• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Camera Arts gone?

Georgia

H
Georgia

  • 1
  • 0
  • 25
German_Church.jpg

H
German_Church.jpg

  • 4
  • 0
  • 38

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
202,564
Messages
2,842,429
Members
101,380
Latest member
andi63
Recent bookmarks
0

Bill Hahn

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Nov 19, 2004
Messages
351
Location
North centra
Format
35mm
According to A. D. Coleman, the magazine "Camera Arts" is
gone. See:

http://www.nearbycafe.com/artandphoto/cspeed/burner.html

(scroll about 2/3 way down page, or look for "Camera Arts".)

Sorry if this is old news, I looked for "Camera Arts" and didn't see
any reference to it going out of business....
 
I'm not surprised. The content to cost ratio of CameraArts (and View Camera) was always fairly high.
 
I think the magazine was a little too esoteric. I can only remember buying one issue - only because it featured Christopher Burkett.
 
I advertised in both magazines for 6 months and got very very few e-mails or phone calls. My advertising with them ceased when my self-imposed trial period ended.

IMO the readership that was promised to me as an advertiser just didn't exist. I would suppose that other advertisers experienced the same or similar results.

I did find their content at times very good, but as with most print magazines and newspapers I am finding that there is equal if not significantly superior content online. This site would definitely qualify within that statement.

I surf various 'enthusiast' sites that compete with print magazines and the trend is the same regardless of the subject matter.

I do not remember the last time I paid for a photography magazine.
 
I had decided not to re-subscribe. Something about the content was getting to me - the tone was not right. My wife, an artist, looked at the last issue and said ' I can see why you are not renewing - the pictures are (dreadful)!'.

I do not envy anyone trying to develop a print magazine. It has to be popular, but it needs to be distinctive enough to stand out. It has to be good quality, but it has to be cheap enough to be popular (or very expensive).

Ultimately one has to look at the costs and benefits for oneself.
 
My children bought me a subscription as a gift one Christmas past. IMHO it was nothing but fluff and will not be missed. I can't recall a single significant article. Whereas I keep old issues of many of my favorite mags like B&W and Lenswork, I pitched each issue of CA.
 
I actually just saw the newest Camera Arts at Borders yesterday. It's now printed almost as small as lenswork.
 
After reading the article, I should of said the 'last,' instead of 'newest'
 
At one time it was a pretty good magazine. I have not paid much attention to it for a couple of years since the content was more and more about digital. Plenty of magazines that already do that.

I still buy the occasional photo magazine. A few issues each year of View Camera, Lenswork and B&W. But now I would rather spend the money on a good book of photographs or a print.
 
I had subscribed for many years. Steve sold it and they went even more digital. Then they went heavy into do your own thing cross processed type weird color. Ugly photographs with a lot of text to explain why it was art.

I did not renew. I dropped Aperture for the same reason quite a while back.

Lenswork is the best. Brooks has gone digital but still has good taste. View Camera because I love view camera's but boy the edit and printing has been sloppy of late.
 
Camera Arts

Is this death toll official? I happen to have quite a few CA from the mid nineties that kick butt. Some really well written and informative articles. Worth picking up on the cheap on that site...
Best, Peter
 
Camera Arts FINE!

I was just assured by Tim Anderson that Camera Arts is fine - that costs forced the format change, but that a new subscriber has nothing to fear. Since the change in ownership, I like the changes. Many magazines have good images, some have good printing, few have good writing. This is in-between - I get better images from some, better writing from some. Overall, it also seems less amateurish.
 
Sure.

What you do is get some toy figures and toy cars and trucks. Stick them on a plywood board that has some tiny little fake trees, bridges and roads. Make a toy truck look like it has crashed, have a green toy soldier with a gun threatening a little red riding hood figure. Maybe scatter a few plastic figures around to represent dead bodies.

Photograph the whole scene with color film using a holga. Don't worry about stuff like exposure or focusing.

Now write some incomprehensible prose using phrases such as "constructed realities", "metaphors for war and the american war machine", "identity politics", "alternative realities",and "gender police". Alternatively, just use the postmodern essay generator here:

http://www.elsewhere.org/pomo

Send Aperture magazine the scans and your "statement", and print your negatives to 6x6 feet for the breakout show in which you will be lionized as the next great thing.

It's easy once you know how.

Sportera said:
speaking of bad photography, can someone explain "Apertature" to me! I don't get it.
 
Clay, I said "Ugly photographs with a lot of text to explain why it was art".

But you, you just gave an entire MA degree sylabus in four paragraphs. Can I study with you and become famous?
 
Sure, but there is a huge waiting list. You might want to go ahead and get some black jeans, black turtleneck and beret. Oddly sculpted facial hair is also a big plus.

photobum said:
Clay, I said "Ugly photographs with a lot of text to explain why it was art".

But you, you just gave an entire MA degree sylabus in four paragraphs. Can I study with you and become famous?
 
Sportera said:
speaking of bad photography, can someone explain "Apertature" to me! I don't get it.
I think it's some kind of potato with a hole in it.
 
The Holga diorama sounds more interesting than another godforsaken St. Ansel-lite landscape, actually.
 
celluloidpropaganda said:
The Holga diorama sounds more interesting than another godforsaken St. Ansel-lite landscape, actually.

Just what I was going to say. I think a lot of the people who hold Ansel and the other f64 group in high regard, and use them as the unbending yard stick of what photography should be, would have ridiculed them at the time for their "ugly, un-naturaly sharp and unromantic images".
 
From the other side...
It can take guts, imagination, empathy, analysis and skill to produce a successful image with intellectual, and or emotional value. I wonder what it takes to follow someone's formula and go do an intellectually inert time exposure of a waterfall or brook?

People should check the build of their domicile before they start throwing stones.
 
Speaking of Aperture - I don't buy it or Blind Spot anymore ($15 apiece is too rich for my blood), but there's a stunning Darfur documentary portfolio in the latest issue.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom