blockend
Member
I think gear is hugely over-emphasised in the role of making compelling images. In fact I believe it's counter-productive in many instances, leading to paralysis by analysis, or more often an unrealistic sense that equipment alone will somehow promote a visceral response to the image. My argument is while the response to, say, a 10 x 8 chrome is real, the materials of its construction will not offer any lasting emotional draw beyond that of spectacle. Which is why photography as description and photography as creation shouldn't be conflated. In other words a sharp large format colour saturated transparency is certainly capable of being used creatively, but it won't be its technical attributes that confer lasting merit or memorability.I have to disagree here. The gear can have an influence on creative photography, for example: Someone going out shooting with a holga is going to be creating something (and likely thinking about their subject matter) very different than someone out shooting with a Rollei, even if they both are using the same 120 film. And I know sometimes I pick VERY specific gear for an image I want to create. Even very basic things about gear like the focal length chosen is part of the creative process and can rule out certain gear, for example if I know the image I want to creat needs the compression only a long lens can provide, rules out my rolleiflex.
This morning's radio contained a segment with Antarctic penguins being counted from a space satellite. The resolution of the camera allows for accuracy to a couple of centimetres. For tracking penguins, or rogue cells in the body, or deep space optical phenomena, resolution is a really useful tool, but it's still difficult to know what it offers creatively, beyond spectacle. Personally, I own cameras from 5 x 4" to plastic lens P&S, and digital full frame, APS-C and M43. There have been long periods when I've shot almost exclusively on 6 x 9 colour negative, vintage folding cameras, and black and white film in an SLR. In hindsight, I could have chosen any one of those media, exclusively, and produced good work. This is not a reflection on my ability, nor a lack of regard for what each medium brings to the aesthetic mix, but a sense that what makes a photograph memorable isn't contained in the amount of silver or dye, or the optical formula of a lens.