That's not what I was getting at. I'm just simply talking about the values. A value should be exchanged for another value ... Does that make a little more sense now?
See my last paragraph.
A camera has value only when it is used and has even greater value when it is used for art. The lowly pencil can make a a grocery note or an exquisite drawing. Its not the barter system that gives it value. And when you exchange something for something else, then it is a wholly completely different act. Its one thing to give away a photograph to someone just because they can appreciate it and another thing to demand a kiss for it.
It is your very own personal opinion, to ask something back, in exchange for something you give, a pretty common notion in your society because of its almost fanatical adherence to the capitalistic system. You see others as unknown strangers with whom you can only trade. One doesn't necessarily value something just because it has a price tag (where price is not just money), just because one has to give away something to appreciate what they are getting, either as a trade or a reward.
Artists need tools and materials to create. As creation is their prime concern, often they don't adhere or are successful in providing everything they need in a society that gives major emphasis on credit economy. Thus, they often are in need of assistance, just so they can go on creating, as they either wouldn't be able to afford the tools, the constant flow of consumable materials and their basic living. The "starving artist" is not just a romantic idea, it is based on that fact, as they would often forego basic needs that other people have as top priorities so they can continue creating.
If you take your system of barter and value, one step further, you will see that by giving a tool and/or materials or the means to obtain them to an artist, we all benefit, as it gives us back artistic work to enjoy and get inspired from. Which can be said for other professions as well. So, that may sound a bit too pinko commie to you.
I do not want to sidestep and take this thread to something else. I will also not start a conversation colored by capitalist/communist, left/right black and white ideologies, which I have no interest at all in.
For me is simple.
A tool has two purposes: one, as decoration, two as a tool.
Guns, knives, bags, masks, hammers, etc are examples.
A camera thus,
can either be used for taking photographs
or
be decoration, with its value relating to the beauty of construction, brand/model value and sentimental value.
A camera which is not used, is for me a camera in coma. I have very little respect for collectors, so it always feels that they are depriving the world of something needed.
GAS, the Gear Acquisition Syndrome, can either be seen as the understandable need for an artist to have many tools for different kinds of jobs (different cameras are not unlike different woodworking tools, if quite a bit more general purpose), or the controversial affliction of a collector for the above mentioned characteristics of decorative objects and a hint that they may have a lot more disposable income than most people.
Hmm, now it feels like Christ's "those who have two robes should give one" or however it goes, so maybe it can be seen as pinko christianism.
So, who's with me in the Camera Liberation Front?