I was looking through some images the other day (more specifically some stuff Capa shot during the Normandy landing) and it made me wonder how his work would be treated if it were shot today. Part of me feels like it would be thrown to the wayside and picked apart for being "too blurry" or "too grain" or whatever.
It seems like with the flood of photography filling our daily lives, we have become very critical and selective on what we deem "good" photography.
That leads me to the thought; by todays standards, are the greats really all that great? Or do people worship them because it's the status quo to respect the old masters?
by todays standards, are the greats really all that great?
It's impossible to compare things from one era to another. Having said that, quality will win out every time.
...I spend as much time as I can wondering through art museums, looking for ideas. On Saturday I was studying this piece by Makovsky when I caught myself thinking that the Photoshop work to lay in the back-light highlights on her right shoulder were a little sloppy.
Erp.
That was really pretty much a stupid thought on my part...
I think you could ask this about all art after 1914 or so. Artists are made famous through web of critics, dealers, agents, etc. looking to become famous by "discovering" an artist so they can advance their own careers. Agents and gallery owners must sell the artist as the newest, greatest thing and therefore advance their careers. Artists, photographers or otherwise are a cog in the machinery of "the business." They are (a major) part that dealers, agents, museum curators, sponsors, and critics use to capture consumer imagination and earn their dollars through sales and admission costs.
There are, of course, great images that pull our eyes into the composition; undeniably, emotionally powerful images do exist and hats off to those that capture them. We can all stare in awe, deservedly.
There are some seriously ugly piles of stink in museums all over the world and everyone knows it when they see it, so why are they there on equal footing?
I think the romance for both situations is generally fabricated through "the business," so to answer your question with a question:
Do you (individually) buy into greatness or not? Its up to the beholder, always, and if the beholder buys into it, then they do, if not, then not.
So simple! ha:munch:
As far as somebody like Cartier-Bresson, well they only show us the best work. There are thousands upon thousands of terrible ones too, but they had the skill to recognize the really good ones.
I don't agree with this and have heard too often the machine gun approach will produce the genius pictures. This is just not true. When he photographed Ghandi's funeral he said he had about five rolls of film. It is not about taking hundreds of pictures (otherwise digital photographers would produce hundreds of brilliant pictures and they don't) but a few with slight variance of composition. Well that is my opinion from research and also from my own practice.
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