <imagist3 at mac.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> 
>>> On Apr 8, 2013, at 8:54 PM, Adam Bridge wrote:
>>> 
>>>> But now, when we work entirely in digital, when any number of copies 
>>>> can be
>>>> made at very small cost, does having a limited edition make any sense at
>>>> all?
>>>> Would you destroy an original RAW file (for example) to guarantee that
>>>> you'd
>>>> done a limited edition?
>>>> 
>>>> I'm left with a bad feeling. Maybe he wants a new M?
>>>> 
>>>> Anyway, am I off base here? What are your thoughts?
>>> 
>>> There are, and always have been, many different levels of "print making."
>>> As in every area of commerce integrity comes into play.
>>> The integrity of the artist/printmaker? the printer? the publisher? the
>>> agent/dealers? all.
>>> 
>>> The actual process whether darkroom, inkjet, lithograph, woodcut, 
>>> intaglio,
>>> or
>>> silkscreen;
>>> whether printed with an ink roller and a spoon or on some sort of press; 
>>> or
>>> any other technique is not the main issue.
>>> 
>>> The terms: "Limited Edition" and "First Edition" have meaning; a 
>>> history; a
>>> tradition;
>>> and deserve to be used honorably to preserves the integrity of all 
>>> involved
>>> in
>>> the production, distribution and sale of the editions.
>>> 
>>> Limited Editions require numbers to establish the stated "limits."
>>> First (and subsequent) Editions require notations establishing their
>>> numerical
>>> sequence.
>>> It also helps to have an artist's signature on the print - establishing 
>>> it
>>> as
>>> "author ized."
>>> 
>>> My read of the Eggleston judgement makes perfect sense within the 
>>> tradition
>>> of
>>> Limited and Sequential Editions.
>>> Had Eggleston pulled a Second Limited Edition of Dye Transfer Prints at
>>> exactly the same size, paper, etc.
>>> One would have to question the integrity of that decision - and its 
>>> effect
>>> on
>>> the "market value" of the Original Edition.
>>> This New Edition of much larger prints on different paper, using an
>>> altogether
>>> different printing process, should have little to no effect on the 
>>> "market
>>> value" of the Original Dye Transfer Edition. In all likelihood this New
>>> Edition will probably enhance the value of the Original Edition (in ways
>>> similar to the ever increasing value of a First Edition - over subsequent
>>> editions of our most prized authors). Since that Original Edition this
>>> artist
>>> has advanced in reputation and historical stature; with concomitant 
>>> growth
>>> in
>>> his base of collectors. The more people collecting Eggleston - the more
>>> valuable each Dye Transfer Print in that Original Limited Edition - 
>>> supply
>>> and
>>> demand.
>>> 
>>> The misunderstanding seems to rest in the assumption that a "Limited
>>> Edition"
>>> means that One and only one Limited Edition will ever be published
>>> from any given Negative, Plate, Block, Stone, Screen, etc.
>>> 
>>> While that may very well be the case; there have always been exceptions.
>>> The history of a plate, wood block, lithographic stone and/or negative 
>>> can
>>> be
>>> longer than the artist's life.
>>> Sometimes even within the artist's lifetime changes are made to the plate
>>> with
>>> new prints being made, with new dates and new edition numbers.
>>> see: <http://www.chicagoappraisers.com/rembrandt-history.html>
>>> 
>>> Bottom line: Documentation, Provenance, Signatures, Integrity of Artist,
>>> Printmaker, Printer, Publisher, Imprimatur, Dealer, Agent, Museum, 
>>> Collector
>>> will determine the monetary and historical value of any particular 
>>> artifact
>>> -
>>> whether a unique one-off or some sort of multiple.
>>> 
>>> Regards,
>>> George Lottermoser
>>> george at imagist.com
>>> http://www.imagist.com
>>> http://www.imagist.com/blog
>>> http://www.linkedin.com/in/imagist
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Leica Users Group.
>>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> Mark William Rabiner
>> Photography
>> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/lugalrabs/
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> Leica Users Group.
>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Leica Users Group.
> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information




-- 
Mark William Rabiner
Photography
http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/lugalrabs/




In reply to: Message from robertmeier at usjet.net (Robert Meier) ([Leica] Is Eggleston in the right? What is the meaning of "limited edition"?)