Here is Edward Weston's statement for the catalogue of his 1932 NY show, from page 246, The Daybooks of Edward Weston, #2, California:
"I have no unalterable theories to proclaim, no personal cause to champion, no symbolism to connote. Too often theories crystallize into academic dullness,- bind one in a straight jacket of logic,- of common, very common sense. To be directed or restrained by unyielding reason is to put doubt as a check on amazement, to question fresh horizons, and so hinder growth. It is essential to keep fluid by thinking irrationally, by challenging apparent evidence and accepted ideas,- especially one's own.
In a civilization severed from its roots in the soil - cluttered with nonessentials, blinded by abortive desires, the camera can be a way of self-development, a means to rediscover and identify oneself with all manifestation of basic form,- with nature, the source.
Fortunately, it is difficult to see too personally with the very impersonal lens-eye: through it one is prone to approach nature with desire to learn from, rather than impose upon, so that a photograph, done in this spirit, is not an interpretation, a biased opinion of what nature should be, but a revelation,- an absolute, impersonal recognition of the significance of facts.
The camera controlled by wisdom goes beyond obvious, statistical recording,- sublimating things seen into things known.
"Self expression" is usually an egotistical approach, a willful distortion, resulting in over or understatement. The direction should be toward a clearer understanding through intentional emphasis of the fundamental reality of things, so that the presentation becomes a synthesis of their essence."
That has a little more to chew on - especially the last paragraph!!!! I'd still rather read statements by real living photographers for exhibitions of their work...who spent the time to dig deep into who and what they are and could express it in words for others, or who could explain why they were unwilling to do so.
It comes to mind that maybe only those that have mounted a solo exhibit have really, truly, faced this question. For those that have, what words did you use...
Murray