Just last night someone told me about this thread.
I can't believe that there is anyone out there who can harbor even the slightest thought that Paula and I have "secrets" and that you have to pay us and take our workshop to learn them.
All of the techincal things taught in our Vision and Technique workshop have been written about in my articles, most of which appeared in View Camera magazine. They are there at
www.michaelandpaula.com under "Writings." No secrets. WE HAVE NO SECRETS.
The person who visited me last night who told me about this thread said to me that one of the things I said at the beginning of the workshop was, "We have no secrets. We will answer to the best of our abilities any question about anything at all concerning photography."
It seems that some people just want to find fault even where none exists, and yes, I deeply resent anyone's implication that we have "secrets" that we only share with those who pay.
In fact, when I wrote some of the articles some folks said to me, "Are you sure you want to publish these. After people read them they will not need to take your workshop." To which my answer was, "Our Vision and Technique Workshop is about so much more than what is in the articles--it is about the Vision part first and foremost, although everything technical that is necessary is covered--developing by inspection, printing, mounting, spotting, and on and on."
And I thought that those primarily interested in the technical things, like developing film by inspection, would not ever need to take our workshop, which was fine with me.
Paula and I make our living from print sales, not from workshops. We teach only a very few weekend workshops each year. This year we taught some only because they were in conjunction with other activities--our travel and our exhibitions. As far as we can anticipate for next year, no workshops are planned except for our workshop in Iceland, where we teach the Vision part of our Vision and Technique workshop, but none of the technical things. We'll answer any techincal question that anyone asks, however.
Any visual work of art is primarily about its visual qualities, of which techincal excellence is only a part. Technical excellence alone, without vision is boring, dull, lifeless. Vision without technical excellence (and what may be technically excellent for one photograph may vary from what is technically excellent for another), cannot fulfill its highest expressive and communicative function.
From the photographs I have seen from those who have taken our workshops, their work is always significantly better afterwards--not necessarily better technically, because some of those who take our workshop already possess considerable technical skills, but better because the work is more visually vibrant and alive. And that is because of what we teach and how we teach in the Vision part of our workshop. And so we have no secrets there either.