It would interest me if Bjorke could tell us what he means by physicality and how a bulletin board like APUG could actually have this quality.
If you'll notice, the thread topic as posted has question mark. In general I find statements dull, questions more worthy of attention. Statements are dead ends, questions lead to more questions.
The digitalisation that Alec speaks of (Alec is a very well-known contemporary shooter, book producer, all-around nice guy, and member of Magnum. If you hurry, maybe you can go to
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Robert & Shana Parke Harrison, "Book of Life"
with 11 platinum prints.
Nice if you have a few extra $thousands sitting around.
I think the idea of "physicality" in photography diffuses when you look at it closely (and photography is always about looking closely.... isnt it?) -- there is the physicality of shooting, of print making, and the physicality of viewing at the "end." And I think these are quite jumbled in Alec's comments and most of the comments to his comments. The Matt Ducklo photo of the blind people touching sculpture, for example, has a sense of physicality that's quite far from the physicality of Stephen Gil's buried-and-exhumed Polaroids (which reminded me of a sculpture made many years ago by my friend Sue Emshwiller, in which polaroids of important personal events were permanently encased, and hidden, in plaster).
The Ducklo images are valid in large part regardless of their presentation format -- while Gil's (and almost all Holga-ish work, which I find mannered and dirt-dull) is deeply dependant on the physicality of the process and the presented object.
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Binh Dahn, "Ancestral Altar"
These are issues that to my mind seem quite close kin to those underlying impulses and feelings that are often driving the discussions and shooting here on APUG. YMMV, but asking how "a bulletin board like APUG" has physicality entirely misses (or deliberately obscures) the point ("bulletin board"? you mean like "BBS"?). One might as easily ask how APUG has anything to do with photography, if you mistake the bytes and web protocols for the Real Deal.
Ceci n'est pas une opinion, dude, it's just electrons circling 'round on your desk, right?