blansky
Member
It seems like a lot of people are twisting Ken's argument into what they want it to be and then proceeding to knock down their own modified version.
Personally, I think both analog and digital are "photography", they both can be "art", and they are equally capable of creating compelling, emotional images. I truly believe that. Having said that, the processes of getting there are not the same. They may feel similar and they may be trying to accomplish the same thing for the same purpose, but at a step-by-step process level, I think the considerations that go into the image-making are just different.
That may be a distinction without a difference to some and if all you care about is the end-product and whether it is compelling, emotional, honest, etc., than that is fine - a completely valid perspective. But I think it's hard to make an argument that the processes are not, if nothing more than at a physical, "what you actually do" level (i.e. stand in a darkroom vs. sit at a computer), different.
I agree 100% and have stated so. I have done both processes. FOR ME one replaced the other for reasons I described. (30 years compared to 7)
I know that there are process people that turn out stunning work.
But Ken's initial argument and continuing argument goes beyond viva la difference to the point where one has worth and the other does not. Don't believe me read his earlier posts.
So I simply added that a beautifully processes boring picture has little real value and a poorly processed impactful picture, no matter the way it was originated, can have incredible value ( not talking monetary). I agree value us a subjective term but you get the drift.
And I don't think the genesis of photography had much to do with process, (just do whatever works), and more to do with the magic of stopping time and getting an image. The impact of the image. As much as Ken wants to love the glass plate, the originator cared about the image. It was all about getting the image.