Alan Edward Klein
Member
A few posters - mostly me.
I liked the spoof with the Death Star instead of the moon. Was that yours? It is very apropos with the recent release of all the UFO photos. Now that's transformative!

A few posters - mostly me.

I liked the spoof with the Death Star instead of the moon. Was that yours?


No, I meant photos actually posted in this thread. Or maybe I missed that one.
Anyway, Alan, I don't know what the point is you're arguing. If it's legal, what does that matter? It's legal to carry around a cup of urine and offer to sell it to other people, too. Even if it's not your urine. Even if it's Ansel Adams' urine.
Conceptual art says: the idea itself is the artwork. The object is just evidence of the idea.
There's a lot to this and I agree. Duchamp among others proved it. But it leaves out something essential that is also there: Sensibility. Indeed, a good working definition of art is simply "the idea coupled with sensibility." This principal levels the playing field among the arts. Yes, painting is more difficult than photography, but that doesn't necessarily make photography a lesser art.
The discussion focused on whether it was ethical, not legal, to modify someone else's photograph in the Public Domain.
Whew. I was unaware that it had been published. I hereby claim “Fair Use”…
Don - the problem with the qualitative difference in AA's big mural prints wasn't the competence of the printing; it was his negatives themselves. In fact, most of those were printed under his own supervision by a much better equipped big pro lab in SF, not in his own digs. His earlier film and camera choices were not in the same precision league as, say, Bradford Washburn later on, who was scientifically trained and mainly used very precise aerial film gear fixed-focused at infinity, whose big prints hold up extremely well.
In my brief association with those mural prints, a deliberate push-pull was in play. Viewers backed off from the AA prints to take them in, in a different manner they customarily viewed his work. To disguise the anomalies present when viewed large, Ansel dictated that these big images be printed a little more softly and on non-glossy paper. And indeed, this led intelligent viewers to see these famous scenes at a whole different level, less dramatically and more poetically. I heard a lot of those comments in person. These were each displayed on dark brown panels, according to Ansel's own preference.
But in my case, between these brown panels, I had equal size pale neutral gray panels. And when people closely approached my work after taking in the overall composition, they started enjoying all the extreme detail. These were big color Cibachromes I had myself printed and specially framed - mostly taken within the same general or High Sierra settings as much of Ansel's own interest, but in an entirely different manner. His work was comparatively "scenic"; mine was quite "Zen" at the time - certainly not understated or minimalistic, but demanding another style of viewing and contemplation, and involving a lot of very nuanced hues. That was the whole point - counterpoint itself. Unfortunately, due to the extreme value of those big AA prints, the insurer would not allow the show to travel elsewhere.
Anyway, nothing I can add to this colorized Moonrise thread is going to top your "REMAX" summary of it. If he had made that redo simply as a draw to his booth, it might not have been so annoying. But by editioning it and offering it for sale, he crossed a line in my opinion. What's to stop someone from mass producing a scanned and cut in half diptych version of some famous AA scene, claiming that as "transformative"? It would make no difference with serious collectors, however; what they want is the full original signature too. Nobody is going to pay much without that. ... Just sofa decor at this point, colorized.
Already there have been a number of Ai-generated, "Make me an Ansel Adams looking scene."
Some of these abominations have been offered for sale, and the Trust has intervened to altogether stop usage of his own name in connection with those. They hold that as a copyright too. My main gripe, is all of this digi nonsense cheats people out of experiencing light and beauty for themselves, thinking they can faux artificially concoct that at will. At least Ansel had the real deal in front of him when he pressed the shutter.
Ethics is a matter of whatever system is to adjudicate. Is it ethical from the point of view of non-photographers? They don't care - so they would have no problem with it. Is it ethical from the point of view of photographers? Some yes, some no. More people have a problem with the display, attempt to sell as a distinct artwork, the cited manner of production, and the lack of reference to the original. If my Remax over Hernandez (above) was used in an ad campaign, I doubt anyone would care. Saying it's a distinct artwork in its own right is the problem.
If I take my Dodge Grand Caravan and paint it a different colour, I won't get away with telling people it's now a Don Grande Caravaggio. It's not suddenly a different thing.

Can we assume you think it's ethical to use Adam's Public Domain pictures, since you modified it into a spoof? (I think the ReMax baloon over a graveyard makes it seem the realtor is selling plots for the deceased.) Do you think it;s ethical only becasue it;s legal, or do you think it's otherwise ethical and why?
This is why it's hard to tell if you have actual opinions or if you just like to type more than the rest of us.I usually play devil's advocate. After all these years of posting, I thought you'd pick up on this by now. When everyone is going one way, I go the other.
This is why it's hard to tell if you have actual opinions or if you just like to type more than the rest of us.
everyone just joins the chorus and repeats the same nonsense and untruths.
But Allen, we now do not know if your opinions you post now are the fake ones or just your usual BS. You have complained that people here do not respect your opinions...perhaps this is why.
You cherry picked a small portion of my post and missed my whole point.That tells me you don't pay much attention to what people are saying. In this thread alone there have been several very different ideas and opinions expressed - some of which are quite nuanced.
Calling my posts"your usual BS" is insulting. I'm surprised at you.
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