RattyMouse
Member
Doesn't this other post from the same guy, and the opinions he expresses therein, sort of contradict the whole project he wants to do in the above link?
http://www.blackandwhitefineart.net/2012/08/film-vs-digital-i-could-puke/
Only problem is a true fine artist would not bother with all that.
Only problem is a true fine artist would not bother with all that.
You mean Andreas Gursky, right? Or Peter Lik?There must be a ... Oh, right, there are YouTube videos mocking true fine artists! There's the one puportedly using Dell computers, there's the psycho idiot and the models, there's the ones mocking various famous photographers, etc.
I think Tim Layton is interested in people who care about the material they use. Thus, the person will care enough to talk about why they prefer film. It's self-selecting, really.
You mean Andreas Gursky, right? Or Peter Lik?There must be a ... Oh, right, there are YouTube videos mocking true fine artists! There's the one puportedly using Dell computers, there's the psycho idiot and the models, there's the ones mocking various famous photographers, etc.
Sorry, but this terminology is my biggest photographic pet peeve.
Not this again. Only Peter Lik is a fine art photographer. Gursky is just an art photographer. Both are beyond awful.
In the modern vernacular, 'fine art photography' is a marketing term. 'Fine art', which is the term you used, is only typically made in reference to painting.
'Fine art photography', if we can finally get it straight, is decorative, produced in vast quantities and cheap (Peter Lik is a prime example) relative to art photography or contemporary photography, which is mostly high concept, a handful of prints and very expensive (Gursky is a prime example).
With 'fine art photography', which is what the OP is after, business always comes first. Most fine art photographers would bother with this, as they need as many people to buy as many of their prints as possible. This would be perfect exposure to that end
Sorry, but this terminology is my biggest photographic pet peeve.
Peter Lik "is" a prime example? Elaborate.
Have you actually met and viewed Peter Lik's vast body of work, particularly his Ilfochrome Classic works that sell for around $28,000-plus? There is every chance Lik has made a very comfortable living for himself through hard work and determination (and financial sacrifice), rather than dangling on forums making wild and spurious generalisations about others. He chooses his subjects very carefully, his market even with more care.
Unless you know a person well, refrain from making value-based judgements on their style and/or quality of work.
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