snusmumriken
Subscriber
I think this touches on the core of the issue. I've always been fascinated by the way really strong photos survive the worst travesties of picture editors, printers and online copying. Others are unremarkable until some beyond-Adams darkroom wizard works on them. Levoy et al are able to create automated processes that substitute for the wizard. Of course there will always be scope for choice, good taste and judgement, but doesn't it shift the emphasis of just where creativity begins and ends?Ansel's technique was just a means toward an end. I don't think his tool kit was even particularly fancy for his own day. Most commercial labs had way better equipment; and there were a number of color printmakers in his own neighborhood with way more darkroom tricks up their sleeves than him. Everything in "The Negative" and "The Print" is quite elementary anyway. I gave away my copies long ago.