Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Kotsinadelis, Peter (Peter) wrote: > > > I would think one would buy the equipment that allows one to > create the art > of a photograph. > A sharp lens will not produce a great image, only a photographer > can do this > regardless of what toll they use. Personally, I would rather see an HCB, > Avedon, or other image taken by a Brownie that one by a artistic > illiterate > taken with a very expensive Leica. > > Peter K > But that is not at all the point, who you would rather view a photograph taken by. If it were then the modern Leica would be hardly relevent, perhaps the M would be unique as a rangefinder, though it certainly wasn't even this in its day. The R series would be totally irrelevent, never at all unique. Indeed I imagine many great and artistic photographs have been taken by the worst of lenses. I believe the "pictoral school" of photography, popular in the earlier part of the 20th century had no great need for technical capabilities of lenses. Much of the rise of the 35mm camera in contrast to large format has been due to the very fact that the high lens quality allowed much smaller film area to be used in certain circumstances. E. Leitz never ran an "art school", it was a fine optics/engineering firm as was Wild-Heerbrug. Zeiss et al. then same. Much of Leitz' early business was in the area of microscopy, indeed closely tied to scientific not artistic endeavors. This is not to minimise the artistic contributions of photographers (nor scientists for that matter), but if one does in fact wish to "evaluate" camera systems or lenses prior to plunking down several thousand (or several hundred) dollars, there are several ways of doing so: ***1) Choose a religion and ask the applicable priest which camera/lens to use. ****2) Measure the lens in a scientific fashion and compare the results. Jonathan Borden *** If you haven't yet guessed, HCB and AA are high priests. **** The famous Leitz/Zeiss designers are also high priests.