Cholentpot
Member
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2015
- Messages
- 7,150
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- 35mm
Whatever that certain age may be, you will eventually reach it, and your taste and ideas will be deemed "of a certain" type, also.
Anyway, I wasn't latching onto who you were identifying other than the fact they're all women.
My tastes are outdated for my age set as is. Without sounding too pretentious I look for timeless stuff. I don't care if it's been done 1,000 times, if it's excellent work it'll speak for itself.
It is almost impressive that you typed that into a thread which contains multiple posts rushing to the defence of Ansel Adams. A thread on a forum that has a > 10 year running thread on HCB Appreciation that accepts no quarter on the matter of Bresson's apparently mystical skills!
There's a certain defense I see with the photographers I mentioned. People take it personally, more personally than going after Adams.
I agree with Sherman and Lebowitz being vastly oversold as photographers.
But to be fair, there are any number of highly regarded men that are the darlings of the arts community whose work is mostly sophomoric snapshooting.
Among them I include Meyerowitz and Freedlander whose work I rarely find all that interesting. Vivien Maier was head and shoulders better than either of them. So it ain't a gender thing.
This seems to especially be a particular NYC disease where "The City" justifies all manner of artistic dreck. It is certainly true that art needs to be understood in its context and time, but it should have some timeless quality to it. None of the above hit that criteria in my estimation.
In fairness, almost no one can deliver a consistently great body of work over a lifetime of shooting so we need to give all the above a bunch of grace. But I rile at the arterati who constantly pimp mediocre work (cf "The Fountainhead" that deals exactly with this phenomenon).
Banana Taped To A Wall exists everywhere. Context and Time don't age well. Context gets removed, time moves on. Art shouldn't need an explanation.
I'm going to open a different can of worms. I find that a lot of street photography to be uh... not great.
I would agree but also say a lot of photography in general is not great.
And yes, I'm being a critic without showing my work. It's just the way it is. I've been published blah blah blah. I'm not part of the establishment though, never went to any sort of formal training. Never studied under anyone. Which is my other hot take. The beauty of photography as an artistic medium is you don't need to be part of a movement to make a statement. The whole 'outsider art' label is in my opinion just juvenile high school labeling. However I'm always open to learn about new techniques and study the masters. I can take and leave what I want.

