donbga said:
I beleive that Adams, (not Gomez or Ansel), Misrach, and Shore has appeared in VC in the past.
Not as far as recall, apart from Misrach, which I indicated - as in I'd be suprised to see View Camera publish his shrub or beach studies? (But they did publish An-My Lê - so who knows) - they are somewhat different from most of his desert work
And you may be right about Friedlander... who knows
But the under current to your posts lately seem to me to suggest that you embrace what many art schools with a photography curriculum are teaching, "traditional photography is residual photography".
I'm not sure what "traditional photography" is? But that aside, I've really no idea what the art schools and departments are currently teaching. I do know what kind of contemporary photography tends to interest and excite me though, and what my friends and colleagues who are photographers talk about, look at and enjoy.
(I'm still intrigued by the traditional photography thing - is it Frederick Evans? Gustav le Gray? Atget? Sudek? Many Ray? Walker Evans? Roger Fenton? Francis Frith? Maholy Nagy? Kertesz? to name a few of my favourites of widely varying schools and styles - give me a clue)
Frankly, a lot of the current color work I see today is banal and quite boring. Big ass inkjet or cibachrome prints seem to be one of the trends these days; work that is devoid of emotion or point of view
..but I don't see much new work today that is being promoted as cutting edge worth looking at for long.
Many of Esser's vedutas and landscapes are - for me - quite fascinating, rich and beautiful. Would that I could afford one to keep on the wall... And of course much of Sally Mann's work to me seems almost pure emotion. And much of Sugimotos work to me is stunning and speaks volumes in terms of point of view (as does Basilicos work).
(and don't get me going on size - I've never understood why so many photographers still seem to have an almost pathological attachment to miniautures, even when the technological reasons for them have long fallen! There are few other art forms that so artificially limit themselves in the same way that I can think of... but that's a whole other topic)