Images should be more important than the tools...
I'm sure Canon and Nikon are happy with the little bit of free advertising, but do you really need to know more than the format of the camera?
I agree wholeheartedly, Suzanne. I have been to dozens of art shows where photographers had their images on display to sell, or at the very least, to be viewed and appreciated. As artists, they all want to hear that the photograph the viewer (or potential customer) is looking at is wonderful, or expertly printed, or speaks moods or feelings to that person, or whatever. In other words, the IMAGE grabs someone and he/she is responding to it.
But then...
The most dreaded question asked of photographers in this kind of setting is, "...what CAMERA did you use? Which lens?".
Once that question is asked, the photograph becomes secondary to the equipment. Sometimes it helps the impression the viewer has toward the image, but mostly it detracts.
A Pentax K1000 with a normal lens, or a Holga or a Diana can produce an extraordinary image because of the vision of the photographer, the subject, composition, and the technical expertise of the printing, as well as all the other factors (sometimes unpredictable) that contribute to a final photograph. Even online, some images expand to perhaps only 5x7 on the screen, and I catch myself saying, "WOW! Amazing picture!"
A top-of-the-line 8x10 camera with a $2000 lens does not guarantee a wonderful picture, but if someone is displaying a so-so image at a show, and tells the customer that it was taken with that equipment, it will sound impressive, and suddenly, the image looks better than it deserves to be.
I have seen the beginnings of a sneer when mentioning that I might favor this particular lens over that one for one of my cameras, simply because there are a lot of people out there who are only interested in the tools, and get very closed-minded about how THIS lens would have given me a sharper picture than THAT lens that I used.
Looking at images published (such as in Lenswork, which is what this thread is mostly about), I want to react to the IMAGE, and then, if possible, find out about the size of the camera format used, and possibly the focal length of the lens. Expanded range of focus, depth-of-field, etc, can be stretched on a view camera, and the image presented would take on an entirely different look when done with a 6x9 folder, or 35mm, or whatever.
So, Brooks, count me in for including some BASIC information about the format of the camera and the lens, but I don't feel that the specific BRAND name and model number of the camera is necessary for the understanding of the visual impact of the image.
Evan