rfshootist said:
AA did not photograph mundane clouds, mountains,little houses and cemetaries , he photographed the magic of the moonlight .
There was never anything dreary or mundane in this superb Hernandez concept that needed an analog photoshopper to make it sing.
Well, whatever you may think about that particular photograph, Adams got lucky - he lucked onto the scene on the way back from a shooting trip in Santa Fe, and since he could not find his light meter, had to make an educated guess about the exposure. As a result, most of the negative was grossly underexposed, and only through meticulous application of
craft, was he able to bring anything out of it. (The Negative, pg 127, sidebar).
rfshootist said:
In general I am surprised to read such a statement of making mundane stuff sing, here on this analog site where all kind of manipulation is considered as the worst thing at all which can be done to a photo. Or is that in your opinion only valid if it is done digitally ?
So it sounds like you're taking the extreme position that it's not true photography unless it's a straight print, out of a straight in-camera negative. This site is about analog photography, both the art and the craft. In the craft of analog darkroom work, there are many techniques available for manipulating the image. All manner of chemistry choices, paper grade choices, burning, dodging, split-grade printing, contrast masking, unsharp masking, the list goes on and on. Where do you think photoshop got the names for many of its tools? But back to my point, all these methods of manipulation, which are all entirely analog, are available to support the artistic statement of the one making the print.
I made a print just yesterday which required the split-grade technique, some burning-in of a few areas, and the print could probably do even better with a mask to bring the highlights down a bit. Is that not analog photography? I used no computers of any kind, other than my digital watch to time the film processing, and my digital enlarging timer; my light meter is even analog.
As far as making mundane negatives great by darkroom wizardry, I would say it's not very likely. As another poster mentioned Adams's comment, the negative is the score, and the print is the performance. If either one is lacking, the whole is compromised. A great print of a mundane subject is still going to be mundane. And fabulous negatives printed in an amateurish fashion, well, they aren't any good either. To use the HCB example, I find many of the reproductions of his work to be flat and lifeless, despite the wonderful composition, and this diminishes the work to me. I've never seen a real HCB print in real life, so I'll hold off final judgement until I do.
Will