That was last century and I don't think he was well-known or did well financially for the first half of his career. Today, location has little to do with success or accessibility to locations. It is very much a question of being in the right place at the right time and knowing the right people. A bit of talent can be an asset, but it is not a requirement from what I've seen. Social media savvy helps, too.
As always, little is black and white...too many shades of grey.
I'll flesh it out a bit.
It helps to have had generations of millions of people per year taking holidays in the area you photograph. It also helps to be from a country where there are public service announcements on the radio about who to contact to find the nearest forest to where you live. So, if you live and work somewhere where Nature isn't easily accessible, shelling out some serious money on a fine B&W image which represents something that brings back cherished memories from a distant place hanging in your office or home becomes plausible.
If where you live and work is surrounded by nearby, accessible, easily found wilderness, me-thinks a photographer who works in the mountain park you holiday at, which sees 50 thousand visitors per year, has less of a chance at selling enough prints to attract the level of attention which could reach 'fame' level.
That's what I meant by location counts.
Not saying the photographer from the obscure park couldn't get famous, especially in this modern world, just saying it would be harder.
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