if editions of one is not about marketing why is it being discussed in this thread which should be about "Presentation and Marketing". Its another OP thread hijacked by someone with an agenda...
Merry Christmas
Merry Christmas
Best point made in this whole discussion.It seems to me that if your aspiration is to sell prints at these prices, then it would be better to concentrate on your purpose as a photographer, your vision, your craft, and finding those high value customers. If you get these things right then it won't matter how many prints you make from a negative.
Ian Leake;563205 It seems to me that if your aspiration is to sell prints at these prices said:Ian yours is the best post I've read in the midst of many excellent and well thought out views on this highly emotive subject. The only photographer that I know who seriously limits the number of prints from a single negative is Thomas Joshua Cooper who makes 3 enlarged prints and 3 contact prints from his 7" x 5" original negative. The enlarged prints sell for £11,000, I don't know about the contact prints I think he gives them to friends. In my opinion Thomas fits the quote from your post copied above.
I bring up the bronze example, because we tend to assume that the problem that Walter Benjamin described as "Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" in his essay of that title is new to photography, cinema, and audio recording, but while acknowledging that industrial reproduction is a new factor, we've had mechanical reproduction in various forms for a long time, and many of these questions have been around before Eastman and Edison. In casting the model is even called a "positive" and the mold a "negative," and isn't one of our favorite film developers named after Rodin?
Rodin also re-used elements from one sculpture to another: so you may find the same legs on two different torsos in different sculptures.


Perhaps there's time for one final thought before Christmas...
This whole thing smacks of status anxiety to me. I suggest reading Alain de Botton's book of the same name.
Market makes the price, photographer makes wishes...
The edition isn't really an issue. No print is really the same, too many variables and so many interpretations. An edition of whatever number isn't an exact reproduction of the same print. What is IN the picture is more important than the number.
As the question of being an artist. Anybody can say "I'm an artist", again, this is the Market that decides...
World isn't perfect...
"...snip
Also, each time I melt the sculpture down I add tin and copper...so the lowly zinc sculpture will eventually become a brass sculpture...then end up as a bronze piece
Oh...I left out part of the concept...each time I show the piece the CURRENT version of the sculpture is in a black box...so you only see what the piece WAS, but not what it currently IS
I will only want those 3 prints to be seen.
I'm gone for a couple of weeks only to return and find that a hockey game has broken out.
I certainly didn't intend my original post to erupt in such a firestorm. The bottom line is: how someone (I'm almost afraid to say the word 'artist') produces, markets, and editions their work is their own decision and should not be judged in a negative and defeating manner by anyone else. I certainly wouldn't do that to any of you.No its not, its great, thanks...
You just made my Christmas....
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