frugal said:
. . . . . Someone already mentioned Dan Burkholder, I'm not sure how he does the initial capture but I think he uses film for that, then scans it. He then makes some adjustments in photoshop to create a useable negative (or set of negatives in some cases) which are output on an imagesetter or an inkjet printing on transparency material. He then uses that negative to create a platinum print. Clearly, he has a mix of both analog and digital processes here. If his original image was produced on film and the final print was made using an analog process is he an analog photographer or does that digital step in the middle "taint" everything?
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Good morning frugal,
I mentioned Dan Burkholder, mostly because it seemed like a grey area. However, I don't see some the results of his prints much differently than a Jerry Ulsman (spelling?) image. The big difference is that Jerry Ulsman uses a series of enlargers and custom hand cut masks. I also find it somewhat amusing that a few images that Jerry did in the 1960s got Honorable Mentions in a
digital imaging contest a few years ago.
I took the Dan Burkholder workshop in 1997. At that time, he was using B/W film for the original captures, sometimes even 35mm. Of course, trying to tell which format ended up in which final prints would be tough. In 1997, the best option was having a service bureau output the
negative for the contact print. I still have one of the
negatives from that workshop (the other got damaged and destroyed). Apart from a long discussion about motorcycles, Dan mentioned to me that he was then working on outputting his negatives using an Epson printer; which I think is the method of his newer images. I would guess he might still be starting with film, but since he is very into technology it would be hard to tell how he is now doing things; of course someone could just pop him an e-mail and ask.
Also on Dan's images, it would be tough to get a turtle floating in a church as a captured image, short of doing some Hollywood style huge production. The galleries that sell his works called them platinum or palladium prints, and don't mention the work behind them. Someone buying one of Dan's images might care more about the image, then about the printing method, and perhaps not much about the steps to get to the print. The images speak louder than the steps to create them.
While it is rare for me to do alternative processes, or use the Burkholder methods, I still very clearly remember how to do the steps. However, I have a need to do composite images for work, and I have little desire to do such steps for
fine art. In my opinion, composite images are
photo-illustration and not really photography.
I also see a very
grey area with Polaroid works. These have been one of my chosen fine art techniques, yet the processes seem to be completely out of the realm of photography in the minds of some people. These are entirely hand done, and each is a one of a kind. I find it interesting that they are excluded (or not mentioned) in the APUG Gallery. I know from a few of my postings that some people here do Polaroid manipulations, but perhaps we are a very small minority?
Ciao!
Gordon