One reason I seldom go to museums anymore - big for sake of big, too much digital hanky-panky. Just a new herd of lemmings following another lemming which decided to go that direction, as far as I'm concerned. A trend. And I'm speaking from the standpoint of one who does shoot 8x10 color and knows how to enlarge and elegantly present them. And backlit trannies have about all the appeal as a backlit Hamm's beer sign in a skid row dive window. Plus those fluorescent bulbs fade out the piece quite prematurely, and it's very difficult to store or "archive" those big things or even spare transparencies that large.
And now that Cindy Sherman got mentioned in an analogous context, I gravitate far less to her work - just too pretentiously predictable. Once things get too self-consciously artsy, count me out. Well, studio setups mimicking theatrical content are nothing new. Instead of borrowing small still frames of movie footage, Hurrell would replicate a particular movie set in his own studio, or go to the studio itself between filming session, and replicate some now-famous moments in movies with an 8x10 or even 11X14 camera. I've seen a number of those, often printed over six feet wide black and white, and have even discussed these things with a surviving assistant who was directly involved. I've seen equivalent color still from the era too. But everyone knows that it is all Hollywood related. Likewise in this case; it's just that Hollywood migrated to the Northeast. And it is interesting. But I wouldn't personally go out of my way to view it. Great Photorealist real paintings, I would.