Daniel Grenier said:My wife, who is not a photographer but knows photography extremely well, said to me the other day while looking at photographs on-line:
"Not another picture of Bodie? As there not been enough film shot there yet? Do we really need more pictures of BODIE?
Huuuuummmmm.... Bodie.... I would think that, indeed, the place has been "worked" to excess by too many photographers now. While on this topic, here are a few more locations I feel have been overly photographed and, perhaps, don't warrant any more attention from artists with cameras?
What do you think? Agree? Disagree? Add to the list????
Bodie
Yosemite
"That" church in New Mexico (St Francis)
California sand dunes
Slit Canyons
Anasazi ruins
Point Lobos
Very true Ian, then again you guys in Europe are not inmmune to this. How about pics from that castle that sits on a water inlet, sometimes you see it with water, sometimes you dont. Or Stonehenge, god, I feel like screaming when I see one more pic of Stonehenge. Or how about shots of the gondolas in Venice, you know the one, they show only the bow of the gondola sitting on dock or passing through a bridge.127 said:Dont' forget LONG exposure times of streams flowing over rocks.
Looks cool the first 300 times you see it...
More seriously, it's not the subjects that are worn out - it's the people photographing them. We'll see a thousand retreaded images of them until someone comes along and shows us the old thing/place in a new way, and we'll realise how stupid we were not to have seen it like that before. Then that will be copied a thousand times....
Ian
LOL...Actually Daniel did qualify when it is done differently...Francesco said:Or churches and interiors of churches (oops!).
Jorge said:LOL...Actually Daniel did qualify when it is done differently...
Leon said:I've never seen a definitive "good" shot of Stonehenge, so I pray that people dont stop shooting it in the hope that one day one GOOD image will emerge
jnanian said:was your wife the person who wrote to VC magazine last year (under a pen name) ....
mark said:This is a tired argument. I personally have never seen a photograph of Bodie.
Nor have I, that I know of or remember.... Perhaps it's about time somebody makes some memorable pictures of Bodie? Perhaps even a conference could be held their or something.Daniel Grenier said:WOW! Serious? You have NEVER seen a photograph of Bodie? Well! I have never met a photographer who has never seen a picture of Bodie! Pleased to meet you, Mark.
Bruce (Camclicker) said:Bodie? Perhaps even a conference could be held their or something.
Leon said:if we are consciously copying tripod placements, i dont see the point, but an individual fresh perspective is always welcome in my books.
BTW - as a self confessed megalithic maniac, I've never seen a definitive "good" shot of Stonehenge, so I pray that people dont stop shooting it in the hope that one day one GOOD image will emerge
Jorge said:Our cousins from Australia are not inmmune either, the Sydney Opera house...that big rock taken with velvia and a polarizer.
Francesco said:Or churches and interiors of churches (oops!).
Jorge said:Certainly agree......anything with "El Capitan"
Daniel Grenier said:WOW! Serious? You have NEVER seen a photograph of Bodie? Well! I have never met a photographer who has never seen a picture of Bodie! Pleased to meet you, Mark.
This is a good as example as any location that has been over photographed as any. That didn't stop me visiting it a couple of months ago, and trying to put my slant on the view, nor had it stopped the other photographer who was already their trying also. A place of meditation and solitude indeed, almost mystic, thank's for sharing it Les.Les McLean said:My image of Roughting Linn that Sean has on the home page was made 28 years ago and was rarely photographed at the time because it was not well known. Since I first published the image I have had letters, phone calls and emails from photographers all over the world asking for the map reference to go to photograph it. I've even had requests to take strangers there and have been happy to do so. I photograph it several times every year and have never grown tired of it for I refer to it as .
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