Thomas Bertilsson
Member
Thank you for taking time, Ken. I appreciate it. I still don't agree, but that's not bothering me in the least. I appreciate that we are different.
I argue that 95% of the meaningful transformation from light to print comes from skill.
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I argue that 95% of the meaningful transformation from light to print comes from skill.
No, of course not. But what I created would of necessity be different than if you had given me a 16x20 camera.
The tool of a 35mm camera carries with it certain strengths and weaknesses regarding its properties and behaviors. Things such as size, weight, number of frames available without reloading. Stuff like that. A 16x20 carries with it its own set of unique capabilities and constraints. Unique because the two are different and not the same.
Each of those sets of properties and behaviors affect what is possible to achieve with each camera. And what we can do (are allowed to do) with each camera affects how we perceive the world through it.
While I can certainly set up the 16x20 underneath the basket at an NBA game, the resulting photos will be entirely different than had I used my Nikon F2 w/motor drive, which itself would produce completely different results from the modern professional DSLR the Sports Illustrated guy is using.
Actually, not to belabor the point, but SI is an excellent example of tools affecting the final photographic message. I'm a 40+ year subscriber. In the beginning (early 70s) I signed up because I loved the photography. But now I continue only for the writing.
When SI made the jump to digital, the photography changed radically. It ceased being... substantive, for want of a better term. There was more shallow fluff and less intellectual depth.* At the beginning the eyes behind the cameras had not changed. They had simply migrated. And the games were still exactly the same, as they are governed by set rules.
What changed were the tools. The cameras. Specifically, the properties and behaviors of those cameras. And those changes affected how the SI photographers perceived the competitive sports world before them. What they could show of that world has always been directly related to their camera's capabilities. And those capabilities had radically changed. As a result, so did their pictures.
So sure, hand me a different camera than I am accustomed to using and I can still make photographs. And those photographs will still match my vision. But the implementation of that vision will be unavoidably altered. Because it's not the same camera. Not the same tool.
Hand Michelangelo a pneumatic chisel and David would unavoidably look different as well. My guess is that he might have been noticeably more detailed. Or he might have been completed quicker. Or he might have been larger. But he would not—could not—have looked exactly the same. Because he would have been created differently.
Ken
* For what it's worth, the acknowledged Greatest Sports Photograph In History, Muhammad Ali standing over and sneering down at a defeated Sonny Liston, was made at ringside by a then very young Neil Leifer using a Rolleiflex TLR. He knew the camera property was that he had only a handful of frames to work with, so he concentrated a lot harder...
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