Maris
Member
No, I make successive originals, all different, and therefore singular.Maris:
do you "edition" your photographs and destroy the negative after a singular print is made ?
The emptiness comes not from size. Big size is a ploy to suggest emptiness is significant.what is the maximum size permitted before the image becomes empty?
All of them towering talents as camera-men. And they deserve all their fame. But photographers? Nah!and photographers like HCB karsh, hurrell, and others who had work printed by a printer aren't valid?
I can't think of a major "contemporary" figure that does this.some people who make "contemporary" imagery that is large ( or small ) do just that.
their images are rare, are singular, and are crafted by hand.
History does not confer meaning or extinguish it.just because it isn't imagery based on a 19th century ( or better yet a pre-mid 19th century notion )
doesn't mean it is meaningless, or the other discriptions you use.
People are even entitled to invalid opinions.but then again every is obviously able to have their own valid opinion ..
And interesting set of beliefs worth testing by objective thought.i don't believe that in order to be a "real photographer producing artwork"
one needs to do the printing oneself, make prints like they did in 1850 ...
and i don't believe that every image that might get printed by a machine ( either ink or laser ) is exactly the same,
just like i don't believe that every hand printed image is exactly the same / there are variations. but i do believe
unless someone destroys their negative or only makes single prints there is no such thing as a rare/singular "traditional" silver print.
It would be easy to defend an opposite set of values as a guide to the enjoyment of art. Subjectivity rules...except about facts. Sorry about the clipped replies. I'm off on a five day shoot elsewhere.while i enjoy looking at things that sprouted from a mid or pre-mid 19th century notion
using a process from the same time period, i also get inspiration from early 20th century
practicioners who decided to give the medium the ability to breathe on its own and saw what happens
when they did what they did, whether they were pictorialists who brought pt/pd and gum printing from the grave,
or they were people making cameraless images, constructions or photographing the world from a different perspective.
i am also a enjoyer of people who are still in practice today
who pushed the envelope in the 1980s making giant photographs by hand, and who at present
use encaustic paints to hand work some of their images.