Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mike, You win a pyhrric victory, not with your poor and lazy logic, but with the spirit of your reply. That's not how I want to contribute to the LUG, and so I will add nothing more on this issue. But I can assure you that I am real. Alistair - -----Original Message----- From: Mike Johnston [mailto:michaeljohnston@ameritech.net] Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 1999 6:51 AM To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: [Leica] Cartier-Bresson Alistair: >>>you paraphrase original text to which I contributed, and to which others took issue, very inaccurately. You will see that acknowledgement is made of HCB's high competence, if you choose to read more carefully. What I object to is that we remain fixated on him. Apparently because he was first, we (the world, not the LUG) seem to accord his work much higher prices than that of other more (INVHO) talented photographers who came (some marginally) after<<< High competence? That's damning with faint praise.*I'm* highly competent. <g> I'm not a full-time photography critic, but I've had criticism published on three continents over two decades, and Cartier-Bresson is, in my considered opinion, one of the most important and influential art photographers of the 20th century. If you mean by "fixated" that we still appreciate his work and submit it to delectation, then I guess you're right; perhaps especially now that he is getting very aged and many of his books are being reprinted. And as far as prices are concerned, I confess I have no idea what it costs to buy a Cartier-Bresson print, or how that amount might compare to, say, the cost of a Carleton Watkins print (I saw one for $12,000 recently), or a dye transfer of a bad snapshot by David Salle ($25,000), or a Tina Barney, or a Galen Rowell, or a David Vestal print of Ansel Adams driving his pickup truck into the mountains (that you could have purchased for $60 from the Special Offer in my magazine a few issues back) (shot with a Leica M2, to boot), or a ($75,000 for a suite of 7 small B&W prints of indifferent quality, made, naturally, before she commtted suicide at the age of 22), or a fine modern print of a Jacques Lartigue photograph (very reasonable at well under $1,000, last I looked), or any of a long laundry-list of wildly over- and under-valued photographers on the art market today. Then again, I have every reason to expect that when Jackie Kennedy's belongings were auctioned after her death and fetched record prices, it didn't transpire that people had paid exorbitant sums of money for old end-tables, hairbrushes, cigar humidors, threadbare evening dresses, and the like, simply because they were really GOOD end-tables and hairbrushes and so forth. At least part of the reason why anyone would buy a Cartier-Bresson print is because it is...well, a Cartier-Bresson print; and if you want to have a photograph on your wall that was taken by one of the century's--and the medium's--most accomplished masters, then it will not quite do to substitute a print by one of the LUGgers whose talent you propose as being equal to his. Although it might be equally nice to look at. Sorry, I _am_ being a bit sardonic, and that is ungentlemanly. But really, get _real_ here, Alistair. :-( :-/ :-| :-) - --Mike